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The Pantheon is a building
in Rome which was originally
built as a temple to the seven
deities of the seven planets
in the Roman state religion,
but which has been a
Christian church since the
7th century. It is the
best-preserved of all Roman
buildings and the oldest
important building in the
world with its original roof
intact. It has been in
continuous use throughout
its history.
The original Pantheon was
built in 27 BC-25 BC under
the Roman Empire, during the
third consulship of Marcus
Vipsanius Agrippa, and his
name is inscribed on the
portico of the building. The
inscription reads
M·AGRIPPA·L·F·COS·TERTIUM·FECIT,
"Marcus Agrippa, son of
Lucius, consul for the third
time, built this." It was
originally built with
adjoining baths and water
gardens.
In fact, Agrippa's Pantheon
was destroyed by fire in AD
80, and the current building
dates from about 125, during
the reign of the Emperor
Hadrian, as date-stamps on
the bricks reveal. It was
totally reconstructed, with
the text of the original
inscription added to the new
facade, a common practice in
Hadrian's rebuilding
projects all over Rome. The
building was later repaired
by Septimius Severus and
Caracalla. Hadrian was a
cosmopolitan emperor who
traveled widely in the east
and was a great admirer of
Greek culture. He seems to
have intended the Pantheon,
a temple to all the gods, to
be a kind of ecumenical or
syncretist gesture to the
subjects of the Roman Empire
who did not worship the old
gods of Rome, or who (as was
increasingly the case)
worshipped them under other
names.
In 609 the Byzantine emperor
Phocas gave the building to
Pope Boniface IV, who
reconsecrated it as a
Christian church, the Church
of Mary and all the Martyr
Saints (Santa Maria ad
Martyres), which title it
retains.
The building's consecration
as a church saved it from
the abandonment and
spoliation which befell the
majority of ancient Rome's
buildings during the early
mediaeval period. The only
loss has been the external
sculptures, which adorned
the pediment above Agrippa's
inscription. The marble
interior and the great
bronze doors have survived,
although the latter have
been restored several times.
During the reign of Pope
Urban VIII, the Pope ordered
the bronze ceiling of the
Pantheon's portico melted
down. Most of the bronze was
used to make bombards for
the fortification of Castel
Sant'Angelo, with the
remaining amount used by the
Apostolic Chamber for
various other works. (It is
also said that the bronze
was used by Bernini in
creating the baldachin above
the main altar of St.
Peter's Basilica, but
according to at least one
expert, the Pope's accounts
state that about 90% of the
bronze was used for the
cannon, and that the bronze
for the baldachin came from
Venice.[1]) This led to the
Latin proverb, "Quod non
fecerunt barbari, fecerunt
Barberini" ("What the
barbarians did not do, the
Barberinis [family name of
Urban VIII] did").
Since the Renaissance the
Pantheon has been used as a
tomb. Among those buried
there are the painters
Raphael and Annibale Caracci,
the architect Baldassare
Peruzzi and two kings of
Italy: Vittorio Emanuele II
and Umberto I, as well as
Vittorio Emanuele's Queen,
Margherita. In the 15th
century, the Pantheon was
adorned with paintings: the
best known is the
"Annunciazione" by Melozzo
da Forlì.
Although Italy has been a
republic since 1946,
volunteer members of Italian
monarchist organisations
maintain a vigil over the
royal tombs in the Pantheon.
This has aroused protests
from time to time from
republicans, but the
Catholic authorities allow
the practice to continue,
although the Italian
Ministry of Cultural
Heritage [2] is in charge of
the security and maintenance.
The Pantheon is still a
church and Masses are still
celebrated in the church,
particularly for weddings.
The building is circular
with a portico of three
ranks of huge granite
Corinthian columns (eight in
the first rank and two
groups of four behind) under
a pediment opening into the
rotunda, under a coffered,
concrete dome, with a
central opening (oculus),
the Great Eye, open to the
sky. The weight of the dome
is concentrated on a ring of
voussoirs 8.5 metres in
diameter (almost 30 feet)
which form the oculus. A
rectangular structure links
the portico with the rotunda.
In the walls at the back of
the portico were niches for
statues of Caesar, Augustus
and Agrippa. The large
bronze doors to the cella,
once plated with gold, still
remain, but the gold has
long since vanished. The
pediment was decorated with
a sculpture in bronze
showing the Battle of the
Titans - holes may still be
seen where the clamps which
held the sculpture in place
were fixed.
The height to the oculus and
the diameter of the interior
circle are the same (43
metres, or 142 feet 6 inches),
so the whole interior would
fit exactly within a cube (alternatively,
the interior could house a
sphere 43 metres in diameter).
The dome is the largest
surviving from antiquity and
was the largest dome in
western Europe until
Brunelleschi's dome of the
Duomo of Florence was
completed in 1436. It was
covered with gilded bronze
plates.
The interior of the roof is
intended to symbolize the
heavens. The Great Eye, 27
feet across, at the dome's
apex is the source of all
light and is symbolic of the
sun. Its original circular
bronze cornice remains in
position. The interior
features sunk panels (coffers),
which originally contained
bronze star ornaments. This
coffering was not only
decorative, but also reduced
the weight of the roof, as
did the elimination of the
apex by means of the Great
Eye. The top of the rotunda
wall features a series of
brick-relieving arches,
visible on the outside and
built into the mass of the
brickwork. The Pantheon is
full of such devices - for
example, there are relieving
arches over the recesses
inside - but all these
arches were, of course,
originally hidden by marble
facing.
It may well be noted that
the proportions of the
building are in discord with
respect to the classical
ideal. Most evident is the
rather large pediment, which
appears far too "heavy" for
the columns supporting it.
The reason for this was the
expectation that the
building would be much
taller than it actually is,
which would affect larger
columns. However, by the
time the pediment was built,
it was realised that the
supply of imported stone for
the columns were not enough
to build to its anticipated
height and thus the builders
had to settle with a
building that is somewhat
out of proportion.
The composition of the Roman
concrete used in the dome
remains a mystery. An
unreinforced dome in these
proportions made of modern
concrete would hardly stand
the load of its own weight,
since concrete has very low
tensile strength, yet the
Pantheon has stood for
centuries. It is known from
Roman sources that their
concrete is made up of a
pasty hydrate lime;
pozzolanic ash and
lightweight pumice from a
nearby volcano; and
fist-sized pieces of rock.
In this, it is very similar
to modern concrete. The high
tensile strength appears to
come from the way the
concrete was applied in very
small amounts and then was
tamped down to remove excess
water at all stages. This
appears to have prevented
the air bubbles that
normally form in concrete as
the material dries, thus
increasing its strength
enormously.
As the best preserved
example of monumental Roman
architecture, the Pantheon
was enormously influential
on European and American
architects from the
Renaissance to the 19th
century. Numerous city
halls, universities and
public libraries echo its
portico-and-dome structure.
Examples of notable
buildings influenced by the
Pantheon include Thomas
Jefferson's Rotunda at the
University of Virginia, Low
Library at Columbia
University, New York, and
the State Library of
Victoria in Melbourne,
Australia. Some changes have
been made in the interior
decoration, however. Much
fine marble has been removed
in the course of the
centuries, and there are
capitals from some of the
pilasters in the British
Museum.
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