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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. Although the identity of the
Pantheon's primary architect remains uncertain, it is
largely assigned to Apollodorus of Damascus.
The interior of the Pantheon in the 18th century, painted by
Giovanni Paolo PaniniThe 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 coffers for the concrete dome were
poured in molds, probably on the temporary scaffolding; the
oculus admits the only light (and rain).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. Paul the Deacon
records the spoliation of the building by the Emperor
Constans II, who visited Rome in July 663:
remaining at Rome twelve days he pulled down everything that
in ancient times had been made of metal for the ornament of
the city, to such an extent that he even stripped off the
roof of the church [of the blessed Mary] which at one time
was called the Pantheon, and had been founded in honor of
all the gods and was now by the consent of the former rulers
the place of all the martyrs; and he took away from there
the bronze tiles and sent them with all the other ornaments
to Constantinople. The only other 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 Umberto'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. Antoine Desgodetz' elevation of the Pantheon in Les
edifices antiques de Rome, Paris, 1779: engravings served
designers who never travelled to Rome.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 lower parts of the interior of the
Pantheon are richly decorated in coloured marbles; the
coffered upper parts are unadorned concrete.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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