refined Pantheon,_Rome Essential Information, explanation, recent texts, monographs, and relevant links.
Essential Information & explanations, latest texts & monographs on Pantheon,_Rome.


Pantheon, Rome

The Pantheon, Rome The Pantheon is a building in Rome which was originally built as a temple to all the gods of the Roman state religion, but has been a Christian church since the 7th century AD. It is the only building from the Greco-Roman world which is completely intact and which has been in continuous use throughout its history. The original Pantheon was built in 27 BC under the Roman Republic, 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, meaning "Marcus Agrippa, son of Lucius, Consul for the third time, built this." In fact, Agrippa's Pantheon was destroyed by fire in 80 AD, and the Pantheon was completely rebuilt in about 125 AD, during the reign of the Emperor Hadrian, as date-stamps on the bricks reveal. Presumably some or all of the facade, including the inscription, survived from the old Pantheon. The interior of the Pantheon Hadrian was a cosmopolitan emperor who travelled 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 sort 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. The building is circular with a portico (sometimes also called by the Greek term pronaos) of three ranks of huge granite Corinthian columns (8 in the first rank and 16 in total) under a pediment opening into the rotunda, under a coffered dome, with a central opening (oculus), open to the sky. The height to the oculus and the diameter of the interior circle are the same (43 metres), so the whole interior would fit exactly within a cube. In 609 AD the Byzantine emperor Phocas gave the building to Pope Boniface IV, who reconsecrated it as a Christian church, the Church of the Mary and all the Martyr Saints (Santa Maria ad Martyres), which title it retains. 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. The building's consecration as a church saved it from the vandalism and deliberate destruction 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. Under the portico of the Pantheon 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 wife, Queen Margharita. Although Italy has been a republic since 1947, 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. 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. See also: Pantheon

This article is adapted from from Wikipedia All Wikipedia article text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

The Pantheon : Design, Meaning, and Progeny, With a New Foreword by William L. MacDonald

The Pantheon (Great Building Feats) by Lesley A. Dutemple

The Pantheon or Ancient History of the Gods of Greece and Rome by Edward Baldwin

Il Pantheon : architettura e antiquaria nel Settecento a Roma by Susanna Pasquali

Der Ruhm des Pantheon by Die Museen

Bibliographic Essays on the Architecture of the Ancient City of Rome: The City of Rome, Part 31: Temples--The Pantheon by James Phillips

Pantheon by Flaminio Lucchini

The Pantheon or Ancient History of the Gods of Greece and Rome by William Godwin





Relevant Links
1879
1890s
19th Century
Ability
Abnormal psychology
Abraham Maslow
Addiction
Anthropology
Applied psychology
Aristotle
Artificial consciousness
Artificial consciousness NPOV
Attitude
B.F. Skinner
Behavior
Behaviorism
Biological psychology
Brain
Buddhism
Captology
Clinical psychology.
Cognition
Cognitive neuropsychology
Cognitive neuroscience
Cognitive psychology
Cognitive science
Cognitivism
Comparative Psychology
Complex system
Computer_science
Conditioning
Consciousness-only
Consciousness
Counseling_psycholog
Critical psychology
Critical_theory
Decision_making
Developmental psychology
Economics
Educational psychology
Emotion
Emotional_clearing
Ethology
Evolutionary psychology
Existentialism
Experimental analysis
Experimental psychology
Face perception
Forensic psychology
Functionalism
Game theory
Gender role
Gender studies
Gestalt psychology
History
Humanism
Humanistic psychology
India
Individual_differenc
Industrial and organizational psychology
John_B._Watson
Jung
Language
Language acquisition Learning
Linguistics
List of psychological topics List of psychologist Literary theory Literature
Marketing
Media studies
Medicinal psychology
Memory
Mental illness
Motivation
Nature_versus_nurtur
Nervous_system
Neuro-linguistic programming
Neuroeconomics
Neuropsychology
Neuroscience
Noam_Chomsky
Parapsychology
Pathology
Perception
Personal relationship
Personality
Personality psychology
Philosophy of mind
Philosophy of psychology
Political_science
Popular psychology
Positive psychology
Prediction
Problem solving
Psyche
Psychiatry
Psychoanalysis
Psychohistory
Psycholinguistics
Psychological research
Psychological testing
Psychometrics
Psychopharmacology
Psychophysics
Psychophysiology
Psychotherapy
Qualitative psychology
Radical behaviorism
Reasoning
Reinforcement
Response
Self help
Sexuality
Shyness
Sigmund reud
Social cognition
Social influence
Social psychology
Sociology
Socionics
Statistical inference
Stimulus
Structuralism
Systems theory
The_senses
Thinking
Thomas Willis
Transpersonalpsychology
Wilhelm Wundt
William James
Chromosomes and Genomics
Psychology
Enginering Systems 1
Mathematics
Ancient Knowledge
Brilliant Mathematicians
Classic Authors
Fear No Exams
Nexus
Caracters & countries
Pairs & Twins
April 9

Kitchen Knowledge
Hollywood Icons
Medical Update d06
Neoplasms and Nervous System
Psychology
Science Plus
Science & Computers
t1 , w2

Bibliographic Resources
Updates and comments at Essential Facts blog
Are you interested in Feng Shui?
Price Theory Resources
Fructose, Sucrose, Glucose Core Bibliography
World Class Photographers
Some philosophical movements
Top PDF and eBook Downloads


Note again ... some material here is adapted from from Wikipedia All Wikipedia article text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

©2004, All applicable rights reserved as appropriate.