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Category of Astronomical Heritage: tangible immovable
The Pantheon, Rome, Italy

Format: Short Description (ICOMOS-IAU Case Study format)

Presentation

Geographical position 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 1
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2011-08-22 11:08:01
    Author(s): Giulio Magli

Piazza della Rotonda, Rome, Italy.

 

Location 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 2
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2012-04-30 11:19:44
    Author(s): Giulio Magli with contributions by Clive Ruggles

Latitude 41° 53′ 55″ N, longitude 12° 28′ 37″ E. Elevation 15m above mean sea level.

 

General description 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 1
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2011-08-22 11:08:01
    Author(s): Giulio Magli

The Pantheon is the one of best-preserved buildings of the Roman period in Rome and shares with the Coliseum the title of most famous.

 

Brief inventory 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 3
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2012-08-02 19:45:57
    Author(s): Giulio Magli with contributions by Clive Ruggles

The Pantheon as preserved today is composed of a rectangular pronaos (portico) with three lines of granite columns fronting a circular building. The latter is designed as a huge hemispherical dome (43.3m in diameter) built over a cylinder of the same diameter and as high as the radius. There is a circular opening (oculus) 8.3m wide in the top of the cupola. The wall in the interior is divided into sixteen regularly spaced sectors: the northernmost contains the entrance door while the rest contain niches and columned recesses in alternation.

The oculus provides the only source of natural light for the building, since direct sunlight can never enter through the north-facing entrance. As a consequence, the interior gives the visitor a strange impression of coldness and dark, except on sunny days when one’s attention is drawn to the huge beam of sunlight entering through the oculus.

Fig. 1: Sunlight entering the Pantheon through the oculus. Photograph © Giulio Magli

 

History 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 1
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2011-08-22 11:08:01
    Author(s): Giulio Magli

The Pantheon was built by Agrippa around 27 BC under Augustus’s rule, but its present form is due to Hadrian, c. AD 128.

 

Cultural and symbolic dimension 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 4
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2012-08-02 19:47:54
    Author(s): Giulio Magli with contributions by Clive Ruggles

The Pantheon has exerted a tremendous influence on architecture since the Renaissance; however—apart from a brief mention by Pliny and one by Cassius Dio, writing some 70 years after Hadrian, who makes a cryptic statement about the monument being the temple of all the gods—no written source tells us why the Pantheon was built or how it was used. However, there exists convincing evidence that this monument was strongly connected with the solar cycle during the course of the year, and that at least one of its main functions (if not its main purpose) was to associate the sun with the power of Rome and to reinforce the emperor’s divine right to rule.

The monument acts like a giant sundial with a dark interior, a type well known in the Roman world. During the winter months the beam illuminates only the vaulted dome. However, at noon on the equinoxes it just touches the base of the dome. After the spring equinox it starts descending and on the days around Apr 21 (as well as the symmetric ones in late August) the beam of sunlight fully illuminates the entrance at noon, creating a spectacular hierophany. Closer to the summer solstice, the beam passes across the floor during the middle of the day, although it never reaches the centre.

The spring equinox was connected with the apotheosis of the emperor, while Apr 21 was the traditional date of the foundation of Rome as stated, for example, by Ovid. (In Hadrian’s times the differences between the Julian Date in use and the ‘correct’ Gregorian date was still minimal.) By entering ‘with the sun’ during celebrations on this day, the emperor would succeed in ‘placing Rome among the Gods’. In this and other ways, it is likely that the Pantheon encapsulated Hadrian’s ideas about the relationship between Roman religion and power.

Fig. 2: The main hierophany occurring in the Pantheon on April 21, when the beam of sunlight illuminates the entrance fully at noon. Photograph © Giulio Magli

 

Authenticity and integrity 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 1
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2011-08-22 11:08:01
    Author(s): Giulio Magli

The architectural alignments giving rise to the solar phenomena in the Pantheon are unaltered since the time of Hadrian’s reconstruction. The shift in the sun’s position owing to the change in the obliquity of the ecliptic since that time is almost negligible.

 

Management and use

Present use 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 1
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2011-08-22 11:08:01
    Author(s): Giulio Magli

The site is open to the public, free of charge.

 

State of conservation 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 1
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2011-08-22 11:08:01
    Author(s): Giulio Magli

Very good.

 

Main threats or potential threats 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 1
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2011-08-22 11:08:01
    Author(s): Giulio Magli

No threats known.

 

Protection 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 1
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2011-08-22 11:08:01
    Author(s): Giulio Magli

The Pantheon is on the World Heritage List as part of the “Historic Centre of Rome” World Heritage Site (no. 91).

 

Archaeological / historical / heritage research 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 2
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2012-04-30 11:25:25
    Author(s): Giulio Magli with contributions by Clive Ruggles

There is a substantial literature relating to the Pantheon. See the bibliography and references therein for research relating to astronomy.

 

Management, interpretation and outreach 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 1
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2011-08-22 11:08:01
    Author(s): Giulio Magli

The monument is the property of the Italian State. It is entrusted to the ‘Soprintendenza per i beni architettonici e paesaggistici’ of the Roman administration authority, which is responsible for its maintenance.

 

References

Bibliography (books and published articles) 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 2
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2012-04-30 11:27:57
    Author(s): Giulio Magli with contributions by Clive Ruggles

  • Oudet, J.F. (1992). ’Le Panthéon de Rome à la lumière de l’equinoxe‘, in Readings in Archaeoastronomy, edited by S. Iwaniszewski, pp. 25-52. Warsaw: State Archaeological Museum.

 

Links to external sites 
  • InfoTheme: The Classical World
    Entity: 28
    Subentity: 1
    Version: 2
    Status: PUB
    Date: 2012-04-30 11:28:53
    Author(s): Giulio Magli with contributions by Clive Ruggles

 

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