Pantheon - translation to γερμανικά
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Pantheon - translation to γερμανικά

MAUSOLEUM IN PARIS FOR THE MOST DISTINGUISHED FRENCH PEOPLE
Pantheon, Paris; The Panthéon; Pantheon (Paris); Paris Pantheon; Panthéon de Paris; Pantheon de Paris; Panthéon (Paris); Pantheon, France; Le Panthéon; Le Pantheon; Panthéon, Paris; Église Sainte-Geneviève; French Pantheon
  • Daguerreotype by [[Alphonse Louis Poitevin]], 1842
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  • Design for the cupola by [[Antoine-Jean Gros]] (1812). Napoleon is at the bottom right. (Now in the [[Carnavalet Museum]])
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  • Funeral of [[Victor Hugo]] on 1 June 1885
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  • Painting on the Pendentive, depicting ''Death'' by [[François Gérard]] (1821–1837)
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  • The Panthéon at night
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Pantheon         
n. pantheon, temple for the gods; building in which the famous dead of a nation are entombed or commemorated
pantheon      
n. Gottestempel; Pantheon
Greek mythology         
  • 540 BC}}, [[British Museum]], London
  • Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio]], circa 1601–1602.
  • Metis]], on the right, Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth, assists, circa 550–525 BC ([[Musée du Louvre]], Paris)
  • Chimera]], central medallion of a [[Roman mosaic]] from [[Autun]], [[Musée Rolin]], 2nd to 3rd century AD
  • [[Cicero]] saw himself as the defender of the established order, despite his personal skepticism concerning myth and his inclination towards more philosophical conceptions of divinity.
  • [[Dionysus]] with [[satyr]]s. Interior of a cup painted by the [[Brygos Painter]], [[Cabinet des Médailles]].
  • [[Demeter]] and [[Metanira]] in a detail on an Apulian red-figure hydria, circa 340 BC ([[Altes Museum]], Berlin)
  • ''El Juicio de Paris'']] by [[Enrique Simonet]], 1904. Paris is holding the golden apple on his right hand while surveying the goddesses in a calculative manner.
  • [[Heracles]] with his baby [[Telephus]] ([[Louvre Museum]], Paris)
  • ''[[The Lament for Icarus]]'' (1898) by [[Herbert James Draper]]
  • copy of the lost original by Michelangelo]].
  • Apollo (early Imperial Roman copy of a fourth-century Greek original, [[Louvre]] Museum)
  • [[Max Müller]] is regarded as one of the founders of comparative mythology. In his ''Comparative Mythology'' (1867) Müller analysed the "disturbing" similarity between the mythologies of "savage races" with those of the early Europeans.
  • 20 BC}}
  • Plato in [[Raphael]]'s ''[[The School of Athens]]''
  • Prometheus Unbound]]'', and ''[[Prometheus Pyrphoros]]''.
  • The Roman poet [[Virgil]], here depicted in the fifth-century manuscript, the ''[[Vergilius Romanus]]'', preserved details of Greek mythology in many of his writings.
  • Antiquity]]—is often said to epitomize for modern viewers the spirit of the Renaissance.<ref name="Br" />
  • In ''The Rage of Achilles'' by [[Giovanni Battista Tiepolo]] (1757, Fresco, 300 x 300&nbsp;cm, Villa Valmarana, [[Vicenza]]) [[Achilles]] is outraged that [[Agamemnon]] would threaten to seize his warprize, [[Briseis]], and he draws his sword to kill Agamemnon. The sudden appearance of the goddess Athena, who, in this fresco, has grabbed Achilles by the hair, prevents the act of violence.
MYTHS OF ANCIENT GREECE
GreekMythology; Greek Goddess; Greek myth; Greek mythological; Greek legend; Ancient greek deities; Olympic god; Greek pantheon; Greek Myth; Greek mythologgy; Greek god goddess; Greek Pantheon; Greek Early Beliefs; Early Greek Beliefs; Homeric gods; The greek pantheon; Greek Mythology heroes; Greek mythology gods; Ancient Greek mythology; The stories of the Greek religion; Greek Mythology; Mythology of ancient Greece; Story of Greek Mythology; Archaeology and Greek mythology; Greek mythology history; Greek Gods and Goddesses of Greek mythology; Greek myths and legends; Greek legends; Greek myths; Ancient Greek Mythology; Ancient Greece Mythology; Mythology of Greece; Greek mythos; Mythology of Cyprus; Legends from greece; Nikostratos Greco-Roman Warrior; Draft:Greek Mythology; Ancient Greek myth; Greek mythological tradition; Ελληνική μυθολογία
die griechische Mythologie

Ορισμός

Pantheon
·noun A temple dedicated to all the gods; especially, the building so called at Rome.
II. Pantheon ·noun The collective gods of a people, or a work treating of them; as, a divinity of the Greek pantheon.

Βικιπαίδεια

Panthéon

The Panthéon (French: [pɑ̃.te.ɔ̃] (listen), from the Classical Greek word πάνθειον, pántheion, '[temple] to all the gods') is a monument in the 5th arrondissement of Paris, France. It stands in the Latin Quarter, atop the Montagne Sainte-Geneviève, in the centre of the Place du Panthéon, which was named after it. The edifice was built between 1758 and 1790, from designs by Jacques-Germain Soufflot, at the behest of King Louis XV of France; the king intended it as a church dedicated to Saint Genevieve, Paris's patron saint, whose relics were to be housed in the church. Neither Soufflot nor Louis XV lived to see the church completed.

By the time the construction was finished, the French Revolution had started; the National Constituent Assembly voted in 1791 to transform the Church of Saint Genevieve into a mausoleum for the remains of distinguished French citizens, modelled on the Pantheon in Rome which had been used in this way since the 17th century. The first panthéonisé was Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau, although his remains were removed from the building a few years later. The Panthéon was twice restored to church usage in the course of the 19th century—although Soufflot's remains were transferred inside it in 1829—until the French Third Republic finally decreed the building's exclusive use as a mausoleum in 1881. The placement of Victor Hugo's remains in the crypt in 1885 was its first entombment in over 50 years.

The successive changes in the Panthéon's purpose resulted in modifications of the pedimental sculptures and the capping of the dome by a cross or a flag; some of the originally existing windows were blocked up with masonry in order to give the interior a darker and more funereal atmosphere, which compromised somewhat Soufflot's initial attempt at combining the lightness and brightness of the Gothic cathedral with classical principles. The architecture of the Panthéon is an early example of Neoclassicism, surmounted by a dome that owes some of its character to Bramante's Tempietto.

In 1851, Léon Foucault conducted a demonstration of diurnal motion at the Panthéon by suspending a pendulum from the ceiling, a copy of which is still visible today. As of December 2021 the remains of 81 people (75 men and six women) had been transferred to the Panthéon. More than half of all the panthéonisations were made under Napoleon's rule during the First Empire.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για Pantheon
1. Verlag Pantheon Books, New York 2006. 47' S., 30.– $.
2. Ach damals lebte Helen Wolff noch, die Frau von Kurt Wolff von Pantheon Press.
3. Andreas Rosenfelder hat sich die Kabarett–Veranstaltung zur Verleihung des "Prix Pantheon 2006" in Bonn angesehen.
4. Denn selbst wenn sie den kassenträchtigen Hauruck–Regisseur von "Die Insel" partout nicht in den Pantheon ihrer schöngeistigen Meister lassen wollen, so erfüllt Bay genau betrachtet doch alle Mitgliedsbedingungen.
5. Die Welt, 10.07.2006 Tilman Krause mag kaum glauben, dass sich Frankreichs Präsident Jacques Chirac weigert, die Überreste des Hauptmann Dreyfus im Pantheon aufzunehmen: "Dieser Überwinder des Pariatums durch Inanspruchnahme des Rechts, gehört selbstverständlich ins Pantheon." Ulf Meyer begutachtet das Musee d‘Art Moderne in Luxemburg, das Ieoh Ming Pei für das Herzogtum auf den Mauern des alten Forts Thüngen errichten ließ. Peter Dittmar kündigt an, dass Sotheby‘s die 1623 gedruckte First–Folio–Ausgabe von "Mr.