Panthéon
Landmark
About Panthéon
The Panthéon functions as France's Westminster Abbey, housing the tombs of 81 luminaries in its crypt including Marie Curie (the only woman based on her own achievements), Voltaire, and Rousseau. The neoclassical dome interior surprises with massive scale and José María Sert's dark frescoes depicting Saint Geneviève, while Foucault's 67-meter pendulum swings hypnotically in the center, knocking over metal pins as Earth rotates beneath it.
Your visit starts in the soaring nave where the pendulum dominates-plan to watch it for several minutes as the physics become mesmerizing. The crypt below feels like wandering through French intellectual history, with simple stone tombs in candlelit chambers. The dome climb involves 206 steps but rewards with unobstructed views toward Notre-Dame and across the 5th arrondissement's Haussmann rooftops.
Most visitors rush through in 30 minutes and miss the building's story. The bronze doors depicting scenes from French history deserve attention, and the model of the pendulum explains the elegant physics better than the signage. Skip the overpriced audio guide-the plaques provide sufficient context. The dome climb costs extra but offers Paris's best lesser-known panorama, especially dramatic in late afternoon light.
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