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In 1744, King [[Louis XV of France|Louis XV]] vowed that if he recovered from smallpox, he would replace the ruined church of the Abbey of Sainte Geneviève with a new one. He recovered, and construction on the Pantheon began in 1755 and it was completed in 1780. The building stands 60 meters above the Seine, and is the high point of [[Paris]]' left bank.
In 1744, King [[Louis XV of France|Louis XV]] vowed that if he recovered from smallpox, he would replace the ruined church of the Abbey of Sainte Geneviève with a new one. He recovered, and construction on the [[Pantheon (Paris)|Pantheon]] began in 1755 and it was completed in 1780. The building stands 60 meters above the Seine, and is the high point of [[Paris]]' left bank.


Although the building began as a church, it has changed hands several times over the years, from church to state. In April 1791, the remains of Mirabeau were placed here - turning the building into a sort of secular mausoleum. Later, when his secret correspondence with the king was revealed, [[Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau|Mirabeau]]'s remains were removed.*<br />
Although the building began as a church, it has changed hands several times over the years, from church to state. In April 1791, the remains of Mirabeau were placed here - turning the building into a sort of secular mausoleum. Later, when his secret correspondence with the king was revealed, [[Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau|Mirabeau]]'s remains were removed.*<br />

Revision as of 00:49, 24 July 2015

In 1744, King Louis XV vowed that if he recovered from smallpox, he would replace the ruined church of the Abbey of Sainte Geneviève with a new one. He recovered, and construction on the Pantheon began in 1755 and it was completed in 1780. The building stands 60 meters above the Seine, and is the high point of Paris' left bank.

Although the building began as a church, it has changed hands several times over the years, from church to state. In April 1791, the remains of Mirabeau were placed here - turning the building into a sort of secular mausoleum. Later, when his secret correspondence with the king was revealed, Mirabeau's remains were removed.*
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* I bet he was livid. In fact, if he'd still had a grave, he'd probably have been spinning in it.
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Today the building houses the bodies of some of France's greatest heroes - including Voltaire, Marie Curie, Victor Hugo.