Panthéon and St-Étienne-du-Mont |
Panthéon |
The Panthéon's interior is well worth a visit for its oddly secular frescoes and sculptures, and monumental design, originally conceived as a combination of the virtues of Classical Greek and Gothic construction. You can also see a working model of Foucault's Pendulum swinging from the dome (the original is under glass at the Musée des Arts et Métiers). The French physicist Léon Foucault devised the experiment, conducted at the Panthéon in 1851, to demonstrate vividly the rotation of the earth. While the pendulum appeared to rotate over a 24-hour period, it was in fact the earth beneath it turning. The demonstration wowed the scientific establishment and the public alike, with huge crowds turning up to watch the ground move beneath their feet.
Sloping gently downhill from the main portico of the Panthéon, broad rue Soufflot entices you west towards the Luxembourg gardens. On the east side of the Panthéon, however, peeping over the walls of the Lycée Henri IV, look out for the lone Gothic tower which is all that remains of the earlier church of Ste-Geneviève. Ste-Geneviève's remains, and those of two seventeenth-century literary giants who didn't make the Panthéon, Pascal and Racine, lie close at hand in the church of St-Étienne-du-Mont, on the corner of rue Clovis. The church's facade is a bit of a hotch-potch, but it conceals a stunning and highly unexpected interior. The transition from Flamboyant Gothic choir to sixteenth-century nave would be startling if the eye wasn't distracted by a strange high-level catwalk which springs from pillar to pillar before transforming itself into a rood screen which arches across the width of the nave. This last feature is highly unusual in itself; most French rood screens fell victim to Protestant iconoclasts, reformers or revolutionaries. Exceptionally tall windows flood the church with light, and the cloister has some good seventeenth-century stained glass.
Further down rue Clovis, a huge piece of Philippe-Auguste's twelfth-century city walls emerges from among the houses.
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