All 50 Uses of
pantheon
in
Angels & Demons
- Recently the New York Times had reported the eerie Masonic ties of countless famous men-Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the Duke of Kent, Peter Sellers, Irving Berlin, Prince Philip, Louis Armstrong, as well as a pantheon of well-known modern-day industrialists and banking magnates.†
Chpt 11-12
- Believe it or not, Raphael's buried in the Pantheon.†
Chpt 55-56 *
- The Pantheon?†
Chpt 55-56
- The Raphael at the Pantheon.†
Chpt 55-56
- Langdon had to admit, the Pantheon was not what he had expected for the placement of the first marker.†
Chpt 55-56
- Even in the 1600s, the Pantheon, with its tremendous, holed dome, was one of the best known sites in Rome.†
Chpt 55-56
- Is the Pantheon even a church?†
Chpt 55-56
- But do you really think the first cardinal could be killed at the Pantheon?†
Chpt 55-56
- Killing a cardinal at the Pantheon would certainly open some eyes.†
Chpt 55-56
- But how does this guy expect to kill someone at the Pantheon and get away unnoticed?†
Chpt 55-56
- And you're certain Raphael is buried inside the Pantheon?†
Chpt 55-56
- Is the Pantheon far?†
Chpt 55-56
- Actually, there's probably no more earthly place in Rome than the Pantheon.†
Chpt 55-56
- As a student of architecture, Langdon had been amazed to learn that the dimensions of the Pantheon's main chamber were a tribute to Gaea-the goddess of the Earth.†
Chpt 55-56
- The famous circular opening in the Pantheon's roof.†
Chpt 55-56
- He had never heard the term "demon's hole," but he did recall a famous sixth-century critique of the Pantheon whose words seemed oddly appropriate now.†
Chpt 55-56
- The Venerable Bede had once written that the hole in the Pantheon's roof had been bored by demons trying to escape the building when it was consecrated by Boniface IV.†
Chpt 55-56
- And I have done this to stake out the Pantheon based on the testimony of some American I have never met who has just interpreted a fourhundredyear-old poem.†
Chpt 55-56
- All I know is that the information we found refers to Raphael's tomb, and Raphael's tomb is inside the Pantheon.†
Chpt 55-56
- The Pantheon is your one chance to catch this guy.†
Chpt 55-56
- If the Pantheon is the right spot, we can follow the pathway to the other markers.†
Chpt 55-56
- Langdon's realization that the Pantheon was the first altar of science had been a bittersweet moment.†
Chpt 55-56
- The Vatican had all the statues in the Pantheon removed and destroyed in the late 1800s.†
Chpt 55-56
- The Pantheon.†
Chpt 55-56
- Mr. Langdon, when you told me you would explain the situation en route, I assumed I would be approaching the Pantheon with a clear idea of why my men are here.†
Chpt 55-56
- Have you been to the Pantheon, Ms.†
Chpt 55-56
- The Pantheon is a single room.†
Chpt 55-56
- Can you give me one plausible scenario of how someone could kill a cardinal inside the Pantheon?†
Chpt 55-56
- How does one even get a hostage past the guards into the Pantheon in the first place?†
Chpt 55-56
- "Or the killer drugs the cardinal," Vittoria said, "brings him to the Pantheon in a wheelchair like some old tourist.†
Chpt 55-56
- Langdon felt himself sweating now in his Harris tweed in the backseat of the Alpha Romeo, which was idling in Piazza de la Concorde, three blocks from the Pantheon.†
Chpt 57-58
- Inside the Pantheon!†
Chpt 57-58
- Hi, honey, I'm standing in the Pantheon.†
Chpt 57-58
- It takes you directly to the Pantheon.†
Chpt 57-58
- Two blocks from the Pantheon, Langdon and Vittoria approached on foot past a line of taxis, their drivers sleeping in the front seats.†
Chpt 59-60
- As they rounded the corner into Piazza della Rotunda, the Pantheon rose before them.†
Chpt 59-60
- The Pantheon.†
Chpt 59-60
- Outside the entrance to the Pantheon, four armed Roman policemen stood at attention just as Olivetti had predicted.†
Chpt 59-60
- He had been here many times beneath the Pantheon's oculus and stood before the grave of the great Raphael.†
Chpt 59-60
- "Hope these guys are good," Vittoria said, eyeing the scattered tourists entering the Pantheon.†
Chpt 59-60
- The air inside the Pantheon was cool and damp, heavy with history.†
Chpt 61-62
- Sadly, Langdon knew they once contained statues of the Olympian gods, but the pagan sculptures had been destroyed when the Vatican converted the Pantheon to a Christian church.†
Chpt 61-62
- He was back in the Pantheon.†
Chpt 61-62
- "The Pantheon," the man declared, launching into his memorized spiel, "was built by Marcus Agrippa in 27 B.C." "Yes," Langdon interjected, "and rebuilt by Hadrian in 119 A.D." It was the world's largest free-standing dome until 1960 when it was eclipsed by the Superdome in New Orleans!†
Chpt 61-62
- And a fifth-century theologian once called the Pantheon the House of the Devil, warning that the hole in the roof was an entrance for demons!†
Chpt 61-62
- Langdon found himself scanning the Pantheon for reporters.†
Chpt 61-62
- Langdon's progress around his side of the Pantheon was being hampered somewhat by the guide on his heels, now continuing his tireless narration as Langdon prepared to check the final alcove.†
Chpt 61-62
- Raphael's body was relocated to the Pantheon in 1758.†
Chpt 61-62
- Back then, the Pantheon had nothing at all to do with Raphael!†
Chpt 61-62
- To my knowledge the Pantheon is unique.†
Chpt 61-62
Definition:
-
(pantheon as in: pantheon of great writers) a list of the most important of something -- such as great writers