The Doors of the Roman Pantheon are the main entrance bronze doors to the rotunda of the Roman Pantheon.
As a monument of applied arts, the exact date of their creation has remained open to speculation for centuries, with scholars attempting to determine the age of the doors and whether they are contemporaneous with the Pantheon.
The doors, measuring wide and high, consist of two leaves.[1] The panels and lintels of the doors are made of cast bronze. Each leaf pivots on pins installed in the floor at the bottom and in the architrave at the top. The doors, in form and detail, resemble the ancient bronze doors of Rome, such as those in the Temple of Romulus and the Curia Julia.
Bronze pilasters with fluting, surmounted by Tuscan capitals, flank both sides of the doors. These capitals are adorned with egg-and-dart motifs of the Ionic order—bronze casting in the form of egg-shaped ornaments and arrowheads. The pilasters are connected by an entablature composed of a concise frieze. Above the doors, on a wooden frame, sits a transom—six identical rectangular vertical bronze lattice panels with a simple and fairly common ancient pattern. This structure is part of the building's ventilation system, allowing air to flow inside even when the doors are closed.
It is uncertain whether these doors are contemporaneous with the Pantheon, with opinions both for and against. Some researchers of the Pantheon believed these doors to be genuinely ancient, not stolen by conquerors, Eastern Emperors (with Constans II exporting bronze), or medieval Popes. Johann Joachim Winckelmann was also confident in the ancient age of the doors, as he stated in his work Storia dell’arte nell’antichità. Doubts have been expressed[2] about the ancient age of the doors, with the noted disproportion of the doors to comply with the prescriptions of Vitruvius suggesting their manufacture in the Modern Age. There have been suggestions that the original doors were looted during the Sack of Rome by King Gaiseric of the Vandals in the 5th century, as the Vandals' booty included copper stripped from the roof of the Temple of Jupiter, as mentioned by Procopius of Caesarea.[3]
There is also a version suggesting that the doors only partially contain ancient elements, with some elements unquestionably more recent. There is evidence that during restoration work on the Pantheon in 1759, the doors were repaired because they were damaged due to a fall during an attempt to remove them two years earlier, resulting in the death of the unfortunate master mason Corsini.[4]
Researchers doubt that the wooden beam frame, to which the bronze parts of the doors are attached, could be of ancient age and lean towards the belief that the doors underwent substantial reconstruction in the Middle Ages or during the time of Pope Urban VIII.
For 241 years, the right door remained completely blocked, and the left one opened only partially. In 1998, after careful examination, the doors were slightly raised using specially made plates coated with a layer of soap. The pins were replaced, and the doors became fully functional.[5]