National Pantheon of Venezuela explained

National Pantheon of Venezuela
Established:27 March 1874
Country:Venezuela
Location:Caracas
Type:Public
Owner:Venezuelan government

The National Pantheon of Venezuela (Panteón Nacional de Venezuela) is a final resting place for national heroes. The Pantheon (Latin Pantheon,[1] from Greek Pantheon, meaning "Temple of all the Gods") was created in the 1870s on the site of the ruined Santísima Trinidad church from 1744 on the northern edge of the old town of Caracas, Venezuela.

The entire central nave is dedicated to Simón Bolívar, with the altar's place taken by the hero's bronze sarcophagus, while lesser luminaries are relegated to the aisles. The national pantheon's vault is covered with 1930s paintings depicting scenes from Bolívar's life, and the huge crystal chandelier glittering overhead was installed in 1883 on the centennial of his birth. The Pantheon was reopened in 2013 after a 3 year long process of expansion and restoration.

Gallery

Image:Santísima Trinidad Church.jpg|Santísima Trinidad Church, 1874Image:the old facade of the National Pantheon.jpg|Old facade of the National Pantheon, 1912File:Panteón Nacional de Venezuela desde el MINCI.jpg|Panteón Nacional de Venezuela Image:Monument to Francisco de Miranda - National Pantheon.jpg|Cenotaph of Francisco de MirandaImage:Sucre´s Monument - National Pantheon.jpg|Cenotaph of Antonio José de SucreImage:Páez sculpture - National Pantheon.jpg|Monument to José Antonio PáezImage:Andrés Bello Monument - National Pantheon.jpg|Cenotaph of Andrés BelloImage:José María Vargas statue - National Pantheon.jpg|Monument to José María VargasImage:Santiago Mariño statue - National Pantheon.jpg|Monument to Santiago MariñoImage:José Gregorio Monagas monument - National Pantheon.jpg|Monument to José Gregorio MonagasImage:1st Republic Monument - National Pantheon.jpg|First Republic MonumentImage:Federation Monument - National Pantheon.jpg|Federation's Monument

List of people who are buried at the Pantheon

The following personalities in the preceding list are not buried in the Pantheon because their remains have not been found, but it has been decreed by the Venezuelan authorities they should be:[4]

The following person is not buried in the Pantheon but an empty tomb is kept there, next to Simon Bolivar's in the hopes that his remains will return to his homeland:

Monuments

Central Nave

Right Nave

Left Nave

Cenotaphs

Works of Tito Salas

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Rarely Pantheum. This rare usage appears in Pliny's Natural History (XXXVI.38) in describing this edifice: Agrippae Pantheum decoravit Diogenes Atheniensis; in columnis templi eius Caryatides probantur inter pauca operum, sicut in fastigio posita signa, sed propter altitudinem loci minus celebrata.
  2. Web site: Trasladan al Panteón Nacional restos de la Negra Hipólita, Matea y Apacuana. Runrunes. March 8, 2017. es. February 5, 2022.
  3. Web site: Restos de Hipólita y Matea serán trasladados al Panteón Nacional. March 1, 2017. es. February 5, 2022. El Estímulo. Caracas.
  4. Panteón Nacional, Miriam Morillo, http://www.simon-bolivar.org/bolivar/panteon_nacional.html