The Pantheon in Rome as it stands today was rebuilt under Emperor Hadrian sometime between about 118 and 128 CE, after earlier versions on the site had been damaged by fire and the elements. The surviving inscription on the façade attributes the original temple to Marcus Agrippa, which has led scholars to discuss a first temple on the site dating to 27–25 BCE, with the Hadrianic reconstruction forming the present monument. The building has undergone later alterations, especially in the early 3rd century, and was converted into a Christian church in 609 CE.
