The Battle of the Pantheon Dome occurred in 1943 when the French Resistance fighter Sean Devlin destroyed a massive German howitzer mounted atop the Panthéon in Paris during World War II.
Clinical psychologist Felix Kwong, a leader of the French Resistance, theorized that the Germans had installed the massive howitzer atop the Panthéon due to its phallic shape, which he believed was meant to project German dominance over Paris and its women. He sent Devlin to destroy the howitzer and show the impotence of the German occupiers. Devlin fought his way into the historic building, killing several soldiers before reaching the top of the dome. Once there, he planted charges on the "Uber gun" and destroyed it, removing the perceived symbol of German power in that section of Paris.