It is named after the best-known saint buried in it,
Hippolytus of Rome, from early in the 3rd century, recorded as a priest, bishop, soldier, anti-heretical writer and martyr in the ancient literary sources. He was exiled to
Sardinia with
Pope Pontianus, both dying in the mines. The
Depositio martyrum entry for 13 August records that Hippolytus was buried on the via Tiburtina and Pontianus in the
catacomb of Callixtus on
via Appia, both on 13 August. Hippolytus is remembered in the poem that
Pope Damasus I had engraved by
Furius Dionysius Filocalus, several fragments of which have been discovered in the pavement of the
Basilica of St. John Lateran. The Christian writer and poet
Prudentius, who visited the cemetery at the beginning of the
5th century, speaks of it in the eleventh poem of his
Peristephanon: he describes the underground crypt where the martyr was buried, the fresco portraying him and the ornaments enriching his tomb, along with a three-aisled basilica above ground, of which today no definite remains have been found. The 5th century
Martyrologium Hieronymianum mentions the martyrs Concordia (22 February) and Genesius (24 August) as both also being buried in the catacomb. The 7th century
Notitia ecclesiarum urbis Romae adds two more martyrs, Tryphonia and Cyrilla, but no traces remain of their monuments in the catacomb. The first to explore the catacomb was
Antonio Bosio around the end of the 16th century, who is thought to have dug through to it from the neighbouring
catacomb of San Lorenzo. At the start of the 18th century
Marcantonio Boldetti recognised the cemetery on the via Tiburtina as the catacomb of Sant'Ippolito based on documents by 12th-13th notaries which called the monticello in which it was excavated the cemetery "mons sancti Ypoliti" (mountain of Saint Hippolytus). The first modern investigation was by
Giovanni Battista de Rossi in the 19th century, assisted by Fabio Gori - they discovered a three-apse mauseoleum above ground (now destroyed) and an underground basilica built by
Pope Vigilius in the 6th century over Hippolytus' tomb. Also, by studying an ancient codex now in
Saint Petersburg and made available to him by the tsar himself, De Rossi successfully reconstructed the entire building built by Damasus. The
Barnabite Luigi Bruzza collaborated with De Rossi, though the former fell in a ditch during a visit to the site. Studied since the start of the 20th century, the cemetery was damaged by its use as an
air raid shelter during the
Second World War. After the war it was studied by the American Gabriel Bertonière and the priest Umberto Maria Fasola. Further investigations in the 1990s have still found few inscriptions due to substantial looting from the 19th century onwards. ==Description==