The Roman catacombs, of which there are forty in the suburbs or former suburbs, were built along the consular roads out of Rome, such as the
Via Appia, the
Via Ostiensis, the
Via Labicana, the
Via Tiburtina and the
Via Nomentana. With the exception of the Via Ostiensis (Italian:
Via Ostiense), these ancient Latin terms are also the current Italian names for these roads.
Catacombs of Marcellinus and Peter These catacombs are situated on the ancient
Via Labicana, today
Via Casilina in
Rome,
Italy, near the church of
Santi Marcellino e Pietro ad Duas Lauros. Their name refers to the
Christian martyrs
Marcellinus and Peter who, according to tradition, were buried here, near the body of
St. Tiburtius.
Catacombs of Domitilla Close to the Catacombs of San Callisto are the large and impressive Catacombs of Domitilla (named after
Saint Domitilla), spread over of caves. In the beginning of 2009, at the request of the Vatican, the
Divine Word Missionaries, a Roman Catholic Society of priests and Brothers, assumed responsibility as an administrator of St. Domitilla Catacombs.
Catacombs of Commodilla These catacombs, on the
Via Ostiensis, contain one of the earliest images of a bearded Christ. They originally held the relics of Saints
Felix and Adauctus. Excavations on the Commodilla were conducted by Franciscan archaeologist
Bellarmino Bagatti (1933–34).
Catacombs of Generosa Located on the Campana Road, these catacombs are said to have been the resting place, perhaps temporarily, of
Simplicius, Faustinus and Beatrix,
Christian Martyrs who died in
Rome during the
Diocletian persecution (302 or 303).
Catacombs of Praetextatus These are found along the
Via Appia and were built at the end of the 2nd century. They consist of a vast underground burial area, at first in pagan then in Christian use, housing various tombs of
Christian martyrs. In the oldest parts of the complex may be found the "
cubiculum of the coronation", with a rare depiction for that period of Christ being crowned with thorns, and a 4th-century painting of
Susanna and the old men in the allegorical guise of a lamb and wolves.
Catacombs of Priscilla The Catacomb of Priscilla, situated at the
Via Salaria across from the
Villa Ada, probably derives its name from the name of the landowner on whose land they were built. They are looked after by the Benedictine nuns of Priscilla.
Catacombs of San Pancrazio Established underneath the San Pacrazio basilica which was built by
Pope Symmachus on the place where the body of the young martyr
Saint Pancras, or Pancratius, had been buried. In the 17th century, it was given to the
Discalced Carmelites, who completely remodeled it. The catacombs house fragments of sculpture and pagan and early Christian inscriptions.
Catacombs of San Sebastiano One of the smallest Christian cemeteries, this has always been one of the most accessible catacombs and is thus one of the least preserved (of the four original floors, the first is almost completely gone). On the left-hand end of the right-hand wall of the nave of the primitive basilica, rebuilt in 1933 on ancient remains, arches to end the middle of the nave of the actual church, built in the 13th century, are visible, along with the outside of the apse of the Chapel of the Relics; whole and fragmentary collected sarcophagi (mostly of 4th-century date) were found in excavations. This is where the martyrs Sebastian and Eutychius were buried. Via a staircase down, one finds the arcades where varied cubicula (including the cubiculum of Giona's fine four stage cycle of paintings, dating to the end of the 4th century). One then arrives at the restored crypt of S. Sebastiano, with a table altar on the site of the ancient one (some remains of the original's base still survive) and a bust of
Saint Sebastian attributed to
Bernini. From here one reaches a platform, under which is a sandstone cavity ad catacumbas which once may have been named "ad catacumbas", thus giving this and all other tombs of this type their name. Three mausolea of the second half of the 2nd century (but also in later use) open off the platform. The first one on the right, decorated on the outside with paintings of funereal banquets and the miracle of the calling out of Cerasa's demons, on the inside contains paintings (including a ceiling painting of a Gorgon's head) and inhumation burials and has a surviving inscription reading "Marcus Clodius Hermes", the name of its owner. The second, called by some "tomb of the Innocentiores" (a burial club which owned it), has a refined stucco ceiling, Latin inscriptions in Greek characters, and a graffito with the initials of the Greek words for "
Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour". On the left is the mausoleum of Ascia, with an exterior wall painting of vine shoots rising from
kantharoi up
trompe-l'œil pillars. A room called the "Triglia" rises from the platform, roughly in the middle of the basilica and cut into from above by the present basilica. This covered room was used for funereal banquets; the plastered walls have hundreds of graffiti by the devotees at these banquets, carved in the second half of the 3rd to the beginnings of the 4th century, with appeals to the apostle's Peter and Paul. From the "Trigilia" one passed into an ancient ambulatory, which turns around into an apse: here is a collection of epitaphs and a model of all the mausolei, of the "Triglia" and of the
Constantinian basilica. From here one descends into the "Platonica", construction at the rear of the basilica that was long believed to have been the temporary
resting place for Peter and Paul, but was in fact (as proved by excavation) a tomb for the martyr
Quirinus, bishop of Sescia in
Pannonia, whose remains were brought here in the 5th century. To the right of the "Platonica" is the chapel of
Honorius III, adapted as the vestibule of the mausoleum, with interesting 13th-century paintings of Peter and Paul, the Crucifixion, saints, the
Massacre of the Innocents,
Madonna and Child, and other subjects. On the left is an apsidal mausoleum with an altar built against the apse: on the left wall, a surviving graffito reading "domus Petri" either hints at Peter having been buried here or testifies to the belief at the time the graffito was written that Peter was buried here.
Catacombs of San Valentino The catacombs of San Valentino were dedicated to
Saint Valentine. In the 13th century, the martyr's relics were transferred to
Basilica of Saint Praxedes.
Catacombs of Sant'Agnese Built for the conservation and veneration of the remains of
Saint Agnes of Rome. Agnes' bones are now conserved in the church of
Sant'Agnese fuori le mura in Rome, built over the
catacomb. Her skull is preserved in a side chapel in the church of
Sant'Agnese in Agone in Rome's
Piazza Navona.
Catacombs of via Anapo On the
via Salaria, the Catacombs of via Anapo are datable to the end of the 3rd or the beginning of the 4th century and contain diverse frescoes of biblical subjects.
Jewish catacombs There are six known Jewish catacombs in Rome, two of which are open to the public:
Vigna Randanini and
Villa Torlonia. The Jewish catacombs were discovered in 1918, and
archaeological excavations continued for twelve years. The structure has two entrances, one on
via Syracuse and the other inside
Villa Torlonia. The catacombs extend for more than , and date back to the period between the 2nd and 3rd centuries, and possibly remained in use until the 5th century. There are almost a century of epitaphs, but these do not show any examples of a particular belief, beyond some rare frescoes showing the classic Jewish religious symbols. The Jewish catacombs are distinguished from their Christian counterparts by various signs as well as the fact that
Jews did not visit their dead in the catacombs. Parts of the
Hebrew Bible—the Christian Old Testament—and the symbol of a
Temple menorah have been spotted on the walls of the Jewish catacombs. Due to high levels of humidity and temperature, bone preservation has been negatively affected in the catacombs. Scientists are unable to identify the sex of the dead due to the lack of preservation in the bones. The other catacombs are not open to the public because of the instability of their structure and the presence of
radon. ==Gallery of paintings from the catacombs of Rome==