Roman Catholic ossuaries in
Milan. Many examples of ossuaries are found within Europe, including the
Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini in
Rome, Italy; the
Martyrs of Otranto in south Italy; the
Fontanelle cemetery and
Purgatorio ad Arco in
Naples, Italy; the
San Bernardino alle Ossa in
Milan, Italy; the
Brno Ossuary and the
Sedlec Ossuary in the Czech Republic; the
Czermna Skull Chapel in Poland; and the
Capela dos Ossos ("Chapel of Bones") in
Évora, Portugal. The village of
Wamba in the province of
Valladolid, Spain, has an impressive ossuary of over a thousand skulls inside the local church, dating from between the 12th and 18th centuries. A more recent example is the
Douaumont ossuary in
France, which contains the remains of more than 130,000 French and German soldiers that fell at the
Battle of Verdun during
World War I. The
Catacombs of Paris represents another famous ossuary. The
catacombs beneath the
Monastery of San Francisco in
Lima, Peru also contain an ossuary.
Largest ossuary in
Cologne, where in the 17th century the largest mosaic in human bones ever was created, that covers the four walls of the room. The skeletal remains of six million people lie, neatly arranged, in catacombs (also known as ossuaries or charnel houses) beneath the streets of
Paris, France. The city has an estimated of tunnels and pathways, of which are packed tightly with the bones of those re-interred from the city's overflowing cemeteries in the late 1700s.
Eastern Orthodox ossuaries ossuaries made of wood and metal. The use of ossuaries is a longstanding tradition in the
Eastern Orthodox Church. The remains of an Orthodox Christian are treated with special reverence, in conformity with the biblical teaching that the body of a believer is a "temple of the Holy Spirit", having been
sanctified and
transfigured by
Baptism,
Holy Communion and the participation in the
mystical life of the Church. In Orthodox
monasteries, when one of the brethren dies, his remains are buried (for details, see
Christian burial) for one to three years, and then disinterred, cleaned and gathered into the monastery's
charnel house. If there is reason to believe that the departed is a
saint, the remains may be placed in a
reliquary; otherwise the bones are usually mingled together (skulls together in one place,
long bones in another, etc.). The remains of an
abbot may be placed in a separate ossuary made out of wood or metal. The use of ossuaries is also found among the
laity in the
Greek Orthodox Church. The departed will be buried for one to three years and then, often on the anniversary of death, the family will gather with the
parish priest and celebrate a
parastas (memorial service), after which the remains are disinterred, washed with wine, perfumed, and placed in a small ossuary of wood or metal, inscribed with the name of the departed, and placed in a room, often in or near the church, which is dedicated to this purpose. ==See also==