City of The Dead
5000 Published
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Description
Beneath the bustling streets of Rome lies a shadowy underworld of tunnels known as the Roman catacombs—part cemetery, part sanctuary, part time capsule. These subterranean networks, carved between the 2nd and 5th centuries AD, were used primarily by early Christians and some Jewish communities to bury their dead when traditional Roman cremation fell out of favor.
Stretching for hundreds of kilometers, catacombs such as the Catacombs of San Callisto and Catacombs of Priscilla contain narrow passageways lined with burial niches, or loculi. Walls are often decorated with faded frescoes—simple yet powerful symbols like fish, anchors, and the Good Shepherd, quietly expressing faith during times of persecution.
Walking through them today feels like stepping into a hushed archive of belief and resilience, where history lingers in cool stone corridors far from the Roman sun.