Christianity: Details about 'Catacombs'

Index / Christianity / Saint Peter / Catacombs /

Web christianity-guide.com

Navigation

Home
One level up
Back
Index of contents
Links
Jesus-Shop

Useful Links


Christianity Portal
History of christianity Jesus Christ Old testament New testament Apocrypha Christian_music
Roman catholic Orthodox Christianity Protestantism Christian movements Mormons Baptists
The Catacomb computer game series is under Catacomb 3D.

The original catacombs are a network of underground burial galleries near San Sebastiano fuori le mura, in Rome. The word now refers to any network of caves, grottos, or subterranean place that is used for the burial of the dead, or it can refer to a specific underground burial place.

Famous examples are:

  • Catacombs of Rome, in Rome, Italy
  • Catacombs of Paris, in Paris, France
  • Kom al Sukkfa, Catacombs of Alexandria, Egypt
  • Catacombs of Malta in the island of Malta
  • Catacombs of Sacromonte in Granada, Spain.
  • Capuchin catacombs of Palermo, Italy.
  • Catacombs of Lima, in Lima, Peru.

The word itself comes from Late Latin plural catacumbæ, from the phrase cata tumbas (among the tombs), through metathesis and with attraction of -cumbere (to lie), from Greek κατα (down) and ultimately from Greek τυμβος (tomb) (1).

There are also catacomb-like burial



chambers in Anatolia, Turkey; in Susa, North Africa; in Naples, Italy; in Syracuse, Italy; Trier, Germany; Kiev, Ukraine. Capuchin catacombs of Palermo, Sicily were used as late as 1920s.

In Ukraine and Russia, catacomb (used in the local languages' plural katakomby) also refers to the network of abandoned caves and tunnels earlier used to mine stone, especially limestone. Such catacombs are situated in Crimea and the Black Sea coast of these two countries. The most famous are catacombs beneath Odessa and Ajimushkay, Crimea, Ukraine. They served as bases for Soviet World War II guerrillas (see also Great Patriotic War). Ajimushkay catacombs hosted about 10.000 fighters and refugees. Many of them died and were buried there, and memorials and museums were later established (it is now a territory of Kerch city).

See also

  • Burial mounds,
  • Cemetery
  • Crypts
  • Necropolis

References

  1. “Chambers Dictionary of Etymology”, Chambers (New York), 1988, ISBN 0-550-14230-4, see catacomb and tomb

Katakombe Catacumbas Catacombes Katakomba Catacombe カタコンブ Katakombe Katakumby Katakomb


Visitors who viewed this also viewed:

Christianity: Biblical Scholars
Christianity: Heresies
Christianity: Martin Luther King
Buddhism: Diamond Sutra
New Age: Ptolemy Gnostic


 





Click here for our Jesus-Shop


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Catacombs". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.