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VIA APPIA CATACOMBS, Rome Italy

VIA APPIA. The first 90km section of this road was laid in 312 BC and then extended in 100 BC to reach Brindisi on Italy’s southern Adriatic coast. It has long been one of Rome’s exclusive addresses, a beautiful cobbled thoroughfare flanked by grassy fields, Roman structures, and towering pine trees. It was here that Spartacus and 6000 of his slave rebels were crucified in 71 BC.


As Christianity was illegal until about 500 AD, Christians couldn’t be buried inside the walls of Rome. The Via Appia was well on the outskirts of the city. Christians also shunned cremation preferring to be buried whole to facilitate resurrection. There are 66 catacombs with 300 km of underground burial chambers carved out of tufa on four levels. The lower levels are flooded. They were abandoned for over 1800 years and lost until recently.
You can’t visit all 300 km but three major catacombs are open for guided tours. To get here, take the metro to Pyramid and bus 118 out and back.

Catacomb of San Callisto. These are the largest and most visited of the catacombs. Founded at the end of the second century, they became the official cemetery of the newly established Roman Church. In the 20 km of tunnels explored to date were the tombs of 500,000 people, 16 popes and 60 martyrs. The patron saint of music, St Cecilia was buried here and when her body was exhumed in 1596, it was perfectly preserved. Unlike the Paris catacombs (the Paris cemeteries inside the city were emptied and all the bones put down there), there are no bones, only the narrow cavities carved into the rock, usually just large enough to hold one body. The walls are painted with fading Christian symbols and graffiti is common.


Statue of St Cecilia

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I would like to think of myself as a full time traveler. I have been retired since 2006 and in that time have traveled every winter for four to seven months. The months that I am "home", are often also spent on the road, hiking or kayaking. I hope to present a website that describes my travel along with my hiking and sea kayaking experiences.

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