
Published online:
31 October 2023
Published in print:
04 August 1994
Online ISBN:
9780197739648
Print ISBN:
9780195082524
Contents
Chapter
6 The Earliest Christian Art
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Pages
146–274
-
Published:August 1994
Cite
Finney, Paul Corby, 'The Earliest Christian Art', The Invisible God: The Earliest Christians on Art (New York, NY , 1994; online edn, Oxford Academic, 31 Oct. 2023), https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195082524.003.0006, accessed 24 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
At the beginning of the third century (circa 190/200–210/220) a small group of Roman Christians commissioned and oversaw the execution of fresco paintings for the walls and ceilings of ten underground burial chambers1 within a catacomb complex situated on the Appia Antica (Figure 6.1 no. 44) southeast of Rome and named after Callistus,2 an ex-slave who also was bishop of Rome in the years approximately 217 to 222. Most of the paintings in these rooms have perished. Of those that survive, a few illustrate biblical subjects inspired either by the Hebrew Bible or the Gospels.
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