hypogeum

Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

  • noun A subterranean chamber of an ancient building.
  • noun An ancient subterranean burial chamber, such as a catacomb.

Examples

  • Before the amazed eyes of the congregation, a cascade of white petals descends from the coffered ceiling, blanketing the hypogeum.

    The Papal Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore

  • To be the steward of an entire hypogeum, and particularly, as I was in my youth, to be steward of my Hypogeum Apotropaic in the time of Father Inire, requires the most unremitting effort; one has hardly a watch in which to sleep.

    The Urth of the New Sun

  • In the Roman necropolis, along the Kairwan road, several interesting discoveries were made, among them a hypogeum containing several frescoes in fair preservation, containing curious figures and inscriptions, and also some inscriptions on marble or stucco.

    The American Journal of Archaeology, 1893-1

  • When the museum authorities first took over the hypogeum practically all the chambers were filled to within a short distance of their roofs with a mass of reddish soil, which proved to contain the remains of thousands of human skeletons.

    Rough Stone Monuments and Their Builders

Note

The word 'hypogeum' comes ultimately from a Greek word meaning 'underground'.