The Vatican Necropolis

There’s an insane story about the Vatican Necropolis that I read while doing research for this map and I’d like to share it with you.

So, St. Peter’s Basilica was said to have been built directly over the grave of St. Peter, the first pope. His grave was well below the basilica, however, and was not accessible.

Then, in the 1940s, Pope Pius XII decided he wanted to open the Vatican Grottoes to tourists. There was a problem, though: the ceilings were too low. They couldn’t be raised because there was a basilica on top of them, so the floor had to be lowered. Workers were sent in to dig every room two feet deeper and put in new floors. And, in the middle of this, one of them broke through to something below.

The ancient, Roman tombs they found were considered likely to contain the tomb of St. Peter, so the pope sent a group of archaeologists to get in there and archaeologize the place. A priest named Ludwig Kaas, who had no education or experience in archaeology, was assigned to oversee the excavation.

Eventually, an archaeologist named Dr. Margherita Guarducci found St. Peter’s tomb. It was directly under the central altar of the basilica, it was lined with marble and there was graffiti that said it was him. Bingo. The only problem was that there were no bones inside. Dr. Guarducci wondered why they were moved and where they might be now. They started testing bones from the necropolis. Is this St. Peter? No, that’s a woman. How about this? No, that’s a teenager. This? That’s a sheep.

Ten years later, while talking to one of the basilica’s maintenance guys, Dr. Guarducci found out where the bones went. Apparently, Father Kaas had been going into the dig site at night, taking out any bones he found and putting them in boxes. Without telling anyone. They’d been in a storeroom for a decade and Father Kaas never said anything. For ten years, he watched people search the necropolis, test remains and painstakingly examine the site for clues about where St. Peter’s bones might be. And this dude said absolutely nothing. And then he died.

And that’s how the bones of St. Peter were discovered by archaeologists. In a box in a closet.

Next, I’ll be drawing a castle sitting over an elaborate cave system, containing a meeting place for the local thieves’ guild. It should be a useful map for adventures where the players are going somewhere that’s normal on the outside, but shady on the inside. Secret gangs, cults, conspiracies and so on. Have you seen Hot Fuzz? That sort of thing.

After that, I’ll be drawing the last part of St. Peter’s Basilica, which is the reliquary lodges. They’re small and won’t take more than a couple days.

All right, that’s about it. Let me know what you think!

Vatican Necropolis (Work-in-Progress)

The Roman Necropolis is a lot less well-documented than the rest of St. Peter’s Basilica, mostly due to the very limited amount of tourism they allow there. So, while I’d normally be able to search for any other part of the basilica and find 11 billion photos from every conceivable angle, I’ve had to do some serious digging to find out what’s in some parts of this place.

Anyway, I’m coloring this now and I should have it done in a few more days. Until then!

Fort Irongall on the River Styx

Hell. Hell never changes. Wait, that’s war. Does hell change? I’m not sure. In the traditional D&D cosmology, there are nine hells and they’re all different, so I think we can conclude that hell does, in fact, change. In a sense, anyway.

With that settled, I’m curious what you think about my depiction of hell. We’ve got the River Styx, some pools of blood (which I imagine is what it rains in hell), and a variety of skulls, corpses, heads on poles and so on. I wanted to draw something a little different from the standard-issue “pit of fire,” but I wasn’t trying to completely reinvent hell. Anyway, I hope it works for you.

With this done, we’re back to our regularly scheduled maps of Vatican City. I’ll be drawing the Roman Necropolis next, which is the second-to-last part of St. Peter’s Basilica. That’ll be three maps in a row with quite a lot of death in them. I hope you guys like death. Any death fans out there? Let’s hope so. Anyway, I’m gonna go look up some floor plans for that and get to it. See you soon!