Black line drawings on the white walls of an underground chamber in a private catacomb, in the north of Rome; the drawings include figured scenes from the usual repertory of early Christian art. The drawing under consideration here is found between the loculi of the left wall of the chamber, and appears to depict a naked male figure standing on a pedestal, most likely representing a statue; it holds a sceptre or staff in its left hand and a circular object, perhaps a patera, in its right. A figure wearing a short tunic stands to the right of the statue-figure, with both arms raised and one hand holding on to a rope that has been thrown around the statue’s neck. To the left of the statue another figure can just be discerned, also wearing a short tunic, and throwing rocks.
(Published by De Rossi, Giovanni Battista, “Un esplorazione sotteranea sulla Via Salaria Vecchia” in Bullettino di archeologia cristiana 3 (1895), p. 1-8)