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  1. The Great Fire of Rome (Latin: incendium magnum Romae) began on the 18th of July 64 AD. The fire began in the merchant shops around Rome's chariot stadium, Circus Maximus. After six days, the fire was brought under control, but before the damage could be assessed, the fire reignited and burned for another three days.

  2. On July 18, 64 C.E., a fire started in the enormous Circus Maximus stadium in Rome, now the capital of Italy. When the fire was finally extinguished six days later, 10 of Rome’s 14 districts had burned. Ancient historians blamed Rome’s infamous emperor, Nero, for the fire.

  3. El gran incendio de Roma arrasó gran parte de dicha ciudad durante el verano del año 64, cuando Nerón reinaba como emperador. Su auténtico significado y alcance son motivo de disputa puesto que las fuentes primarias, principalmente el historiador Tácito, que tratan sobre el incendio son pocas y se contradicen en ciertos aspectos.

  4. 7 de jul. de 2014 · Menacing conspiracies formed against the emperor in Rome, the army was losing confidence in him and there were uprisings in Spain, Gaul and the eastern provinces. In AD 68, when even the Praetorian Guard deserted him, he fled to a villa outside Rome where, aged 30, he committed suicide.

  5. 10 de feb. de 2023 · On a hot summer night in July a great fire broke out and swept across the city of Rome, the capital of the Roman Empire. For over six days, the raging inferno consumed everything in its path. When the fire finally ran its course, it left seventy percent of the city a smoldering ruin.

  6. The Great Fire of Rome, a six-day inferno, would come to be known as one of the most devastating disasters of the ancient world, leaving a city of splendor in ruins and its people in a state of despair. But what were the true origins of this blaze that tore through the heart of an empire?

  7. The great fire that ravaged Rome in 64 illustrates how low Neros reputation had sunk by this time. Taking advantage of the fire’s destruction, Nero had the city reconstructed in the Greek style and began building a prodigious palace—the Golden House—which, had it been finished, would…