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Nero, Emperor

After the catastrophic fire that burned ancient Rome in 64 A. D., the emperor Nero rebuilt the city with fire precautions that included wide public avenues, limitations in building heights, provision of fireproof construction and improvements to the city water supplies to aid in fire fighting. Thus it is very evident that... [Pg.2]

Although this and other research suggests the Romans were exposed to a considerable amount of lead—and they absorbed quite a bit of it—no one yet knows if they were adversely affected. Lead poisoning could explain why Roman children suffered from high mortality as De Muynck and his colleagues noted in their paper, Approximately 26% of Roman children died before the age of fourteen, while approximately 14% even died in the first year of life. The disorder may also account for the apparent madness of emperors such as Caligula and Nero. However, these and other problems could easily be due to other causes. [Pg.189]

The Romans were the first to discover the vicissitudes of a culture a that derives its power from finance. Gold, like any other commodity, I does not have an absolute value it depends on how much of it there is around. The gold denomination of the Roman Empire was the aureus, which was worth twenty-five silver denarii. But the later emperors were prone to grotesque displays of wealth - Nero constracted a Golden House with jewel-encrusted walls. These excesses removed so much gold and silver from circulation that the coin minters were forced to add other metals to the aureus and the denarius. By the third century ad the denarius was 98 per cent copper. Naturally, a trader will not give as much for a coin that is mostly copper as for one that is pure silver, even if they are called the same thing and bear the same stamp. [Pg.56]

Caius Plinius Secundus, the Elder Pliny, was born 23 A. D., and died in 79 A. D. at Stabiee in the eruption of Vesuvius which overwhelmed Herculaneum and Pompeii. In early manhood, he was a cavalry officer in later life he held the office of Procurator in Nearer Spain under the Emperor Nero. His official duties evidently left him much leisure for study, for he was said to have been a constant reader, and was himself a prolific author. His nephew, the Younger Pliny, has listed the works of his uncle as follows ... [Pg.40]

It Avas the Emperor Nero s invention to boil Avater and then inclose it in glass vessels and cool it in snoAV a method Avhich insures all the enjoyment of a cold beverage without any of the inconveniences resulting from the use of snow. 7C... [Pg.76]

Burning of Rome in 64 AD. Rome burned for six days, while emperor Nero played the harp. [Pg.68]

Humans also learned that poisons could be obtained from plants. In classical Rome, for example, mushrooms were the poison of choice and were expertly used by Agrippina, wife of Emperor Claudius and mother of Nero. Agrippina had Lollia Paulina put to death because Claudius, in a careless moment, remarked on Lollia s beauty. [Pg.720]

Arsenic has long been recognized as a poison, and was reputed to have been used by Agrippina to assassinate the Roman emperor Claudius and by the Roman emperor Nero to kiU Claudius son Britannicus. In the latter case, after the first attempt had failed and had instead aroused suspicion, the arsenic was put into the water used to cool his soup rather than into the soup itself which was tested by a taster. In the seventeenth century a woman by the name of Tofana produced arsenical powders which became known as les poudres de succession , as they were used to remove obstacles like rivals, husbands, and so on. The powders contained arsenic sulphide, aconite, box, caustic lime, powdered glass, and honey. She is reputed to have committed some 600 murders. Her most well-known poison was Aqua Tofana, probably a solution containing arsenic and lead. [Pg.221]

For centuries it was supposed not only that there could be, but that there actually was, a single antidote to all poisons. This was Theriaca Andromachi, a formulation of 72 (a magical number) ingredients amongst which particular importance was attached to the flesh of a snake (viper). The antidote was devised by Andromachus whose son was physician to the Roman Emperor, Nero (AD 37-68). [Pg.152]

The Roman Emperor Nero (AD 37-68) murdered his severely constipated aunt by ordering the doctors to give her a laxative of fatal strength. He seized her property before she was quite dead and tore up the will so that nothing could escape him. (Suetonius (trans) R Graves). [Pg.642]

In sixty-seven a.d. the roman emperor Nero entered the chariot race at the Olympic games, and although he failed to finish the race, the judges unanimously declared him the Winner. [Pg.523]

Historical fundamentalists identify the Great Beast with Emperor Nero because his Greek title is Neron Kaisar. The Gematria sum of the Hebrew translation RSQ NWRN is 666. [Pg.229]

The Greeks continued the tradition of distinguishing their nobility by the colour of their garments. The habit was then taken up enthusiastically in Rome, where the imperial toga was lined with purple. The Emperor Nero was the first to insist that only the ruler had the right to wear royal purple. From classical times, therefore, a link was forged between the colour purple and the idea of noble or royal blood. [Pg.2]

Pliny lived in the first century ce, around the time of the reign of Nero. Bom in Gaul, Pliny served in the army on campaign in Germany, then studied law, and then devoted himself to scholarly study and writing. On the accession of Emperor Vespasian, with whom Pliny had served in Germany, Pliny went to Rome and assumed various official positions. [Pg.54]

Roman emperor Nero, who was nearsighted, watched gladiator games at the Roman Colosseum through a large handheld emerald lens centuries before the invention of spectacles. [Pg.1246]

Some famous victims of poisoning include Socrates (hemlock) and Cleopatra (snakebite). The Emperor Claudius (Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero Germani-cus) was said to have been poisoned by his wife. Some... [Pg.1850]


See other pages where Nero, Emperor is mentioned: [Pg.648]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.323]    [Pg.707]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.416]    [Pg.582]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.1012]    [Pg.844]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.326]   
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Emperor

Nero, Roman Emperor

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