When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Baths of Nero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baths_of_Nero

    The complex's water was initially supplied by the Aqua Virgo – already supplying the neighbouring Baths of Agrippa – then by the newly built Aqua Alexandrina after its restoration in the reign of the early third century emperor Alexander Severus, after whom it was subsequently renamed, though some continued to give it Nero's name. [5]

  3. Domus Aurea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domus_Aurea

    Construction began after the great fire of 64 and was nearly completed before Nero's death in 68, a remarkably short time for such an enormous project. [4] Nero took great interest in every detail of the project, according to Tacitus, [5] and oversaw the engineer-architects, Celer and Severus, who were also responsible for the attempted navigable canal with which Nero hoped to link Misenum ...

  4. Baths of Trajan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baths_of_Trajan

    After Nero's death, the residence on the Oppian remained in use by Emperors of the Flavian dynasty, until it was destroyed in a fire in 104 AD. [9] The Domus Aurea was used as a cryptoporticus to level the ground and support a platform built over it upon which the Baths were built.

  5. Baths of Nero (Pisa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baths_of_Nero_(Pisa)

    They were given the misnomer 'of Nero' in the medieval period, when they were believed to have been part of a palace - the earliest level actually dates to the final decades of the 1st century, during the reign of Domitian, as suggested by the use of the opus vittatum mixtum building technique with alternating layers of brick and tuff blocks.

  6. Nero's exploration of the Nile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nero's_exploration_of_the_Nile

    According to Seneca the small group of praetorian guards reported back to Nero stating: "we personally saw two rocks from which an immense quantity of water issued". Some modern historians, such as Vantini and D'Ambrosio, argue that this place is the Murchison Falls in northern Uganda, meaning that the Romans may have reached equatorial Africa. [5]

  7. Colossus of Nero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colossus_of_Nero

    Location of the Colossus (in red near the center) on a map of Rome. The Colossus of Nero (Colossus Neronis) was a 30-metre (98 ft) bronze statue that the Emperor Nero (37–68 AD) created in the vestibule of his Domus Aurea, the imperial villa complex which spanned a large area from the north side of the Palatine Hill, across the Velian ridge to the Esquiline Hill in Rome.

  8. A Real-Life Sword in the Stone Has Suddenly and ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/real-life-sword-stone-suddenly...

    Real-Life Sword in the Stone Suddenly Vanishes Colin Anderson - Getty Images The French town of Rocamadour was partly known for a centuries-old sword embedded in a cliff wall 100 feet off a riverbank.

  9. Nero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nero

    Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus (/ ˈ n ɪər oʊ / NEER-oh; born Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus; 15 December AD 37 – 9 June AD 68) was a Roman emperor and the final emperor of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, reigning from AD 54 until his death in AD 68.