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The Roman road to Judea’s destruction

Eli Abt visits the British Museum's Nero exhibition to shed light on the background to Tisha b'Av

July 15, 2021 10:43
IDX 16_Marble bust of Nero. Italy, around AD 55. Photo by Francesco Piras. © MiBACT Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Cagliari.jpg
Marble bust of Nero. Italy, around AD 55. Photo by Francesco Piras. With permission of the Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali e per il Turismo ̶ Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Cagliari.
3 min read

Did Nero set fire to Rome in July 64 AD and, as some would have us believe, strum his lyre while watching the conflagration devour half his capital?

An absorbing show at the British Museum convincingly challenges the classical accounts of this emperor’s reign (54 – 68 CE), written well after his death by historians with their own axe to grind.

The traditionalists strongly disapproved of Nero’s undoubted musical talents as unbecoming for an emperor, hence that “fiddling while Rome burns” story and other fictions.

As to the fire, the exhibition’s nine-day timeline shows that when it broke out Nero was 40 miles away at his seaside villa at Antium. He hurried back to lead the relief efforts, pleasing the populace but not, apparently, his enemies in the Roman elite and Senate.