Government and Politics | Did Nero Really Play His Fiddle While Rome Burned?

Did Nero really play his fiddle while Rome burned?

According to legend, in A.D. 64 Roman emperor Nero (A.D. 37–68) played his fiddle (violin) for nine days as he watched Rome being destroyed by fire. However, no one has found any historical evidence for this story. It is known that Nero played a lyre, an early stringed instrument like the harp—the violin had not yet been invented—and he was reportedly 50 miles (80 kilometers) away from Rome when the fire started. The tale was accepted as truth since this was the kind of behavior expected of Nero, who was mentally unstable and considered himself a talented musician. Nero has been suspected of deliberately being absent from Rome because he had instigated the fire so he could rebuild the city. Nevertheless, he blamed Christians (followers of Christianity, a religion founded by Jesus of Nazareth) for setting the blaze and he began the first Roman...

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