Nero: Mad Tyrant or Misunderstood Emperor? — Fexingo History

Nero's Aqueducts: The Aqua Claudia and Rome's Water Revolution

6 min · 19 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Nero's Aqueducts: The Aqua Claudia and Rome's Water Revolution

Descripción

When Nero needed to secure his legacy after the Great Fire of 64 AD, he turned not to golden palaces but to water. This episode follows the completion of the Aqua Claudia and the Anio Novus, two of Rome's mightiest aqueducts, whose construction was started by Caligula and Claudius but finished by Nero. We explore the engineering marvels—the arcades of the Porta Maggiore, the massive concrete channels, the daily flow of millions of gallons into the city's fountains, baths, and private homes. Along the way we meet the curator aquarum, the slave gangs who maintained the system, and the emperor who dedicated the Aqua Claudia in 52 AD but whose name Nero took care to stamp on every arch. We also look at how the Great Fire reshaped water infrastructure, with Nero doubling public fountain access to prevent future disasters. And we consider the darker side: the aqueducts that fueled Nero's Domus Aurea baths, and the legal battles over water rights that Tacitus records. A story of concrete, politics, and the wet pulse of the imperial city. #Nero #AquaClaudia #RomanAqueducts #FlavianDynasty #RomanEngineering #PortaMaggiore #AnioNovus #CuratorAquarum #Frontinus #Tacitus #DomusAurea #GreatFireofRome #RomanBaths #ImperialRome #WaterInfrastructure #History #FexingoHistory #RomanConcrete Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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140 episodios

episode Nero and the Great Fire: The Christians as Scapegoats artwork

Nero and the Great Fire: The Christians as Scapegoats

In July 64 AD, a fire engulfed Rome, burning for six days and destroying much of the city. Rumors swirled that Nero had started it to clear land for his Golden House. To deflect blame, he turned on a new religious sect: the Christians. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how Tacitus describes the scapegoating, the horrific punishments—being torn by dogs, crucified, set ablaze as human torches—and whether Nero actually persecuted Christians on a wide scale. They examine the early Christian community in Rome, the role of Peter and Paul, and the historical debate over the Neronian persecution. Was it a targeted policy or a single burst of cruelty? And how did this event shape Christian memory and martyrdom traditions for centuries? This is a deep dive into one of the most notorious episodes in Roman history, separating fact from legend. #Nero #GreatFireOfRome #ChristianPersecution #Tacitus #Scapegoating #EarlyChristianity #RomanHistory #Martyrdom #Peter #Paul #DomusAurea #Tigellinus #Suetonius #CassiusDio #NeronianPersecution #History #FexingoHistory #AncientRome Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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episode Nero's Urban Reforms After the Great Fire artwork

Nero's Urban Reforms After the Great Fire

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Nero's ambitious urban reforms following the Great Fire of 64 AD. They discuss how the emperor used the disaster to rebuild Rome with wider streets, porticoes, and fire-resistant insulae, enforced by new building codes. The episode also examines the creation of the Praefectus Vigilem, the fire brigade, and the controversial funding mechanisms, including confiscations and taxes on grain. Learn about the impact of these reforms on Roman daily life and their lasting influence on city planning. The conversation touches on Tacitus's Annales, the Domus Aurea's architectural innovations, and the political motives behind Nero's rebuilding. #Nero #GreatFire #UrbanReform #RomanArchitecture #Insulae #Vigiles #PraefectusVigilem #DomusAurea #Tacitus #Annales #OpusCaementicium #Porticoes #RomanHistory #AncientRome #JulioClaudian #FirePrevention #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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episode Nero's Naval Innovations and the Classis Misenensis artwork

Nero's Naval Innovations and the Classis Misenensis

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Nero's often-overlooked naval policies, focusing on the Classis Misenensis, the imperial fleet based at Misenum. They discuss how Nero expanded the fleet's role beyond military patrol to include grain supply protection, anti-piracy operations, and even theatrical naumachiae. The conversation covers the construction of the Portus Iulius, the use of liburnian vessels, and the political significance of naval loyalty during the Pisonian Conspiracy. They also touch on the contributions of prefects like Anicetus and the fleet's involvement in the murder of Agrippina. Dive into the practical and symbolic power of Rome's navy under Nero, and how it shaped his reign. #Nero #ClassisMisenensis #RomanNavy #Misenum #PortusIulius #Naumachia #PisonianConspiracy #Anicetus #Agrippina #Liburnian #RomanFleet #AncientNavalHistory #JulioClaudian #RomanEmpire #History #FexingoHistory #MediterraneanHistory #NavalWarfare Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode Nero's Great Fire: Accidental Inferno or Imperial Plot artwork

Nero's Great Fire: Accidental Inferno or Imperial Plot

In July 64 AD, a fire engulfed Rome, burning for six days and destroying two-thirds of the city. Rumors swirled that Emperor Nero himself had started the blaze to clear land for his Golden House. But what really happened? Drawing on Tacitus, Suetonius, and Cassius Dio, we sort through the evidence: the fire's origin in the Circus Maximus shops, the failure of the Vigiles, the imperial relief efforts, and the scapegoating of the Christians. Did Nero really fiddle — or rather, cithara-play — while Rome burned? We examine the topography of the fire, the Domus Aurea controversy, and the lasting legend that turned an emperor into an arsonist. #Nero #GreatFireOfRome #DomusAurea #Tacitus #Suetonius #CassiusDio #CircusMaximus #Vigiles #ChristianScapegoat #JulioClaudian #AncientRome #RomanEmpire #Archaeology #Historiography #UrbanDisaster #ImperialPropaganda #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4 de jul de 20268 min
episode Nero and the Jewish Revolt: The Spark of 66 AD artwork

Nero and the Jewish Revolt: The Spark of 66 AD

In 66 AD, as Nero basked in his artistic triumph in Greece, a revolt erupted in Judaea that would reshape the Roman Empire. This episode explores the complex causes of the First Jewish-Roman War: the oppressive rule of procurators like Gessius Florus, the clash between Jewish monotheism and Roman imperial cult, and the rise of radical factions like the Zealots and Sicarii. We examine the role of Agrippa II, the last Herodian king, who tried in vain to avert disaster. Lucas and Luna discuss the massacre in Caesarea, the cessation of sacrifices for the emperor in the Jerusalem Temple, and the desperate mission of Cestius Gallus. They also touch on how Nero's preoccupation with Greece and the looming threat from Parthia left the empire slow to respond. This episode sets the stage for the catastrophic war that would culminate in the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD under Vespasian and Titus. #Nero #JewishRevolt #FirstJewishRomanWar #Judaea #GessiusFlorus #AgrippaII #Zealots #Sicarii #JerusalemTemple #Caesarea #CestiusGallus #RomanProcurator #JewishHistory #AncientRome #66AD #History #FexingoHistory #Mediterranean Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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