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Some filters moved to Formats filters, which is at the top of the page. All Resource Types. Results for nero 12, results. Sort: Relevance. Word Document File Webquests. This worksheet allows students to use a primary source document to learn about the brutality Christians faced in Rome under the rule of NeroThis activity is very easy to use.
All you have to do is print off the primary source from the following website for classroom use or direct students to the web.
Ancient History , Religion , World History. Lesson Plans Individual , Worksheets. Show more details. Wish List. This passage describes the life of Nero in ancient Rome. I've included a color and black white version, as well as a key. Ancient History , Informational Text. Homework , Printables , Worksheets. Students read an account of when Rome burned in 64 AD while Nero was emperor and answer 10 questions, and respond to a statement with 6 sub-questions.
There is also a creative task where students create a museum exhibit. This would be great for a sub and the answers included where appropriate! Ancient History , Social Studies - History. Ancient Rome - Nero - Webquest with Key.
Ancient Rome - Nero - Webquest with Key - This 6 page document contains a webquest and teachers key related to the history of Nero during Ancient Rome. It contains 21 questions and a teachers key. Your students will learn about the life of Nero in Ancient Rome. It covers all of the major people, th. This set of word search, secret code and word scramble worksheet printables features phrases and terms relating to Roman emperor Nero.
Streamlined for easy instructional use, each puzzle worksheet in this set — even the word jumble — comes with a convenient teacher answer key for quick correcting. Activities , Printables , Worksheets.
Zip Webquests. Engage your students with the unique history of one of Rome's most controversial emperors, Nero. This mini-bundle provides an overview of his life, reign, and the factors leading to his fall. European History , Social Studies - History. Activities , Worksheets. This Nero resource is an engaging and informative way to help your students learn and understand more about Nero of Ancient Rome!
After completing the reading passage about Nero, students will answer questions based on the reading. Disguising himself, he spent nights stalking the streets of Rome with friends, drinking, frequenting brothels and brawling. Ignoring Octavia and a marriage that bored him, he fell for a former slave, who he later left for Poppaea Sabina, the wife of a senator.
That move proved both her undoing and the beginning of several formative, blood-soaked years for the emperor. The first to die was Britannicus, on the day before he became an adult in AD Although Nero claimed his step-brother succumbed to an epileptic seizure, historical records suggest poison had been added to his glass of wine. Next to go would be Agrippina herself in AD Nero wanted her death to look like an accident so, according to Suetonius, came up with the idea of a booby-trapped boat, which would fall apart in the water.
In a final show of her domineering personality, she survived the sinking and swam to shore, so Nero had to send assassins to finish the job at her villa. Then in AD 62, Nero lost those remaining figures who had managed to keep him in check. Burrus died — his replacement, a cruel man named Tigellinus, served with particular malice — while Seneca retired from public affairs. Nero found himself in absolute power for the first time, wholly untethered from any control or need to temper his behaviour.
So when he wanted to marry his mistress Poppaea, he divorced and exiled Octavia on a trumped-up charge of adultery. When this caused outrage in Rome, he had her executed and her head presented to his new wife. Rather than use this power to rule or even conquer new lands, Nero still dreamed of being an artist, cheered by an adoring public. He played the lyre, wrote poetry and sang, but Romans considered the idea of an emperor performing on stage as the ultimate disgrace, demonstrating a disrespectful and scandalous lack of dignity.
He forced people to watch his performances without letting them leave, which, Suetonius wrote, led some to pretend they had died so they would be carried out of the theatre. On hearing the news, he rushed back to the city to coordinate relief efforts, which included opening his private gardens as shelter and providing food. By quickly taking advantage of land cleared by the flames to begin construction of an extravagant palace complex, the Domus Aurea Golden House , Nero gave many Romans reason to wonder whether that had been his intention all along.
He needed to pass the blame, and he found his scapegoat in a small religious group that had been growing in Rome for a generation — the Christians. Nero apparently delighted in having men crucified in his garden, coated in wax and set alight to act as candles at his parties.
Suetonius wrote that, in AD 65, the emperor kicked the pregnant Poppaea to death after being scolded for spending too much time at the races. Grief-stricken, Nero then became fixated on a boy named Sporus, who bore a resemblance to his murdered wife, had him castrated and married him. Meanwhile, his megalomaniacal need to see the Golden House completed threatened to bankrupt the state treasury. Spanning to acres, the complex boasted gold-leaf-covered rooms and a lavish banqueting hall with a revolving ceiling that sprayed perfume on revellers below.
Outside, the centrepiece was a metre high colossus of Nero. Paying for it had proved beyond the capability of even the empire. Much like its leader, the empire looked increasingly unstable. The purge of the Pisonian conspiracy in AD 65 — which intended to replace Nero with statesman Gaius Calpurnius Piso — claimed senators, army officers, aristocrats and even Seneca.
Having overcome this threat and with discontent lingering, Nero left Rome, essentially renouncing his rule. He almost died after being thrown from his chariot, but still won all his events. He, reluctantly, returned — just in time to see his reign come crashing down. But then another governor, Servius Sulpicius Galba in northern Spain, joined the revolt and declared himself emperor, inspiring more to rise up.
The Senate declared Nero a public enemy and, once the Praetorian Guard abandoned him, he knew it was the end. The year-old emperor-turned-enemy of Rome fled the city, with nowhere to run or hide. He asked someone else to go first, to set an example, before begging his private secretary, Epaphroditos, to help drive the blade home. Nero — murderer, thief, sadist, tyrant — wanted to be remembered as something else.
He devised elaborate ways to cause untold suffering, including crucifying his victims upside down and turning them into human candles for his garden. For his persecution, Nero has been described as the Antichrist.
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