Dando-Collins introduces the fascinating cavalcade of historical characters who were in Rome during the first seven months of A.D. 64, and played a part in the great drama. Apart from Nero himself, these will include the notorious freedman Vatinius the dwarf; Agricola the young quaestor, leaving his pregnant wife as he set off for overseas; Pliny the Elder, workaholic author; Vespasian, former general, just returned from Africa where he was pelted with turnips; Vespasian's respected brother Sabinus, the City Prefect; young poet Lucan, nephew of Seneca, working on the masterwork he will never finish; Acte, Nero's longtime mistress, and alleged Christian convert; Petronius, Nero's arbiter of good taste; and Tigellinus, ambitious Prefect of the Praetorian Guard, who will be one of those suspected of being behind the fire. It's a pot-boiler of political intrigue and social drama. Using ancient sources, as well as modern archaeology, Dando-Collins describes the fire itself, and its the aftermath, as Nero personally directed relief efforts and reconstruction.
"The Great Fire of Rome" is an unforgettable human drama which brings ancient Rome and the momentous events of 64 AD to scorching life.