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29 November, 08:13

How did Nero's plan to blame the Christians for the fire

backfire?

A

Nero was uitimately prosecuted and removed as emperor.

D

Most Roman citizens felt sympathy for the Christian victims of Nero's torture and did not

support Nero

C

All the Christians escaped Rome before Nero could attack them.

D

The Christians rose up and fought back against Nero's false accusations.

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Answers (2)
  1. 29 November, 11:01
    0
    A

    Nero was uitimately prosecuted and removed as emperor.

    Explanation:

    Nero blamed the Christians, an easy target at the time. The persecution of Christians because of the fire started about 250 years of Roman persecution of Christians, a practice finally ended in 313 AD when Emperor Constantine legalized the Christian religion with the Edict of Milan.
  2. 29 November, 11:35
    0
    D. Most Roman citizens felt sympathy for the Christian victims of Nero's torture and did not support Nero

    Explanation:

    Nero was the Roman emperor when the first years of Christianity developed, he was the first one to declare christians a public enemy and to blame them for the great fire of Rome in the early year 60, he allegadly started the fire because he wanted to buil a city of palaces called neropolis in that part of the city, he eventually killed himself, was never prosecuted but did loose all the support of the romans.
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