Amphitheater of Nero
The Amphitheater of Nero was a wholly wooden amphitheater built by the Roman emperor Nero on an unknown site on the Campus Martius. One hypothesis places it on the site of the demolished amphitheater of Statilius Taurus, but it now seems more likely that it was built near the demolished amphitheater of Caligula to the north of the Saepta Julia.
According to Tacitus work began on the amphitheater in 57, the year of Nero's second consulship, with Lucius Calpurnius Piso as his colleague. Others state it was built after the Great Fire of Rome in 64 since Nero wanted to replace the amphitheater of Statilius Taurus, then the only stone amphitheater in Rome, which had been destroyed in the fire. It took only a year to complete and Nero held gladiatorial battles to inaugurate it. According to Suetonius' Life of Nero (XII, 2-3): "at the gladiatorial fights which he [Nero] gave in a wooden amphitheatre, built on the Campus Martius in less than a year, nobody was left to kill, even criminals. But he made 400 senators and 600 Roman equestrians fight". However, the building's wooden construction meant it did not last long and was probably destroyed in the fire of 80.
Sources
- Samuel Ball Platner and Thomas Ashby, A topographical dictionary of Ancient Rome, Oxford University Press, 1929
Coordinates: 41°53′43″N 12°28′25″E / 41.8954°N 12.4737°E