No one was hurt when the theatre came alight in 1613, just the building. It was rebuilt in 1614.
Only one person, a man named Richard Burbage, is believed to have perished in the fire that destroyed the Globe Theatre in 1613.
41 people died in the Ballantyne's fire in Christchurch in November 1947. It was one of the deadliest fires in New Zealand's history.
The Wallow Fire in 2011 did not result in any reported fatalities. However, it was a significant wildfire in terms of damage to property and ecosystems, covering a large area across Arizona and New Mexico.
107 fire fighters lost there lives in 2008.
In 2010, approximately 2.5 million people died in the United States.
An estimated 56 million people died worldwide in 1968.
There is no specific number recorded, but it is estimated that no one died in the fire at the Globe Theatre in 1613. The fire occurred during a performance of Shakespeare's Henry VIII, and the audience was able to escape safely.
100,000 people
146
56
Amazingly, hardly anyone died.
The fire-bombing of Tokyo in WWII. Estimated 140,000.
that's mean
None, thankfully.
According to official records, nobody died in the fire.
Shakespeare's Globe Theatre will sell a maximum of 700 tickets to groundlings. The number of tickets sold is limited, not by space, but by fire regulation. They could pack a lot more into that space, and in Shakespeare's day, when they had no fire regulations, they did.
The death toll estimate was 300 from the Great Chicago Fire.
41 people died from the swine flu in south Africa how'd it get there when it was started in Mexico its stretching across the whole globe