96 years
more than 10 thousand years ago
The Coloseum was completed in 80AD.
The emperor Titus was in power in 80 AD.
The Torah has been around for at least 3300 years and it makes up the Old Testament,the Old Testament was written between about 80AD and 200AD depending on the book of the bible it was
Following the opening of Colosseum Flavium (in 80AD) there were 100 holidays.
The last gladiator battle in the " Colosseum " was Jan 1st 404 AD
The Flavian Amphitheatre a.k.a Colosseum. It was completed in 8 years under emperor Vespasian. It was was further developed by emperor Domitian who added a gallery at the top and built underground tunnels to house animals and slaves.
The Colosseum (Amphitheatre Flavium) in Rome opened in 80AD. The opening ceremony was held by Emperor Titus and it was followed by 100 holidays. According to Dion Cassius, 2000 gladiators and 9000 wild animals died during these holidays.
First of all: What three buildings are /were based on Roman architecture? The Colosseum in Rome - an amphitheatre(72-80AD); triumphal arches (several), aqueducts (several), Forum Romanum with all the temples, the curia, the basilica...etc.
The short answer is 'no'. The metric system was invented and came came into use in the time of Napoleon in France, around 1800AD, and wasn't fully accepted until late in the nineteenth century. In Britain we still are trying hard to resist it!
The huge Ampitheatrum Flavium in central Rome was built by Emperors of the Flavius family from 70AD to 80AD using travertine stone from nearby quarries. The pieces of cut stone were held together by iron clamps rather than mortar.It was built near a gigantic bronze statue of Emperor Nero called the Colossus, and eventually people started calling the ampitheater by the name Colosseum.
Three volcanoes: 1. Thera (Greek Island) which last erupted in ancient times (c.1300BC) which caused the Minoan civilisation to disappear. Thought by some scholars to be the source of the legend of Atlantis. 2. Vesuvius near Naples (Italy) which is still active but currently quiet. Famous eruption in 80AD buried the Roman cities of Pompey and Herculeum. 3. Mount Etna (Sicily) still active