Nero, emperor 54-68 CE
"Alone and Exploited, Migrant Children Work Brutal Jobs Across the U.S." (New York Times)
Florida Governor's higher education legislation (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
Coins of 64-65 CE: L: Nero Caesar Augustus; R: Juppiter Custos ("Jupiter Guardian")
artist's hyper-realistic portrait head of Nero based on Suetonius's description (cf. Ahenobarbus, "red-bronze beard", and Nero's subflavus, "somewhat orange-ish" hair, Nero 51)
Hubert, The Fire of Rome, 1785
Nero & the Great Fire of 64 CE (fuller account in Tacitus, Annals 15.38-44, ca. 115 CE)
Suetonius, Nero 38 (cultural catastrophe & the obliteration of civic memory; Neropolis?)
For, as if he were upset by the ugliness of the old buildings and the narrow and twisting streets, he set fire to the city, so openly indeed that some ex-consuls, when they came upon his servants equipped with kindling and torches on their property, did not stop them. He greatly desired some land near the Golden House, then occupied by granaries, and had them torn down and burnt using military machinery because their walls were made of stone. For six days and seven nights destruction raged and the people were forced to take shelter in monuments and tombs. During that time, besides the enormous number of apartment blocks, the houses of great generals of old, together with the spoils of battle which still adorned them, the temples of the gods, too, which had been vowed and dedicated by Rome's kings and later in the Punic and Gallic wars, and every other interesting or memorable survival from the olden days went up in flames. Nero watched the fire from the tower of Maecenas, delighted with what he termed 'the beauty of the flames' and, dressed in his stage attire, he sang 'The Fall of Troy'.
Peter Ustinov as Nero in Quo Vadis (1951): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EVZwTMmk8c