Football - Liverpool and Everton
The Beatles Story and Albert Dock
The Three Graces
The ferry across the Mersey River
The two Cathedrals
Tate Art Gallery
Liverpool One, the new mall
Sefton Park and the Palm House
Speke Hall
St. George's Hall
The Beatles' childhood homes and Strawberry Feilds gates
The Adelphi hotel
The Cavern Walks
The Cavern Club
There are a ton of great things to do in Liverpool!
Chat with our AI personalities
If you are referring to the great fire during the reign of Nero, no. The Colosseum had not been built at the time. If yo uare referring to the great fire during the reign of Commodus, no, the Colosseum escaped that one too.
There weren't such things as tourist attractions in colonial times.
No. The Roman Coliseum has been in ruins for centuries. Part of it was toppled by an earthquake in the Middle Ages and never rebuilt. The floor of the arena is long gone, and repairs would be needed before an event could be held there again. Some of the smaller Roman amphitheaters are still used for soccer games today, and bullfights in Spain and Portugal. [In Spain the bull is killed, in Portugal it is not.] And there are reenactors who stage gladiatorial games today, but never to the death as was often done in Roman times.
Tourist attractions
London's Millennium Eye, Millennium Bridge, The Clipper Cutty Sark Buckingham Palace. Greenwich, with the National Maritime Museum The Cotswold's, the Lake District, Oxford, Stratford-upon-Avon and York Bath, The original Roman Baths and Pump Rooms. The Lake District, Lake Windemere Beatrix Potter at Bowness-on-Windermere. Stratford-upon-Avon, Attractions associated with the Bard include Shakespeare's Birthplace Anne Hathaway's Cottage York, The Shambles, one of the world's best-preserved medieval streets Alton Towers,