Norman Wooland

Norman Wooland

  • Born: 1905-3-16
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Laila 2022-02-19 08:02:03

      Did Nero really set the city of Rome on fire?

      The movie once again told me that history is written by victors.

      The film is based on the long historical novel "Where Are You Going" published in 1896 by the Polish writer Shankowitz. Poland is a country deeply influenced by Catholicism. Writers who grew up in such an environment will naturally...

    • Verda 2022-02-19 08:02:03

      Records of the Burning City of the Tyrant-"Faith is Built on the Foundation of Love"

      In the first century AD, under the preaching of Paul, Peter and others, more and more poor people from the lower class believed in Christianity and were brutally persecuted. A young Roman aristocratic officer and a hostage were treated as a daughter by the guardian. The beautiful girl has...

    • Cullen 2022-03-25 09:01:19

      The Burning of the City by the Tyrant, the Fall of the Roman Empire, and the Gladiator are all three-hour masterpieces. It's better than a Gladiator. Old movies can only be viewed at double speed. The rhythm and amount of information in this film are better than those of The Fallen Record. It is inexplicable that the heroine falls in love with the hero instantly, and the missionary miracle appears slightly dramatic. The persecution of Christians, the portrayal of Nero and Bocconi is wonderful, and the interaction between the tyrant and the "sober minister" is vividly displayed

    • Jaclyn 2022-02-19 08:02:03

      Simon Peter asked Jesus, "Where is the Lord going?" Jesus replied, "Where I am going, you cannot go with me now, but you will go with me later." (John 13:36)

    Quo Vadis quotes

    • Emperor Nero: [On learning that Petronius is dead] I shall never forgive him for this!

    • Narrator: This is the Appian Way, the most famous road that leads to Rome, as all roads lead to Rome. On this road march her conquering legions. Imperial Rome is the center of the empire, the undisputed master of the world. But with this power inevitably comes corruption. No man is sure of his life, the individual is at the mercy of the state, murder replaces justice. Rulers of conquered nations surrender their helpless subjects to bondage. High and low alike become Roman slaves, Roman hostages. There is no escape from the whip and the sword. That any force on earth can shake the foundations of this pyramid of power and corruption, of human misery and slavery, seems inconceivable. But thirty years before this day, a miracle occurred. On a Roman cross in Judea, a Man died to make men free, to spread the Gospel of love and redemption. Soon that humble cross is destined to replace the proud eagles atop the victorious Roman standards. This is the story of that immortal conflict. In this, the summer of the year 64 A.D., in the reign of the antichrist known to history as the emperor Nero, the victorious Fourteenth Legion is on its way back to Rome under the command of one Marcus Vinicius.