The Great Fire of London in 1666 killed thousands of people trapped in burning buildings.
The Great Fire of London (September 2-6, 1666) destroyed 13,200 houses and 87 churches across 436 acres, one of history's largest urban conflagrations. Yet official contemporary records documented remarkably few deaths: six confirmed fatalities. This astonishing disparity occurs because most Londoners successfully evacuated to open fields outside the city. The inferno's destructive power was immense, but its human toll was comparatively low due to rapid escape routes and warning systems. Popular imagination, fed by dramatic descriptions of the fire's scale, often inflates death tolls. This gap between physical devastation and human casualty numbers reveals how destruction doesn't automatically translate to mass death.