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Cleopatra

Cleopatra VII Philopator (Koinē Greek: Κλεοπάτρα Φιλοπάτωρ, "Cleopatra the father-beloved";[5] 69 BC – 10 August 30 BC) was Queen of the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt from 51 to 30 BC, and its last active ruler.[note 5] A member of the Ptolemaic dynasty, she was a descendant of its founder Ptolemy I Soter, a Macedonian Greek general and companion of Alexander the Great.[note 6] After the death of Cleopatra, Egypt became a province of the Roman Empire, marking the end of the last Hellenistic state in the Mediterranean and of the age that had lasted since the reign of Alexander (336–323 BC).[note 7] Her native language was Koine Greek, and she was the only Ptolemaic ruler to learn the Egyptian language.[note 8]

Cleopatra
The Berlin Cleopatra, a Roman sculpture of Cleopatra wearing a royal diadem, mid-1st century BC (around the time of her visits to Rome in 46–44 BC), discovered in an Italian villa along the Via Appia and now located in the Altes Museum in Germany.[1][2][3][note 1]
Queen of the Ptolemaic Kingdom
Reign51–30 BC (21 years)[4]
PredecessorPtolemy XII Auletes
SuccessorPtolemy XV Caesarion[note 2]
Co-rulers
See list
BornEarly 69 BC
Alexandria, Ptolemaic Kingdom
Died10 August 30 BC (aged 39)[note 3]
Alexandria, Roman Egypt
Burial
Unlocated tomb
(probably in Egypt)
Spouses
Issue
Names
Cleopatra VII Thea Philopator
DynastyPtolemaic
FatherPtolemy XII Auletes
MotherPresumably Cleopatra VI Tryphaena (also known as Cleopatra V Tryphaena)[note 4]

In 58 BC, Cleopatra presumably accompanied her father, Ptolemy XII Auletes, during his exile to Rome after a revolt in Egypt (a Roman client state) allowed his rival daughter Berenice IV to claim his throne. Berenice was killed in 55 BC when Ptolemy returned to Egypt with Roman military assistance. When he died in 51 BC, the joint reign of Cleopatra and her brother Ptolemy XIII began, but a falling-out between them led to open civil war. After losing the 48 BC Battle of Pharsalus in Greece against his rival Julius Caesar (a Roman dictator and consul) in Caesar's Civil War, the Roman statesman Pompey fled to Egypt. Pompey had been a political ally of Ptolemy XII, but Ptolemy XIII, at the urging of his court eunuchs, had Pompey ambushed and killed before Caesar arrived and occupied Alexandria. Caesar then attempted to reconcile the rival Ptolemaic siblings, but Ptolemy's chief adviser, Potheinos, viewed Caesar's terms as favoring Cleopatra, so his forces besieged her and Caesar at the palace. Shortly after the siege was lifted by reinforcements, Ptolemy XIII died in the 47 BC Battle of the Nile; Cleopatra's half-sister Arsinoe IV was eventually exiled to Ephesus for her role in carrying out the siege. Caesar declared Cleopatra and her brother Ptolemy XIV joint rulers but maintained a private affair with Cleopatra that produced a son, Caesarion. Cleopatra traveled to Rome as a client queen in 46 and 44 BC, where she stayed at Caesar's villa. After the assassination of Caesar and (on her orders) Ptolemy XIV in 44 BC, she named Caesarion co-ruler as Ptolemy XV.

In the Liberators' civil war of 43–42 BC, Cleopatra sided with the Roman Second Triumvirate formed by Caesar's grandnephew and heir Octavian, Mark Antony, and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus. After their meeting at Tarsos in 41 BC, the queen had an affair with Antony. He carried out the execution of Arsinoe at her request, and became increasingly reliant on Cleopatra for both funding and military aid during his invasions of the Parthian Empire and the Kingdom of Armenia. The Donations of Alexandria declared their children Alexander Helios, Cleopatra Selene II, and Ptolemy Philadelphus rulers over various erstwhile territories under Antony's triumviral authority. This event, their marriage, and Antony's divorce of Octavian's sister Octavia Minor led to the final war of the Roman Republic. Octavian engaged in a war of propaganda, forced Antony's allies in the Roman Senate to flee Rome in 32 BC, and declared war on Cleopatra. After defeating Antony and Cleopatra's naval fleet at the 31 BC Battle of Actium, Octavian's forces invaded Egypt in 30 BC and defeated Antony, leading to Antony's suicide. When Cleopatra learned that Octavian planned to bring her to his Roman triumphal procession, she killed herself by poisoning, contrary to the popular belief that she was bitten by an asp.

Cleopatra's legacy survives in ancient and modern works of art. Roman historiography and Latin poetry produced a generally critical view of the queen that pervaded later Medieval and Renaissance literature. In the visual arts, her ancient depictions include Roman busts, paintings, and sculptures, cameo carvings and glass, Ptolemaic and Roman coinage, and reliefs. In Renaissance and Baroque art, she was the subject of many works including operas, paintings, poetry, sculptures, and theatrical dramas. She has become a pop culture icon of Egyptomania since the Victorian era, and in modern times, Cleopatra has appeared in the applied and fine arts, burlesque satire, Hollywood films, and brand images for commercial products.

Etymology

The Latinized form Cleopatra comes from the Ancient Greek Kleopátra (Κλεοπάτρα), meaning "glory of her father",[6] from κλέος (kléos, "glory") and πατήρ (patḗr, "father").[7] The masculine form would have been written either as Kleópatros (Κλεόπατρος) or Pátroklos (Πάτροκλος).[7] Cleopatra was the name of Alexander the Great's sister, as well as Cleopatra Alcyone, wife of Meleager in Greek mythology.[8] Through the marriage of Ptolemy V Epiphanes and Cleopatra I Syra (a Seleucid princess), the name entered the Ptolemaic dynasty.[9][10] Cleopatra's adopted title Theā́ Philopátōra (Θεᾱ́ Φιλοπάτωρα) means "goddess who loves her father".[11][12][note 9]

Biography

Background

 
Hellenistic portrait of Ptolemy XII Auletes, the father of Cleopatra, located in the Louvre, Paris[13]

Ptolemaic pharaohs were crowned by the Egyptian high priest of Ptah at Memphis, but resided in the multicultural and largely Greek city of Alexandria, established by Alexander the Great of Macedon.[14][15][16][note 10] They spoke Greek and governed Egypt as Hellenistic Greek monarchs, refusing to learn the native Egyptian language.[17][18][19][note 8] In contrast, Cleopatra could speak multiple languages by adulthood and was the first Ptolemaic ruler to learn the Egyptian language.[20][21][19][note 11] Plutarch implies that she also spoke Ethiopian, the language of the "Troglodytes", Hebrew (or Aramaic), Arabic, the Syrian language (perhaps Syriac), Median, and Parthian, and she could apparently also speak Latin, although her Roman contemporaries would have preferred to speak with her in her native Koine Greek.[21][19][22][note 12] Aside from Greek, Egyptian, and Latin, these languages reflected Cleopatra's desire to restore North African and West Asian territories that once belonged to the Ptolemaic Kingdom.[23]

Roman interventionism in Egypt predated the reign of Cleopatra.[24][25][26] When Ptolemy IX Lathyros died in late 81 BC, he was succeeded by his daughter Berenice III.[27][28] However, with opposition building at the royal court against the idea of a sole reigning female monarch, Berenice III accepted joint rule and marriage with her cousin and stepson Ptolemy XI Alexander II, an arrangement made by the Roman dictator Sulla.[27][28] Ptolemy XI had his wife killed shortly after their marriage in 80 BC, but was lynched soon thereafter in the resulting riot over the assassination.[27][29][30] Ptolemy XI, and perhaps his uncle Ptolemy IX or father Ptolemy X Alexander I, willed the Ptolemaic Kingdom to Rome as collateral for loans, so that the Romans had legal grounds to take over Egypt, their client state, after the assassination of Ptolemy XI.[27][31][32] The Romans chose instead to divide the Ptolemaic realm among the illegitimate sons of Ptolemy IX, bestowing Cyprus on Ptolemy of Cyprus and Egypt on Ptolemy XII Auletes.[27][29]

Early childhood

Cleopatra VII was born in early 69 BC to the ruling Ptolemaic pharaoh Ptolemy XII and an unknown mother,[33][34][note 13] presumably Ptolemy XII's wife Cleopatra VI Tryphaena (also known as Cleopatra V Tryphaena),[35][36][37][note 14][note 4] the mother of Cleopatra's older sister, Berenice IV Epiphaneia.[38][39][40][note 15] Cleopatra Tryphaena disappears from official records a few months after the birth of Cleopatra in 69 BC.[41][42] The three younger children of Ptolemy XII, Cleopatra's sister Arsinoe IV and brothers Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator and Ptolemy XIV,[38][39][40] were born in the absence of his wife.[43][44] Cleopatra's childhood tutor was Philostratos, from whom she learned the Greek arts of oration and philosophy.[45] During her youth Cleopatra presumably studied at the Musaeum, including the Library of Alexandria.[46][47]

Reign and exile of Ptolemy XII

 
Most likely a posthumously painted portrait of Cleopatra with red hair and her distinct facial features, wearing a royal diadem and pearl-studded hairpins, from Roman Herculaneum, Italy, 1st century AD[48][49][note 16]

In 65 BC the Roman censor Marcus Licinius Crassus argued before the Roman Senate that Rome should annex Ptolemaic Egypt, but his proposed bill and the similar bill of tribune Servilius Rullus in 63 BC were rejected.[50][51] Ptolemy XII responded to the threat of possible annexation by offering remuneration and lavish gifts to powerful Roman statesmen, such as Pompey during his campaign against Mithridates VI of Pontus, and eventually Julius Caesar after he became Roman consul in 59 BC.[52][53][54][note 17] However, Ptolemy XII's profligate behavior bankrupted him, and he was forced to acquire loans from the Roman banker Gaius Rabirius Postumus.[55][56][57]

In 58 BC the Romans annexed Cyprus and on accusations of piracy drove Ptolemy of Cyprus, Ptolemy XII's brother, to commit suicide instead of enduring exile to Paphos.[58][59][57][note 18] Ptolemy XII remained publicly silent on the death of his brother, a decision which, along with ceding traditional Ptolemaic territory to the Romans, damaged his credibility among subjects already enraged by his economic policies.[58][60][61] Ptolemy XII was then exiled from Egypt by force, traveling first to Rhodes, then Athens, and finally the villa of triumvir Pompey in the Alban Hills, near Praeneste, Italy.[58][59][62][note 19] Ptolemy XII spent nearly a year there on the outskirts of Rome, ostensibly accompanied by his daughter Cleopatra, then about 11.[58][62][note 20] Berenice IV sent an embassy to Rome to advocate for her rule and oppose the reinstatement of her father Ptolemy XII, but Ptolemy had assassins kill the leaders of the embassy, an incident that was covered up by his powerful Roman supporters.[63][56][64][note 21] When the Roman Senate denied Ptolemy XII the offer of an armed escort and provisions for a return to Egypt, he decided to leave Rome in late 57 BC and reside at the Temple of Artemis in Ephesus.[65][66][67]

The Roman financiers of Ptolemy XII remained determined to restore him to power.[68] Pompey persuaded Aulus Gabinius, the Roman governor of Syria, to invade Egypt and restore Ptolemy XII, offering him 10,000 talents for the proposed mission.[68][69][70] Although it put him at odds with Roman law, Gabinius invaded Egypt in the spring of 55 BC by way of Hasmonean Judea, where Hyrcanus II had Antipater the Idumaean, father of Herod the Great, furnish the Roman-led army with supplies.[68][71] As a young cavalry officer, Mark Antony was under Gabinius's command. He distinguished himself by preventing Ptolemy XII from massacring the inhabitants of Pelousion, and for rescuing the body of Archelaos, the husband of Berenice IV, after he was killed in battle, ensuring him a proper royal burial.[72][73] Cleopatra, then 14 years of age, would have traveled with the Roman expedition into Egypt; years later, Antony would profess that he had fallen in love with her at this time.[72][74]

 
The Roman Republic (green) and Ptolemaic Egypt (yellow) in 40 BC

Gabinius was put on trial in Rome for abusing his authority, for which he was acquitted, but his second trial for accepting bribes led to his exile, from which he was recalled seven years later in 48 BC by Caesar.[75][76] Crassus replaced him as governor of Syria and extended his provincial command to Egypt, but he was killed by the Parthians at the Battle of Carrhae in 53 BC.[75][77] Ptolemy XII had Berenice IV and her wealthy supporters executed, seizing their properties.[78][79][80] He allowed Gabinius's largely Germanic and Gallic Roman garrison, the Gabiniani, to harass people in the streets of Alexandria and installed his longtime Roman financier Rabirius as his chief financial officer.[78][81][82][note 22] Within a year Rabirius was placed under protective custody and sent back to Rome after his life was endangered for draining Egypt of its resources.[83][84][80][note 23] Despite these problems, Ptolemy XII created a will designating Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII as his joint heirs, oversaw major construction projects such as the Temple of Edfu and a temple at Dendera, and stabilized the economy.[85][84][86][note 24] On 31 May 52 BC, Cleopatra was made a regent of Ptolemy XII, as indicated by an inscription in the Temple of Hathor at Dendera.[87][88][89][note 25] Rabirius was unable to collect the entirety of Ptolemy XII's debt by the time of the latter's death, and so it was passed on to his successors Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII.[83][76]

Accession to the throne

 
 
Left: Cleopatra dressed as a pharaoh and presenting offerings to the goddess Isis, on a limestone stele dedicated by a Greek man named Onnophris, dated 51 BC, and located in the Louvre, Paris
Right: The cartouches of Cleopatra and Caesarion on a limestone stele of the High Priest of Ptah in Egypt, dated to the Ptolemaic period, and located in the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London

Ptolemy XII died sometime before 22 March 51 BC, when Cleopatra, in her first act as queen, began her voyage to Hermonthis, near Thebes, to install a new sacred Buchis bull, worshiped as an intermediary for the god Montu in the Ancient Egyptian religion.[5][90][91][note 26] Cleopatra faced several pressing issues and emergencies shortly after taking the throne. These included famine caused by drought and a low level of the annual flooding of the Nile, and lawless behavior instigated by the Gabiniani, the now unemployed and assimilated Roman soldiers left by Gabinius to garrison Egypt.[92][93] Inheriting her father's debts, Cleopatra also owed the Roman Republic 17.5 million drachmas.[94]

In 50 BC Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus, proconsul of Syria, sent his two eldest sons to Egypt, most likely to negotiate with the Gabiniani and recruit them as soldiers in the desperate defense of Syria against the Parthians.[95] However, the Gabiniani tortured and murdered these two, perhaps with secret encouragement by rogue senior administrators in Cleopatra's court.[95][96] Cleopatra sent the Gabiniani culprits to Bibulus as prisoners awaiting his judgment, but he sent them back to Cleopatra and chastised her for interfering in their adjudication, which was the prerogative of the Roman Senate.[97][96] Bibulus, siding with Pompey in Caesar's Civil War, failed to prevent Caesar from landing a naval fleet in Greece, which ultimately allowed Caesar to reach Egypt in pursuit of Pompey.[97]

By 29 August 51 BC, official documents started listing Cleopatra as the sole ruler, evidence that she had rejected her brother Ptolemy XIII as a co-ruler.[94][96][98] She had probably married him,[77] but there is no record of this.[5] The Ptolemaic practice of sibling marriage was introduced by Ptolemy II and his sister Arsinoe II.[99][100][101] A long-held royal Egyptian practice, it was loathed by contemporary Greeks.[99][100][101][note 27] By the reign of Cleopatra, however, it was considered a normal arrangement for Ptolemaic rulers.[99][100][101]

Despite Cleopatra's rejection of him, Ptolemy XIII still retained powerful allies, notably the eunuch Potheinos, his childhood tutor, regent, and administrator of his properties.[102][93][103] Others involved in the cabal against Cleopatra included Achillas, a prominent military commander, and Theodotus of Chios, another tutor of Ptolemy XIII.[102][104] Cleopatra seems to have attempted a short-lived alliance with her brother Ptolemy XIV, but by the autumn of 50 BC Ptolemy XIII had the upper hand in their conflict and began signing documents with his name before that of his sister, followed by the establishment of his first regnal date in 49 BC.[5][105][106][note 28]

Assassination of Pompey

 
A Roman portrait of Pompey made during the reign of Augustus (27 BC – 14 AD), a copy of an original from 70 to 60 BC, and located in the Venice National Archaeological Museum, Italy

In the summer of 49 BC, Cleopatra and her forces were still fighting against Ptolemy XIII within Alexandria when Pompey's son Gnaeus Pompeius arrived, seeking military aid on behalf of his father.[105] After returning to Italy from the wars in Gaul and crossing the Rubicon in January of 49 BC, Caesar had forced Pompey and his supporters to flee to Greece.[107][108] In perhaps their last joint decree, both Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII agreed to Gnaeus Pompeius's request and sent his father 60 ships and 500 troops, including the Gabiniani, a move that helped erase some of the debt owed to Rome.[107][109] Losing the fight against her brother, Cleopatra was then forced to flee Alexandria and withdraw to the region of Thebes.[110][111][112] By the spring of 48 BC Cleopatra had traveled to Roman Syria with her younger sister, Arsinoe IV, to gather an invasion force that would head to Egypt.[113][106][114] She returned with an army, but her advance to Alexandria was blocked by her brother's forces, including some Gabiniani mobilized to fight against her, so she camped outside Pelousion in the eastern Nile Delta.[115][106][116]

In Greece, Caesar and Pompey's forces engaged each other at the decisive Battle of Pharsalus on 9 August 48 BC, leading to the destruction of most of Pompey's army and his forced flight to Tyre, Lebanon.[115][117][118][note 29] Given his close relationship with the Ptolemies, Pompey ultimately decided that Egypt would be his place of refuge, where he could replenish his forces.[119][118][116][note 30] Ptolemy XIII's advisers, however, feared the idea of Pompey using Egypt as his base in a protracted Roman civil war.[119][120][121] In a scheme devised by Theodotus, Pompey arrived by ship near Pelousion after being invited by a written message, only to be ambushed and stabbed to death on 28 September 48 BC.[119][117][122][note 31] Ptolemy XIII believed he had demonstrated his power and simultaneously defused the situation by having Pompey's head, severed and embalmed, sent to Caesar, who arrived in Alexandria by early October and took up residence at the royal palace.[123][124][125][note 31] Caesar expressed grief and outrage over the killing of Pompey and called on both Ptolemy XIII and Cleopatra to disband their forces and reconcile with each other.[123][126][125][note 32]

Relationship with Julius Caesar

Ptolemy XIII arrived at Alexandria at the head of his army, in clear defiance of Caesar's demand that he disband and leave his army before his arrival.[127][128] Cleopatra initially sent emissaries to Caesar, but upon allegedly hearing that Caesar was inclined to having affairs with royal women, she came to Alexandria to see him personally.[127][129][128] Historian Cassius Dio records that she did so without informing her brother, dressed in an attractive manner, and charmed Caesar with her wit.[127][130][131] Plutarch provides an entirely different and perhaps mythical account that alleges she was bound inside a bed sack to be smuggled into the palace to meet Caesar.[127][132][133][note 33]

 
The Tusculum portrait, a contemporary Roman sculpture of Julius Caesar located in the Archaeological Museum of Turin, Italy

When Ptolemy XIII realized that his sister was in the palace consorting directly with Caesar, he attempted to rouse the populace of Alexandria into a riot, but he was arrested by Caesar, who used his oratorical skills to calm the frenzied crowd.[134][135][136] Caesar then brought Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII before the assembly of Alexandria, where Caesar revealed the written will of Ptolemy XII—previously possessed by Pompey—naming Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII as his joint heirs.[137][135][129][note 34] Caesar then attempted to arrange for the other two siblings, Arsinoe IV and Ptolemy XIV, to rule together over Cyprus, thus removing potential rival claimants to the Egyptian throne while also appeasing the Ptolemaic subjects still bitter over the loss of Cyprus to the Romans in 58 BC.[138][135][139][note 34]

Judging that this agreement favored Cleopatra over Ptolemy XIII and that the latter's army of 20,000, including the Gabiniani, could most likely defeat Caesar's army of 4,000 unsupported troops, Potheinos decided to have Achillas lead their forces to Alexandria to attack both Caesar and Cleopatra.[138][135][140][note 35] After Caesar managed to execute Potheinos, Arsinoe IV joined forces with Achillas and was declared queen, but soon afterward had her tutor Ganymedes kill Achillas and take his position as commander of her army.[141][142][143][note 36] Ganymedes then tricked Caesar into requesting the presence of the erstwhile captive Ptolemy XIII as a negotiator, only to have him join the army of Arsinoe IV.[141][144][145] The resulting siege of the palace, with Caesar and Cleopatra trapped together inside, lasted into the following year of 47 BC.[146][126][147][note 37]

Sometime between January and March of 47 BC, Caesar's reinforcements arrived, including those led by Mithridates of Pergamon and Antipater the Idumaean.[141][126][148][note 38] Ptolemy XIII and Arsinoe IV withdrew their forces to the Nile, where Caesar attacked them. Ptolemy XIII tried to flee by boat, but it capsized, and he drowned.[149][126][150][note 39] Ganymedes may have been killed in the battle. Theodotus was found years later in Asia, by Marcus Junius Brutus, and executed. Arsinoe IV was forcefully paraded in Caesar's triumph in Rome before being exiled to the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus.[151][152][153] Cleopatra was conspicuously absent from these events and resided in the palace, most likely because she had been pregnant with Caesar's child since September 48 BC.[154][155][156]

Caesar's term as consul had expired at the end of 48 BC.[151] However, Antony, an officer of his, helped to secure Caesar's appointment as dictator lasting for a year, until October 47 BC, providing Caesar with the legal authority to settle the dynastic dispute in Egypt.[151] Wary of repeating the mistake of Cleopatra's sister Berenice IV in having a female monarch as sole ruler, Caesar appointed Cleopatra's 12-year-old brother, Ptolemy XIV, as joint ruler with the 22-year-old Cleopatra in a nominal sibling marriage, but Cleopatra continued living privately with Caesar.[157][126][148][note 40] The exact date at which Cyprus was returned to her control is not known, although she had a governor there by 42 BC.[158][148]

 

Caesar is alleged to have joined Cleopatra for a cruise of the Nile and sightseeing of Egyptian monuments,[126][159][160] although this may be a romantic tale reflecting later well-to-do Roman proclivities and not a real historical event.[161] The historian Suetonius provided considerable details about the voyage, including use of Thalamegos, the pleasure barge constructed by Ptolemy IV, which during his reign measured 90 metres (300 ft) in length and 24 metres (80 ft) in height and was complete with dining rooms, state rooms, holy shrines, and promenades along its two decks, resembling a floating villa.[161][162] Caesar could have had an interest in the Nile cruise owing to his fascination with geography; he was well-read in the works of Eratosthenes and Pytheas, and perhaps wanted to discover the source of the river, but turned back before reaching Ethiopia.[163][164]

Caesar departed from Egypt around April 47 BC, allegedly to confront Pharnaces II of Pontus, the son of Mithridates VI of Pontus, who was stirring up trouble for Rome in Anatolia.[165] It is possible that Caesar, married to the prominent Roman woman Calpurnia, also wanted to avoid being seen together with Cleopatra when she bore him their son.[165][159] He left three legions in Egypt, later increased to four, under the command of the freedman Rufio, to secure Cleopatra's tenuous position, but also perhaps to keep her activities in check.[165][166][167]

Caesarion, Cleopatra's alleged child with Caesar, was born 23 June 47 BC and was originally named "Pharaoh Caesar", as preserved on a stele at the Serapeum of Saqqara.[168][126][169][note 41] Perhaps owing to his still childless marriage with Calpurnia, Caesar remained publicly silent about Caesarion (but perhaps accepted his parentage in private).[170][note 42] Cleopatra, on the other hand, made repeated official declarations about Caesarion's parentage, naming Caesar as the father.[170][171][172]

 
Egyptian portrait of a Ptolemaic queen, possibly Cleopatra, c. 51–30 BC, located in the Brooklyn Museum[173]

Cleopatra and her nominal joint ruler Ptolemy XIV visited Rome sometime in late 46 BC, presumably without Caesarion, and were given lodging in Caesar's villa within the Horti Caesaris.[174][169][175][note 43] As with their father Ptolemy XII, Caesar awarded both Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIV the legal status of "friend and ally of the Roman people" (Latin: socius et amicus populi Romani), in effect client rulers loyal to Rome.[176][177][178] Cleopatra's visitors at Caesar's villa across the Tiber included the senator Cicero, who found her arrogant.[179][180] Sosigenes of Alexandria, one of the members of Cleopatra's court, aided Caesar in the calculations for the new Julian calendar, put into effect 1 January 45 BC.[181][182][183] The Temple of Venus Genetrix, established in the Forum of Caesar on 25 September 46 BC, contained a golden statue of Cleopatra (which stood there at least until the 3rd century AD), associating the mother of Caesar's child directly with the goddess Venus, mother of the Romans.[184][182][185] The statue also subtly linked the Egyptian goddess Isis with the Roman religion.[179]

Cleopatra's presence in Rome most likely had an effect on the events at the Lupercalia festival a month before Caesar's assassination.[186][187] Antony attempted to place a royal diadem on Caesar's head, but the latter refused in what was most likely a staged performance, perhaps to gauge the Roman public's mood about accepting Hellenistic-style kingship.[186][187] Cicero, who was present at the festival, mockingly asked where the diadem came from, an obvious reference to the Ptolemaic queen whom he abhorred.[186][187] Caesar was assassinated on the Ides of March (15 March 44 BC), but Cleopatra stayed in Rome until about mid-April, in the vain hope of having Caesarion recognized as Caesar's heir.[188][189][190] However, Caesar's will named his grandnephew Octavian as the primary heir, and Octavian arrived in Italy around the same time Cleopatra decided to depart for Egypt.[188][189][191] A few months later, Cleopatra had Ptolemy XIV killed by poisoning, elevating her son Caesarion as her co-ruler.[192][193][172][note 44]

Cleopatra in the Liberators' civil war

 
Cleopatra's Gate in Tarsos (now Tarsus, Mersin, Turkey), the site where she met Mark Antony in 41 BC[194]

Octavian, Antony, and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus formed the Second Triumvirate in 43 BC, in which they were each elected for five-year terms to restore order in the Republic and bring Caesar's assassins to justice.[195][196] Cleopatra received messages from both Gaius Cassius Longinus, one of Caesar's assassins, and Publius Cornelius Dolabella, proconsul of Syria and Caesarian loyalist, requesting military aid.[195] She decided to write Cassius an excuse that her kingdom faced too many internal problems, while sending the four legions left by Caesar in Egypt to Dolabella.[195][197] However, these troops were captured by Cassius in Palestine.[195][197] While Serapion, Cleopatra's governor of Cyprus, defected to Cassius and provided him with ships, Cleopatra took her own fleet to Greece to personally assist Octavian and Antony, but her ships were heavily damaged in a Mediterranean storm and she arrived too late to aid in the fighting.[195][198] By the autumn of 42 BC, Antony had defeated the forces of Caesar's assassins at the Battle of Philippi in Greece, leading to the suicide of Cassius and Brutus.[195][199]

By the end of 42 BC, Octavian had gained control over much of the western half of the Roman Republic and Antony the eastern half, with Lepidus largely marginalized.[200] In the summer of 41 BC, Antony established his headquarters at Tarsos in Anatolia and summoned Cleopatra there in several letters, which she rebuffed until Antony's envoy Quintus Dellius convinced her to come.[201][202] The meeting would allow Cleopatra to clear up the misconception that she had supported Cassius during the civil war and address territorial exchanges in the Levant, but Antony also undoubtedly desired to form a personal, romantic relationship with the queen.[203][202] Cleopatra sailed up the Kydnos River to Tarsos in Thalamegos, hosting Antony and his officers for two nights of lavish banquets on board the ship.[204][205][note 45] Cleopatra managed to clear her name as a supposed supporter of Cassius, arguing she had really attempted to help Dolabella in Syria, and convinced Antony to have her exiled sister, Arsinoe IV, executed at Ephesus.[206][207] Cleopatra's former rebellious governor of Cyprus was also handed over to her for execution.[206][208]

Relationship with Mark Antony

 
A Roman marble bust of the consul and triumvir Mark Antony, late 1st century AD, Vatican Museums

Cleopatra invited Antony to come to Egypt before departing from Tarsos, which led Antony to visit Alexandria by November 41 BC.[206][209] Antony was well received by the populace of Alexandria, both for his heroic actions in restoring Ptolemy XII to power and coming to Egypt without an occupation force like Caesar had done.[210][211] In Egypt, Antony continued to enjoy the lavish royal lifestyle he had witnessed aboard Cleopatra's ship docked at Tarsos.[212][208] He also had his subordinates, such as Publius Ventidius Bassus, drive the Parthians out of Anatolia and Syria.[211][213][214][note 46]

Cleopatra carefully chose Antony as her partner for producing further heirs, as he was deemed to be the most powerful Roman figure following Caesar's demise.[215] With his powers as a triumvir, Antony also had the broad authority to restore former Ptolemaic lands, which were currently in Roman hands, to Cleopatra.[216][217] While it is clear that both Cilicia and Cyprus were under Cleopatra's control by 19 November 38 BC, the transfer probably occurred earlier in the winter of 41–40 BC, during her time spent with Antony.[216]

By the spring of 40 BC, Antony left Egypt due to troubles in Syria, where his governor Lucius Decidius Saxa was killed and his army taken by Quintus Labienus, a former officer under Cassius who now served the Parthian Empire.[218] Cleopatra provided Antony with 200 ships for his campaign and as payment for her newly acquired territories.[218] She would not see Antony again until 37 BC, but she maintained correspondence, and evidence suggests she kept a spy in his camp.[218] By the end of 40 BC, Cleopatra had given birth to twins, a boy named Alexander Helios and a girl named Cleopatra Selene II, both of whom Antony acknowledged as his children.[219][220] Helios (the Sun) and Selene (the Moon) were symbolic of a new era of societal rejuvenation,[221] as well as an indication that Cleopatra hoped Antony would repeat the exploits of Alexander the Great by conquering the Parthians.[211]

 
The Meeting of Antony and Cleopatra (1885), by Lawrence Alma-Tadema

Mark Antony's Parthian campaign in the east was disrupted by the events of the Perusine War (41–40 BC), initiated by his ambitious wife Fulvia against Octavian in the hopes of making her husband the undisputed leader of Rome.[221][222] It has been suggested that Fulvia wanted to cleave Antony away from Cleopatra, but the conflict emerged in Italy even before Cleopatra's meeting with Antony at Tarsos.[223] Fulvia and Antony's brother Lucius Antonius were eventually besieged by Octavian at Perusia (modern Perugia, Italy) and then exiled from Italy, after which Fulvia died at Sicyon in Greece while attempting to reach Antony.[224] Her sudden death led to a reconciliation of Octavian and Antony at Brundisium in Italy in September 40 BC.[224][211] Although the agreement struck at Brundisium solidified Antony's control of the Roman Republic's territories east of the Ionian Sea, it also stipulated that he concede Italia, Hispania, and Gaul, and marry Octavian's sister Octavia the Younger, a potential rival for Cleopatra.[225][226]

In December 40 BC Cleopatra received Herod in Alexandria as an unexpected guest and refugee who fled a turbulent situation in Judea.[227] Herod had been installed as a tetrarch there by Antony, but he was soon at odds with Antigonus II Mattathias of the long-established Hasmonean dynasty.[227] The latter had imprisoned Herod's brother and fellow tetrarch Phasael, who was executed while Herod was fleeing toward Cleopatra's court.[227] Cleopatra attempted to provide him with a military assignment, but Herod declined and traveled to Rome, where the triumvirs Octavian and Antony named him king of Judea.[228][229] This act put Herod on a collision course with Cleopatra, who would desire to reclaim the former Ptolemaic territories that comprised his new Herodian kingdom.[228]

 
 
An ancient Roman sculpture possibly depicting either Cleopatra of Ptolemaic Egypt,[230][231][note 47] or her daughter, Cleopatra Selene II, Queen of Mauretania,[232] located in the Archaeological Museum of Cherchell, Algeria

Relations between Antony and Cleopatra perhaps soured when he not only married Octavia, but also sired her two children, Antonia the Elder in 39 BC and Antonia Minor in 36 BC, and moved his headquarters to Athens.[233] However, Cleopatra's position in Egypt was secure.[211] Her rival Herod was occupied with civil war in Judea that required heavy Roman military assistance, but received none from Cleopatra.[233] Since the authority of Antony and Octavian as triumvirs had expired on 1 January 37 BC, Octavia arranged for a meeting at Tarentum, where the triumvirate was officially extended to 33 BC.[234] With two legions granted by Octavian and a thousand soldiers lent by Octavia, Antony traveled to Antioch, where he made preparations for war against the Parthians.[235]

Antony summoned Cleopatra to Antioch to discuss pressing issues, such as Herod's kingdom and financial support for his Parthian campaign.[235][236] Cleopatra brought her now three-year-old twins to Antioch, where Antony saw them for the first time and where they probably first received their surnames Helios and Selene as part of Antony and Cleopatra's ambitious plans for the future.[237][238] In order to stabilize the east, Antony not only enlarged Cleopatra's domain,[236] he also established new ruling dynasties and client rulers who would be loyal to him, yet would ultimately outlast him.[239][217][note 48]

In this arrangement Cleopatra gained significant former Ptolemaic territories in the Levant, including nearly all of Phoenicia (Lebanon) minus Tyre and Sidon, which remained in Roman hands.[240][217][236] She also received Ptolemais Akko (modern Acre, Israel), a city that was established by Ptolemy II.[240] Given her ancestral relations with the Seleucids, she was granted the region of Coele-Syria along the upper Orontes River.[241][236] She was even given the region surrounding Jericho in Palestine, but she leased this territory back to Herod.[242][229] At the expense of the Nabataean king Malichus I (a cousin of Herod), Cleopatra was also given a portion of the Nabataean Kingdom around the Gulf of Aqaba on the Red Sea, including Ailana (modern Aqaba, Jordan).[243][229] To the west Cleopatra was handed Cyrene along the Libyan coast, as well as Itanos and Olous in Roman Crete.[244][236] Although still administered by Roman officials, these territories nevertheless enriched her kingdom and led her to declare the inauguration of a new era by double-dating her coinage in 36 BC.[245][246]

 
Roman aureus bearing the portraits of Mark Antony (left) and Octavian (right), issued in 41 BC to celebrate the establishment of the Second Triumvirate by Octavian, Antony and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus in 43 BC

Antony's enlargement of the Ptolemaic realm by relinquishing directly controlled Roman territory was exploited by his rival Octavian, who tapped into the public sentiment in Rome against the empowerment of a foreign queen at the expense of their Republic.[247] Octavian, fostering the narrative that Antony was neglecting his virtuous Roman wife Octavia, granted both her and Livia, his own wife, extraordinary privileges of sacrosanctity.[247] Some 50 years before, Cornelia Africana, daughter of Scipio Africanus, had been the first living Roman woman to have a statue dedicated to her.[245] She was now followed by Octavia and Livia, whose statues were most likely erected in the Forum of Caesar to rival that of Cleopatra's, erected by Caesar.[245]

In 36 BC, Cleopatra accompanied Antony to the Euphrates in his journey toward invading the Parthian Empire.[248] She then returned to Egypt, perhaps due to her advanced state of pregnancy.[249] By the summer of 36 BC, she had given birth to Ptolemy Philadelphus, her second son with Antony.[249][236]

Antony's Parthian campaign in 36 BC turned into a complete debacle for a number of reasons, in particular the betrayal of Artavasdes II of Armenia, who defected to the Parthian side.[250][217][251] After losing some 30,000 men, more than Crassus at Carrhae (an indignity he had hoped to avenge), Antony finally arrived at Leukokome near Berytus (modern Beirut, Lebanon) in December, engaged in heavy drinking before Cleopatra arrived to provide funds and clothing for his battered troops.[250][252] Antony desired to avoid the risks involved in returning to Rome, and so he traveled with Cleopatra back to Alexandria to see his newborn son.[250]

Donations of Alexandria

 
A denarius minted by Antony in 34 BC with his portrait on the obverse, which bears the inscription reading "ANTONIVS ARMENIA DEVICTA", alluding to his Armenian campaign. The reverse features Cleopatra, with the inscription "CLEOPATR[AE] REGINAE REGVM FILIORVM REGVM". The mention of her children on the reverse refers to the Donations of Alexandria.[253][254]

As Antony prepared for another Parthian expedition in 35 BC, this time aimed at their ally Armenia, Octavia traveled to Athens with 2,000 troops in alleged support of Antony, but most likely in a scheme devised by Octavian to embarrass him for his military losses.[255][256][note 49] Antony received these troops but told Octavia not to stray east of Athens as he and Cleopatra traveled together to Antioch, only to suddenly and inexplicably abandon the military campaign and head back to Alexandria.[255][256] When Octavia returned to Rome Octavian portrayed his sister as a victim wronged by Antony, although she refused to leave Antony's household.[257][217] Octavian's confidence grew as he eliminated his rivals in the west, including Sextus Pompeius and even Lepidus, the third member of the triumvirate, who was placed under house arrest after revolting against Octavian in Sicily.[257][217][252]

Dellius was sent as Antony's envoy to Artavasdes II in 34 BC to negotiate a potential marriage alliance that would wed the Armenian king's daughter to Alexander Helios, the son of Antony and Cleopatra.[258][259] When this was declined, Antony marched his army into Armenia, defeated their forces and captured the king and Armenian royal family.[258][260] Antony then held a military parade in Alexandria as an imitation of a Roman triumph, dressed as Dionysus and riding into the city on a chariot to present the royal prisoners to Cleopatra, who was seated on a golden throne above a silver dais.[258][261] News of this event was heavily criticized in Rome as a perversion of time-honored Roman rites and rituals to be enjoyed instead by an Egyptian queen.[258]

 
A papyrus document dated February 33 BC granting tax exemptions to a person in Egypt and containing the signature of Cleopatra written by an official, but with "γινέσθωι" (ginésthōi; lit. "make it happen"[262][263] or "so be it"[264]) added in Greek, likely by the queen's own hand[262][263][264]

In an event held at the gymnasium soon after the triumph, Cleopatra dressed as Isis and declared that she was the Queen of Kings with her son Caesarion, King of Kings, while Alexander Helios was declared king of Armenia, Media, and Parthia, and two-year-old Ptolemy Philadelphos was declared king of Syria and Cilicia.[265][266][267] Cleopatra Selene II was bestowed with Crete and Cyrene.[268][269] Antony and Cleopatra may have been wed during this ceremony.[268][267][note 50] Antony sent a report to Rome requesting ratification of these territorial claims, now known as the Donations of Alexandria. Octavian wanted to publicize it for propaganda purposes, but the two consuls, both supporters of Antony, had it censored from public view.[270][269]

In late 34 BC, Antony and Octavian engaged in a heated war of propaganda that would last for years.[271][269][172][note 51] Antony claimed that his rival had illegally deposed Lepidus from their triumvirate and barred him from raising troops in Italy, while Octavian accused Antony of unlawfully detaining the king of Armenia, marrying Cleopatra despite still being married to his sister Octavia, and wrongfully claiming Caesarion as the heir of Caesar instead of Octavian.[271][269] The litany of accusations and gossip associated with this propaganda war have shaped the popular perceptions about Cleopatra from Augustan-period literature through to various media in modern times.[272][273] Cleopatra was said to have brainwashed Mark Antony with witchcraft and sorcery and was as dangerous as Homer's Helen of Troy in destroying civilization.[274] Pliny the Elder claims in his Natural History that Cleopatra once dissolved a pearl worth tens of millions of sesterces in vinegar just to win a dinner-party bet.[275][276] The accusation that Antony had stolen books from the Library of Pergamum to restock the Library of Alexandria later turned out to be an admitted fabrication by Gaius Calvisius Sabinus.[277]

A papyrus document dated to February 33 BC, later used to wrap a mummy, contains the signature of Cleopatra, probably written by an official authorized to sign for her.[262][263] It concerns certain tax exemptions in Egypt granted to either Quintus Caecillius or Publius Canidius Crassus,[note 52] a former Roman consul and Antony's confidant who would command his land forces at Actium.[278][263] A subscript in a different handwriting at the bottom of the papyrus reads "make it happen"[278][263] or "so be it"[264] (Ancient Greek: γινέσθωι, romanizedginésthōi);[note 53] this is likely the autograph of the queen, as it was Ptolemaic practice to countersign documents to avoid forgery.[278][263]

Battle of Actium

 
A reconstructed statue of Augustus as a younger Octavian, dated c. 30 BC

In a speech to the Roman Senate on the first day of his consulship on 1 January 33 BC, Octavian accused Antony of attempting to subvert Roman freedoms and territorial integrity as a slave to his Oriental queen.[279] Before Antony and Octavian's joint imperium expired on 31 December 33 BC, Antony declared Caesarion as the true heir of Caesar in an attempt to undermine Octavian.[279] In 32 BC, the Antonian loyalists Gaius Sosius and Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus became consuls. The former gave a fiery speech condemning Octavian, now a private citizen without public office, and introduced pieces of legislation against him.[278][280] During the next senatorial session, Octavian entered the Senate house with armed guards and levied his own accusations against the consuls.[278][281] Intimidated by this act, the consuls and over 200 senators still in support of Antony fled Rome the next day to join the side of Antony.[278][281][282]

Antony and Cleopatra traveled together to Ephesus in 32 BC, where she provided him with 200 of the 800 naval ships he was able to acquire.[278] Ahenobarbus, wary of having Octavian's propaganda confirmed to the public, attempted to persuade Antony to have Cleopatra excluded from the campaign against Octavian.[283][284] Publius Canidius Crassus made the counterargument that Cleopatra was funding the war effort and was a competent monarch.[283][284] Cleopatra refused Antony's requests that she return to Egypt, judging that by blocking Octavian in Greece she could more easily defend Egypt.[283][284] Cleopatra's insistence that she be involved in the battle for Greece led to the defections of prominent Romans, such as Ahenobarbus and Lucius Munatius Plancus.[283][281]

During the spring of 32 BC Antony and Cleopatra traveled to Athens, where she persuaded Antony to send Octavia an official declaration of divorce.[283][281][267] This encouraged Plancus to advise Octavian that he should seize Antony's will, invested with the Vestal Virgins.[283][281][269] Although a violation of sacred and legal rights, Octavian forcefully acquired the document from the Temple of Vesta, and it became a useful tool in the propaganda war against Antony and Cleopatra.[283][269] Octavian highlighted parts of the will, such as Caesarion being named heir to Caesar, that the Donations of Alexandria were legal, that Antony should be buried alongside Cleopatra in Egypt instead of Rome, and that Alexandria would be made the new capital of the Roman Republic.[285][281][269] In a show of loyalty to Rome, Octavian decided to begin construction of his own mausoleum at the Campus Martius.[281] Octavian's legal standing was also improved by being elected consul in 31 BC.[281] With Antony's will made public, Octavian had his casus belli, and Rome declared war on Cleopatra,[285][286][287] not Antony.[note 54] The legal argument for war was based less on Cleopatra's territorial acquisitions, with former Roman territories ruled by her children with Antony, and more on the fact that she was providing military support to a private citizen now that Antony's triumviral authority had expired.[288]

 
 
Left: A silver tetradrachm of Cleopatra minted at Seleucia Pieria, Syria
Right: A silver tetradrachm of Cleopatra minted at Ascalon, Israel

Antony and Cleopatra had a larger fleet than Octavian, but the crews of Antony and Cleopatra's navy were not all well-trained, some of them perhaps from merchant vessels, whereas Octavian had a fully professional force.[289][284] Antony wanted to cross the Adriatic Sea and blockade Octavian at either Tarentum or Brundisium,[290] but Cleopatra, concerned primarily with defending Egypt, overrode the decision to attack Italy directly.[291][284] Antony and Cleopatra set up their winter headquarters at Patrai in Greece, and by the spring of 31 BC they had moved to Actium, on the southern side of the Ambracian Gulf.[291][290]

Cleopatra and Antony had the support of various allied kings, but Cleopatra had already been in conflict with Herod, and an earthquake in Judea provided him with an excuse to be absent from the campaign.[292] They also lost the support of Malichus I, which would prove to have strategic consequences.[293] Antony and Cleopatra lost several skirmishes against Octavian around Actium during the summer of 31 BC, while defections to Octavian's camp continued, including Antony's long-time companion Dellius[293] and the allied kings Amyntas of Galatia and Deiotaros of Paphlagonia.[293] While some in Antony's camp suggested abandoning the naval conflict to retreat inland, Cleopatra urged for a naval confrontation, to keep Octavian's fleet away from Egypt.[294]

On 2 September 31 BC the naval forces of Octavian, led by Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, met those of Antony and Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium.[294][290][286] Cleopatra, aboard her flagship, the Antonias, commanded 60 ships at the mouth of the Ambracian Gulf, at the rear of the fleet, in what was likely a move by Antony's officers to marginalize her during the battle.[294] Antony had ordered that their ships should have sails on board for a better chance to pursue or flee from the enemy, which Cleopatra, ever concerned about defending Egypt, used to swiftly move through the area of major combat in a strategic withdrawal to the Peloponnese.[295][296][297] Burstein writes that partisan Roman writers would later accuse Cleopatra of cowardly deserting Antony, but their original intention of keeping their sails on board may have been to break the blockade and salvage as much of their fleet as possible.[297] Antony followed Cleopatra and boarded her ship, identified by its distinctive purple sails, as the two escaped the battle and headed for Tainaron.[295] Antony reportedly avoided Cleopatra during this three-day voyage, until her ladies in waiting at Tainaron urged him to speak with her.[298] The Battle of Actium raged on without Cleopatra and Antony until the morning of 3 September, and was followed by massive defections of officers, troops, and allied kings to Octavian's side.[298][296][299]

Downfall and death

 
A Roman painting from the House of Giuseppe II in Pompeii, early 1st century AD, most likely depicting Cleopatra, wearing her royal diadem and consuming poison in an act of suicide, while her son Caesarion, also wearing a royal diadem, stands behind her[300][301]

While Octavian occupied Athens, Antony and Cleopatra landed at Paraitonion in Egypt.[298][302] The couple then went their separate ways, Antony to Cyrene to raise more troops and Cleopatra to the harbor at Alexandria in an attempt to mislead the oppositional party and portray the activities in Greece as a victory.[298] She was afraid that news about the outcome of the battle of Actium would lead to a rebellion.[303] It is uncertain whether or not, at this time, she actually executed Artavasdes II and sent his head to his rival, Artavasdes I of Media Atropatene, in an attempt to strike an alliance with him.[304][305]

Lucius Pinarius, Mark Antony's appointed governor of Cyrene, received word that Octavian had won the Battle of Actium before Antony's messengers could arrive at his court.[304] Pinarius had these messengers executed and then defected to Octavian's side, surrendering to him the four legions under his command that Antony desired to obtain.[304] Antony nearly committed suicide after hearing news of this but was stopped by his staff officers.[304] In Alexandria he built a reclusive cottage on the island of Pharos that he nicknamed the Timoneion, after the philosopher Timon of Athens, who was famous for his cynicism and misanthropy.[304] Herod, who had personally advised Antony after the Battle of Actium that he should betray Cleopatra, traveled to Rhodes to meet Octavian and resign his kingship out of loyalty to Antony.[306] Octavian was impressed by his speech and sense of loyalty, so he allowed him to maintain his position in Judea, further isolating Antony and Cleopatra.[306]

Cleopatra perhaps started to view Antony as a liability by the late summer of 31 BC, when she prepared to leave Egypt to her son Caesarion.[307] Cleopatra planned to relinquish her throne to him, take her fleet from the Mediterranean into the Red Sea, and then set sail to a foreign port, perhaps in India, where she could spend time recuperating.[307][305] However, these plans were ultimately abandoned when Malichus I, as advised by Octavian's governor of Syria, Quintus Didius, managed to burn Cleopatra's fleet in revenge for his losses in a war with Herod that Cleopatra had largely initiated.[307][305] Cleopatra had no other option but to stay in Egypt and negotiate with Octavian.[307] Although most likely later pro-Octavian propaganda, it was reported that at this time Cleopatra started testing the strengths of various poisons on prisoners and even her own servants.[308]

 
The Death of Cleopatra (1658), by Guido Cagnacci

Cleopatra had Caesarion enter into the ranks of the ephebi, which, along with reliefs on a stele from Koptos dated 21 September 31 BC, demonstrated that Cleopatra was now grooming her son to become the sole ruler of Egypt.[309] In a show of solidarity, Antony also had Marcus Antonius Antyllus, his son with Fulvia, enter the ephebi at the same time.[307] Separate messages and envoys from Antony and Cleopatra were then sent to Octavian, still stationed at Rhodes, although Octavian seems to have replied only to Cleopatra.[308] Cleopatra requested that her children should inherit Egypt and that Antony should be allowed to live in exile in Egypt, offered Octavian money in the future, and immediately sent him lavish gifts.[308][305] Octavian sent his diplomat Thyrsos to Cleopatra after she threatened to burn herself and vast amounts of her treasure within a tomb already under construction.[310] Thyrsos advised her to kill Antony so that her life would be spared, but when Antony suspected foul intent, he had this diplomat flogged and sent back to Octavian without a deal.[311]

After lengthy negotiations that ultimately produced no results, Octavian set out to invade Egypt in the spring of 30 BC,[312] stopping at Ptolemais in Phoenicia, where his new ally Herod provided his army with fresh supplies.[313] Octavian moved south and swiftly took Pelousion, while Cornelius Gallus, marching eastward from Cyrene, defeated Antony's forces near Paraitonion.[314][315] Octavian advanced quickly to Alexandria, but Antony returned and won a small victory over Octavian's tired troops outside the city's hippodrome.[314][315] However, on 1 August 30 BC, Antony's naval fleet surrendered to Octavian, followed by Antony's cavalry.[314][296][316] Cleopatra hid herself in her tomb with her close attendants and sent a message to Antony that she had committed suicide.[314][317][318] In despair, Antony responded to this by stabbing himself in the stomach and taking his own life at age 53.[314][296][305] According to Plutarch, he was still dying when brought to Cleopatra at her tomb, telling her he had died honorably and that she could trust Octavian's companion Gaius Proculeius over anyone else in his entourage.[314][319][320] It was Proculeius, however, who infiltrated her tomb using a ladder and detained the queen, denying her the ability to burn herself with her treasures.[321][322] Cleopatra was then allowed to embalm and bury Antony within her tomb before she was escorted to the palace.[321][305]

 
The Death of Cleopatra (1796–1797), by Jean-Baptiste Regnault

Octavian entered Alexandria, occupied the palace, and seized Cleopatra's three youngest children.[321][323] When she met with Octavian, Cleopatra told him bluntly, "I will not be led in a triumph" (Ancient Greek: οὑ θριαμβεύσομαι, romanizedou thriambéusomai), according to Livy, a rare recording of her exact words.[324][325] Octavian promised that he would keep her alive but offered no explanation about his future plans for her kingdom.[326] When a spy informed her that Octavian planned to move her and her children to Rome in three days, she prepared for suicide as she had no intentions of being paraded in a Roman triumph like her sister Arsinoe IV.[326][296][305] It is unclear if Cleopatra's suicide on 10 August 30 BC, at age 39, took place within the palace or her tomb.[327][328][note 3] It is said she was accompanied by her servants Eiras and Charmion, who also took their own lives.[326][329] Octavian was said to have been angered by this outcome but had Cleopatra buried in royal fashion next to Antony in her tomb.[326][330][331] Cleopatra's physician Olympos did not explain her cause of death, although the popular belief is that she allowed an asp or Egyptian cobra to bite and poison her.[332][333][305] Plutarch relates this tale, but then suggests an implement (κνῆστις, knêstis, lit. 'spine, cheese-grater') was used to introduce the toxin by scratching, while Dio says that she injected the poison with a needle (βελόνη, belónē), and Strabo argued for an ointment of some kind.[334][333][335][note 55] No venomous snake was found with her body, but she did have tiny puncture wounds on her arm that could have been caused by a needle.[332][335][331]

Cleopatra decided in her last moments to send Caesarion away to Upper Egypt, perhaps with plans to flee to Kushite Nubia, Ethiopia, or India.[336][337][315] Caesarion, now Ptolemy XV, would reign for a mere 18 days until executed on the orders of Octavian on 29 August 30 BC, after returning to Alexandria under the false pretense that Octavian would allow him to be king.[338][339][340][note 2] Octavian was convinced by the advice of the philosopher Arius Didymus that there was room for only one Caesar in the world.[341][note 56] With the fall of the Ptolemaic Kingdom, the Roman province of Egypt was established,[342][296][343][note 57] marking the end of the Hellenistic period.[344][345][note 7] In January of 27 BC Octavian was renamed Augustus ("the revered") and amassed constitutional powers that established him as the first Roman emperor, inaugurating the Principate era of the Roman Empire.[346]

Cleopatra's kingdom and role as a monarch

 
Cleopatra on a coin of 40 drachms from 51 to 30 BC, minted at Alexandria; on the obverse is a portrait of Cleopatra wearing a diadem, and on the reverse an inscription reading "ΒΑΣΙΛΙΣΣΗΣ ΚΛΕΟΠΑΤΡΑΣ" with an eagle standing on a thunderbolt.

Following the tradition of Macedonian rulers, Cleopatra ruled Egypt and other territories such as Cyprus as an absolute monarch, serving as the sole lawgiver of her kingdom.[347] She was the chief religious authority in her realm, presiding over religious ceremonies dedicated to the deities of both the Egyptian and Greek polytheistic faiths.[348] She oversaw the construction of various temples to Egyptian and Greek gods,[349] a synagogue for the Jews in Egypt, and even built the Caesareum of Alexandria, dedicated to the cult worship of her patron and lover Julius Caesar.[350][351] Cleopatra was directly involved in the administrative affairs of her domain,[352] tackling crises such as famine by ordering royal granaries to distribute food to the starving populace during a drought at the beginning of her reign.[353] Although the command economy that she managed was more of an ideal than a reality,[354] the government attempted to impose price controls, tariffs, and state monopolies for certain goods, fixed exchange rates for foreign currencies, and rigid laws forcing peasant farmers to stay in their villages during planting and harvesting seasons.[355][356][357] Apparent financial troubles led Cleopatra to debase her coinage, which included silver and bronze currencies but no gold coins like those of some of her distant Ptolemaic predecessors.[358]

Legacy

Children and successors

 
 
Left: A Roman head of either Cleopatra or her daughter Cleopatra Selene II, Queen of Mauretania, from the late 1st century BC, located in the Archaeological Museum of Cherchell, Algeria[232][359][360][note 47]
Right: A likely depiction of Cleopatra Selene II, wearing an elephant skin cap, raised relief image on a gilded silver dish from the Boscoreale Treasure, dated to the early 1st century AD[361][362][note 58]

After her suicide, Cleopatra's three surviving children, Cleopatra Selene II, Alexander Helios, and Ptolemy Philadelphos, were sent to Rome with Octavian's sister Octavia the Younger, a former wife of their father, as their guardian.[363][364] Cleopatra Selene II and Alexander Helios were present in the Roman triumph of Octavian in 29 BC.[363][238] The fates of Alexander Helios and Ptolemy Philadelphus are unknown after this point.[363][238] Octavia arranged the betrothal of Cleopatra Selene II to Juba II, son of Juba I, whose North African kingdom of Numidia had been turned into a Roman province in 46 BC by Julius Caesar due to Juba I's support of Pompey.[365][364][323] The emperor Augustus installed Juba II and Cleopatra Selene II, after their wedding in 25 BC, as the new rulers of Mauretania, where they transformed the old Carthaginian city of Iol into their new capital, renamed Caesarea Mauretaniae (modern Cherchell, Algeria).[365][238] Cleopatra Selene II imported many important scholars, artists, and advisers from her mother's royal court in Alexandria to serve her in Caesarea, now permeated in Hellenistic Greek culture.[366] She also named her son Ptolemy of Mauretania, in honor of their Ptolemaic dynastic heritage.[367][368]

Cleopatra Selene II died around 5 BC, and when Juba II died in 23/24 AD he was succeeded by his son Ptolemy.[367][369] However, Ptolemy was eventually executed by the Roman emperor Caligula in 40 AD, perhaps under the pretense that Ptolemy had unlawfully minted his own royal coinage and utilized regalia reserved for the Roman emperor.[370][371] Ptolemy of Mauretania was the last known monarch of the Ptolemaic dynasty, although Queen Zenobia, of the short-lived Palmyrene Empire during the Crisis of the Third Century, would claim descent from Cleopatra.[372][373] A cult dedicated to Cleopatra still existed as late as 373 AD when Petesenufe, an Egyptian scribe of the book of Isis, explained that he "overlaid the figure of Cleopatra with gold."[374]

Roman literature and historiography

Although almost 50 ancient works of Roman historiography mention Cleopatra, these often include only terse accounts of the Battle of Actium, her suicide, and Augustan propaganda about her personal deficiencies.[376] Despite not being a biography of Cleopatra, the Life of Antonius written by Plutarch in the 1st century AD provides the most thorough surviving account of Cleopatra's life.[377][378][379] Plutarch lived a century after Cleopatra but relied on primary sources, such as Philotas of Amphissa, who had access to the Ptolemaic royal palace, Cleopatra's personal physician named Olympos, and Quintus Dellius, a close confidant of Mark Antony and Cleopatra.[380] Plutarch's work included both the Augustan view of Cleopatra—which became canonical for his period—as well as sources outside of this tradition, such as eyewitness reports.[377][379] The Jewish Roman historian Josephus, writing in the 1st century AD, provides valuable information on the life of Cleopatra via her diplomatic relationship with Herod the Great.[381][382] However, this work relies largely on Herod's memoirs and the biased account of Nicolaus of Damascus, the tutor of Cleopatra's children in Alexandria before he moved to Judea to serve as an adviser and chronicler at Herod's court.[381][382] The Roman History published by the official and historian Cassius Dio in the early 3rd century AD, while failing to fully comprehend the complexities of the late Hellenistic world, nevertheless provides a continuous history of the era of Cleopatra's reign.[381]

 
A restructured marble Roman statue of Cleopatra wearing a diadem and 'melon' hairstyle similar to coinage portraits, found along the Via Cassia near the Tomba di Nerone [it], Rome, and now located in the Museo Pio-Clementino[1][383][384]

Cleopatra is barely mentioned in De Bello Alexandrino, the memoirs of an unknown staff officer who served under Caesar.[385][386][387][note 59] The writings of Cicero, who knew her personally, provide an unflattering portrait of Cleopatra.[385] The Augustan-period authors Virgil, Horace, Propertius, and Ovid perpetuated the negative views of Cleopatra approved by the ruling Roman regime,[385][388] although Virgil established the idea of Cleopatra as a figure of romance and epic melodrama.[389][note 60] Horace also viewed Cleopatra's suicide as a positive choice,[390][388] an idea that found acceptance by the Late Middle Ages with Geoffrey Chaucer.[391][392] The historians Strabo, Velleius, Valerius Maximus, Pliny the Elder, and Appian, while not offering accounts as full as Plutarch, Josephus, or Dio, provided some details of her life that had not survived in other historical records.[385][note 61] Inscriptions on contemporary Ptolemaic coinage and some Egyptian papyrus documents demonstrate Cleopatra's point of view, but this material is very limited in comparison to Roman literary works.[385][393][note 62] The fragmentary Libyka commissioned by Cleopatra's son-in-law Juba II provides a glimpse at a possible body of historiographic material that supported Cleopatra's perspective.[385]

Cleopatra's gender has perhaps led to her depiction as a minor if not insignificant figure in ancient, medieval, and even modern historiography about ancient Egypt and the Greco-Roman world.[394] For instance, the historian Ronald Syme asserted that she was of little importance to Caesar and that the propaganda of Octavian magnified her importance to an excessive degree.[394] Although the common view of Cleopatra was one of a prolific seductress, she had only two known sexual partners, Caesar and Antony, the two most prominent Romans of the time period, who were most likely to ensure the survival of her dynasty.[395][396] Plutarch described Cleopatra as having had a stronger personality and charming wit than physical beauty.[397][16][398][note 63]

Cultural depictions

Depictions in ancient art

Statues
 
 
Left: An Egyptian statue of either Arsinoe II or Cleopatra as an Egyptian goddess in black basalt from the second half of the 1st century BC,[399] located in the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg
Right: The Esquiline Venus, a Roman or Hellenistic-Egyptian statue of Venus (Aphrodite) that may be a depiction of Cleopatra,[400] located in the Capitoline Museums, Rome

Cleopatra was depicted in various ancient works of art, in the Egyptian as well as Hellenistic-Greek and Roman styles.[2] Surviving works include statues, busts, reliefs, and minted coins,[2][375] as well as ancient carved cameos,[401] such as one depicting Cleopatra and Antony in Hellenistic style, now in the Altes Museum, Berlin.[1] Contemporary images of Cleopatra were produced both in and outside of Ptolemaic Egypt. For instance, a large gilded bronze statue of Cleopatra once existed inside the Temple of Venus Genetrix in Rome, the first time that a living person had their statue placed next to that of a deity in a Roman temple.[3][184][402] It was erected there by Caesar and remained in the temple at least until the 3rd century AD, its preservation perhaps owing to Caesar's patronage, although Augustus did not remove or destroy artworks in Alexandria depicting Cleopatra.[403][404]

In regards to surviving Roman statuary, a life-sized Roman-style statue of Cleopatra was found near the Tomba di Nerone [it], Rome, along the Via Cassia and is now housed in the Museo Pio-Clementino, part of the Vatican Museums.[1][383][384] Plutarch, in his Life of Antonius, claimed that the public statues of Antony were torn down by Augustus, but those of Cleopatra were preserved following her death thanks to her friend Archibius paying the emperor 2,000 talents to dissuade him from destroying hers.[405][374][330]

Since the 1950s scholars have debated whether or not the Esquiline Venus—discovered in 1874 on the Esquiline Hill in Rome and housed in the Palazzo dei Conservatori of the Capitoline Museums—is a depiction of Cleopatra, based on the statue's hairstyle and facial features, apparent royal diadem worn over the head, and the uraeus Egyptian cobra wrapped around the base.[400][406][407] Detractors of this theory argue that the face in this statue is thinner than the face on the Berlin portrait and assert that it was unlikely she would be depicted as the naked goddess Venus (or the Greek Aphrodite).[400][406][407] However, she was depicted in an Egyptian statue as the goddess Isis,[408] while some of her coinage depicts her as Venus-Aphrodite.[409][410] She also dressed as Aphrodite when meeting Antony at Tarsos.[205] The Esquiline Venus is generally thought to be a mid-1st-century AD Roman copy of a 1st-century BC Greek original from the school of Pasiteles.[406]

Coinage portraits
 
Cleopatra and Mark Antony on the obverse and reverse, respectively, of a silver tetradrachm struck at the Antioch mint in 36 BC, with Greek legends: BACIΛΙCCA KΛΕΟΠΑΤΡΑ ΘΕΑ ΝΕΩΤΕΡΑ, ANTΩNIOC AYTOKPATΩP TPITON TPIΩN ANΔPΩN.

Surviving coinage of Cleopatra's reign include specimens from every regnal year, from 51 to 30 BC.[411] Cleopatra, the only Ptolemaic queen to issue coins on her own behalf, almost certainly inspired her partner Caesar to become the first living Roman to present his portrait on his own coins.[409][note 64] Cleopatra was also the first foreign queen to have her image appear on Roman currency.[412] Coins dated to the period of her marriage to Antony, which also bear his image, portray the queen as having a very similar aquiline nose and prominent chin as that of her husband.[3][413] These similar facial features followed an artistic convention that represented the mutually-observed harmony of a royal couple.[3][2] Her strong, almost masculine facial features in these particular coins are strikingly different from the smoother, softer, and perhaps idealized sculpted images of her in either the Egyptian or Hellenistic styles.[2][414][415] Her masculine facial features on minted currency are similar to that of her father, Ptolemy XII Auletes,[416][114] and perhaps also to those of her Ptolemaic ancestor Arsinoe II (316–260 BC)[2][417] and even depictions of earlier queens such as Hatshepsut and Nefertiti.[415] It is likely, due to political expediency, that Antony's visage was made to conform not only to hers but also to those of her Macedonian Greek ancestors who founded the Ptolemaic dynasty, to familiarize himself to her subjects as a legitimate member of the royal house.[2]

The inscriptions on the coins are written in Greek, but also in the nominative case of Roman coins rather than the genitive case of Greek coins, in addition to having the letters placed in a circular fashion along the edges of the coin instead of across it horizontally or vertically as was customary for Greek ones.[2] These facets of their coinage represent the synthesis of Roman and Hellenistic culture, and perhaps also a statement to their subjects, however ambiguous to modern scholars, about the superiority of either Antony or Cleopatra over the other.[2] Diana Kleiner argues that Cleopatra, in one of her coins minted with the dual image of her husband Antony, made herself more masculine-looking than other portraits and more like an acceptable Roman client queen than a Hellenistic ruler.[414] Cleopatra had actually achieved this masculine look in coinage predating her affair with Antony, such as the coins struck at the Ashkelon mint during her brief period of exile to Syria and the Levant, which Joann Fletcher explains as her attempt to appear like her father and as a legitimate successor to a male Ptolemaic ruler.[114][418]

Various coins, such as a silver tetradrachm minted sometime after Cleopatra's marriage with Antony in 37 BC, depict her wearing a royal diadem and a 'melon' hairstyle.[3][418] The combination of this hairstyle with a diadem is also featured in two surviving sculpted marble heads.[419][375][420][note 65] This hairstyle, with hair braided back into a bun, is the same as that worn by her Ptolemaic ancestors Arsinoe II and Berenice II in their own coinage.[3][421] After her visit to Rome in 46–44 BC it became fashionable for Roman women to adopt it as one of their hairstyles, but it was abandoned for a more modest, austere look during the conservative rule of Augustus.[3][419][420]

Greco-Roman busts and heads
 
 
An ancient Roman portrait head, c. 50–30 BC, now located in the British Museum, London, that depicts a woman from Ptolemaic Egypt, either Queen Cleopatra or a member of her entourage during her 46–44 BC visit to Rome with her lover Julius Caesar[419]

Of the surviving Greco-Roman-style busts and heads of Cleopatra,[note 66] the sculpture known as the "Berlin Cleopatra", located in the Antikensammlung Berlin collection at the Altes Museum, possesses her full nose, whereas the head known as the "Vatican Cleopatra", located in the Vatican Museums, is damaged with a missing nose.[422][423][424][note 67] Both the Berlin Cleopatra and Vatican Cleopatra have royal diadems, similar facial features, and perhaps once resembled the face of her bronze statue housed in the Temple of Venus Genetrix.[423][425][424][note 68] Both heads are dated to the mid-1st century BC and were found in Roman villas along the Via Appia in Italy, the Vatican Cleopatra having been unearthed in the Villa of the Quintilii.[3][422][424][note 69] Francisco Pina Polo writes that Cleopatra's coinage present her image with certainty and asserts that the sculpted portrait of the Berlin head is confirmed as having a similar profile with her hair pulled back into a bun, a diadem, and a hooked nose.[426] A third sculpted portrait of Cleopatra accepted by scholars as being authentic survives at the Archaeological Museum of Cherchell, Algeria.[404][359][360] This portrait features the royal diadem and similar facial features as the Berlin and Vatican heads, but has a more unique hairstyle and may actually depict Cleopatra Selene II, daughter of Cleopatra.[360][427][232][note 47] A possible Parian-marble sculpture of Cleopatra wearing a vulture headdress in Egyptian style is located at the Capitoline Museums.[428] Discovered near a sanctuary of Isis in Rome and dated to the 1st century BC, it is either Roman or Hellenistic-Egyptian in origin.[429]

Other possible sculpted depictions of Cleopatra include one in the British Museum, London, made of limestone, which perhaps only depicts a woman in her entourage during her trip to Rome.[1][419] The woman in this portrait has facial features similar to others (including the pronounced aquiline nose), but lacks a royal diadem and sports a different hairstyle.[1][419] However, the British Museum head, once belonging to a full statue, could potentially represent Cleopatra at a different stage in her life and may also betray an effort by Cleopatra to discard the use of royal insignia (i.e. the diadem) to make herself more appealing to the citizens of Republican Rome.[419] Duane W. Roller speculates that the British Museum head, along with those in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo, the Capitoline Museums, and in the private collection of Maurice Nahmen, while having similar facial features and hairstyles as the Berlin portrait but lacking a royal diadem, most likely represent members of the royal court or even Roman women imitating Cleopatra's popular hairstyle.[430]

Paintings
 
 
A Roman Second Style painting in the House of Marcus Fabius Rufus at Pompeii, Italy, depicting Cleopatra as Venus Genetrix and her son Caesarion as a cupid, mid-1st century BC[406][431]

In the House of Marcus Fabius Rufus at Pompeii, Italy, a mid-1st century BC Second Style wall painting of the goddess Venus holding a cupid near massive temple doors is most likely a depiction of Cleopatra as Venus Genetrix with her son Caesarion.[406][431] The commission of the painting most likely coincides with the erection of the Temple of Venus Genetrix in the Forum of Caesar in September 46 BC, where Caesar had a gilded statue erected depicting Cleopatra.[406][431] This statue likely formed the basis of her depictions in both sculpted art as well as this painting at Pompeii.[406][432] The woman in the painting wears a royal diadem over her head and is strikingly similar in appearance to the Vatican Cleopatra, which bears possible marks on the marble of its left cheek where a cupid's arm may have been torn off.[406][433][424][note 70] The room with the painting was walled off by its owner, perhaps in reaction to the execution of Caesarion in 30 BC by order of Octavian, when public depictions of Cleopatra's son would have been unfavorable with the new Roman regime.[406][434] Behind her golden diadem, crowned with a red jewel, is a translucent veil with crinkles that suggest the "melon" hairstyle favored by the queen.[433][note 71] Her ivory-white skin, round face, long aquiline nose, and large round eyes were features common in both Roman and Ptolemaic depictions of deities.[433] Roller affirms that "there seems little doubt that this is a depiction of Cleopatra and Caesarion before the doors of the Temple of Venus in the Forum Julium and, as such, it becomes the only extant contemporary painting of the queen."[406]

 
 
A steel engraving published by John Sartain in 1885 (left) depicting the now lost painted death portrait of Cleopatra, an encaustic painting discovered in 1818 in the ancient Roman ruins of the Egyptian temple of Serapis at Hadrian's Villa in Tivoli, Lazio;[435] she is seen here wearing the knotted garment of Isis (corresponding with Plutarch's description of her wearing the robes of Isis),[436] as well as the radiant crown of the Ptolemaic rulers such as Ptolemy V (pictured to the right in a golden octodrachm minted in 204–203 BC).[437]

Another painting from Pompeii, dated to the early 1st century AD and located in the House of Giuseppe II, contains a possible depiction of Cleopatra with her son Caesarion, both wearing royal diadems while she reclines and consumes poison in an act of suicide.[300][301][note 72] The painting was originally thought to depict the Carthaginian noblewoman Sophonisba, who toward the end of the Second Punic War (218–201 BC) drank poison and committed suicide at the behest of her lover Masinissa, King of Numidia.[300] Arguments in favor of it depicting Cleopatra include the strong connection of her house with that of the Numidian royal family, Masinissa and Ptolemy VIII Physcon having been associates, and Cleopatra's own daughter marrying the Numidian prince Juba II.[300] Sophonisba was also a more obscure figure when the painting was made, while Cleopatra's suicide was far more famous.[300] An asp is absent from the painting, but many Romans held the view that she received poison in another manner than a venomous snakebite.[438] A set of double doors on the rear wall of the painting, positioned very high above the people in it, suggests the described layout of Cleopatra's tomb in Alexandria.[300] A male servant holds the mouth of an artificial Egyptian crocodile (possibly an elaborate tray handle), while another man standing by is dressed as a Roman.[300]

In 1818 a now lost encaustic painting was discovered in the Temple of Serapis at Hadrian's Villa, near Tivoli, Lazio, Italy, that depicted Cleopatra committing suicide with an asp biting her bare chest.[435] A chemical analysis performed in 1822 confirmed that the medium for the painting was composed of one-third wax and two-thirds resin.[435] The thickness of the painting over Cleopatra's bare flesh and her drapery were reportedly similar to the paintings of the Fayum mummy portraits.[439] A steel engraving published by John Sartain in 1885 depicting the painting as described in the archaeological report shows Cleopatra wearing authentic clothing and jewelry of Egypt in the late Hellenistic period,[440] as well as the radiant crown of the Ptolemaic rulers, as seen in their portraits on various coins minted during their respective reigns.[437] After Cleopatra's suicide, Octavian commissioned a painting to be made depicting her being bitten by a snake, parading this image in her stead during his triumphal procession in Rome.[439][336][312] The portrait painting of Cleopatra's death was perhaps among the great number of artworks and treasures taken from Rome by Emperor Hadrian to decorate his private villa, where it was found in an Egyptian temple.[435][note 73]

 
 
Ancient Roman fresco in the Pompeian Third Style possibly depicting Cleopatra, from the House of the Orchard at Pompeii, Italy, mid-1st century AD[48]

A Roman panel painting from Herculaneum, Italy, dated to the 1st century AD possibly depicts Cleopatra.[48][49] In it she wears a royal diadem, red or reddish-brown hair pulled back into a bun,[note 74] pearl-studded hairpins,[441] and earrings with ball-shaped pendants, the white skin of her face and neck set against a stark black background.[48] Her hair and facial features are similar to those in the sculpted Berlin and Vatican portraits as well as her coinage.[48] A highly similar painted bust of a woman with a blue headband in the House of the Orchard at Pompeii features Egyptian-style imagery, such as a Greek-style sphinx, and may have been created by the same artist.[48]

Portland Vase
 
A possible depiction of Mark Antony on the Portland Vase being lured by Cleopatra, straddling a serpent, while Anton, Antony's alleged ancestor, looks on and Eros flies above[442][443]

The Portland Vase, a Roman cameo glass vase dated to the Augustan period and now in the British Museum, includes a possible depiction of Cleopatra with Antony.[442][444] In this interpretation, Cleopatra can be seen grasping Antony and drawing him toward her while a serpent (i.e. the asp) rises between her legs, Eros floats above, and Anton, the alleged ancestor of the Antonian family, looks on in despair as his descendant Antony is led to his doom.[442][443] The other side of the vase perhaps contains a scene of Octavia, abandoned by her husband Antony but watched over by her brother, the emperor Augustus.[442][443] The vase would thus have been created no earlier than 35 BC, when Antony sent his wife Octavia back to Italy and stayed with Cleopatra in Alexandria.[442]

Native Egyptian art
 
Cleopatra and her son Caesarion at the Temple of Dendera

The Bust of Cleopatra in the Royal Ontario Museum represents a bust of Cleopatra in the Egyptian style.[445] Dated to the mid-1st century BC, it is perhaps the earliest depiction of Cleopatra as both a goddess and ruling pharaoh of Egypt.[445] The sculpture also has pronounced eyes that share similarities with Roman copies of Ptolemaic sculpted works of art.[446] The Dendera Temple complex, near Dendera, Egypt, contains Egyptian-style carved relief images along the exterior walls of the Temple of Hathor depicting Cleopatra and her young son Caesarion as a grown adult and ruling pharaoh making offerings to the gods.[447][448] Augustus had his name inscribed there following the death of Cleopatra.[447][449]

A large Ptolemaic black basalt statue measuring 104 centimetres (41 in) in height, now in the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, is thought to represent Arsinoe II, wife of Ptolemy II, but recent analysis has indicated that it could depict her descendant Cleopatra due to the three uraei adorning her headdress, an increase from the two used by Arsinoe II to symbolize her rule over Lower and Upper Egypt.[405][401][399] The woman in the basalt statue also holds a divided, double cornucopia (dikeras), which can be seen on coins of both Arsinoe II and Cleopatra.[405][399] In his Kleopatra und die Caesaren (2006), Bernard Andreae [de] contends that this basalt statue, like other idealized Egyptian portraits of the queen, does not contain realistic facial features and hence adds little to the knowledge of her appearance.[450][note 75] Adrian Goldsworthy writes that, despite these representations in the traditional Egyptian style, Cleopatra would have dressed as a native only "perhaps for certain rites" and instead would usually dress as a Greek monarch, which would include the Greek headband seen in her Greco-Roman busts.[451]

Medieval and Early Modern reception

In modern times Cleopatra has become an icon of popular culture,[375] a reputation shaped by theatrical representations dating back to the Renaissance as well as paintings and films.[454] This material largely surpasses the scope and size of existent historiographic literature about her from classical antiquity and has made a greater impact on the general public's view of Cleopatra than the latter.[455] The 14th-century English poet Geoffrey Chaucer, in The Legend of Good Women, contextualized Cleopatra for the Christian world of the Middle Ages.[456] His depiction of Cleopatra and Antony, her shining knight engaged in courtly love, has been interpreted in modern times as being either playful or misogynistic satire.[456] However, Chaucer highlighted Cleopatra's relationships with only two men as hardly the life of a seductress and wrote his works partly in reaction to the negative depiction of Cleopatra in De Mulieribus Claris and De Casibus Virorum Illustrium, Latin works by the 14th-century Italian poet Giovanni Boccaccio.[457][392] The Renaissance humanist Bernardino Cacciante [it], in his 1504 Libretto apologetico delle donne, was the first Italian to defend the reputation of Cleopatra and criticize the perceived moralizing and misogyny in Boccaccio's works.[458] Works of Islamic historiography written in Arabic covered the reign of Cleopatra, such as the 10th-century Meadows of Gold by Al-Masudi,[459] although his work erroneously claimed that Octavian died soon after Cleopatra's suicide.[460]

Cleopatra appeared in miniatures for illuminated manuscripts, such as a depiction of her and Antony lying in a Gothic-style tomb by the Boucicaut Master in 1409.[391] In the visual arts, the sculpted depiction of Cleopatra as a free-standing nude figure committing suicide began with the 16th-century sculptors Bartolommeo Bandinelli and Alessandro Vittoria.[461] Early prints depicting Cleopatra include designs by the Renaissance artists Raphael and Michelangelo, as well as 15th-century woodcuts in illustrated editions of Boccaccio's works.[462]

In the performing arts, the death of Elizabeth I of England in 1603, and the German publication in 1606 of alleged letters of Cleopatra, inspired Samuel Daniel to alter and republish his 1594 play Cleopatra in 1607.[463] He was followed by William Shakespeare, whose Antony and Cleopatra, largely based on Plutarch, was first performed in 1608 and provided a somewhat salacious view of Cleopatra in stark contrast to England's own Virgin Queen.[464] Cleopatra was also featured in operas, such as George Frideric Handel's 1724 Giulio Cesare in Egitto, which portrayed the love affair of Caesar and Cleopatra;[465] Domenico Cimarosa wrote Cleopatra on a similar subject in 1789.[466]

Modern depictions and brand imaging

In Victorian Britain, Cleopatra was highly associated with many aspects of ancient Egyptian culture and her image was used to market various household products, including oil lamps, lithographs, postcards and cigarettes.[467] Fictional novels such as H. Rider Haggard's Cleopatra (1889) and Théophile Gautier's One of Cleopatra's Nights (1838) depicted the queen as a sensual and mystic Easterner, while the Egyptologist Georg Ebers's Cleopatra (1894) was more grounded in historical accuracy.[467][468] The French dramatist Victorien Sardou and Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw produced plays about Cleopatra, while burlesque shows such as F. C. Burnand's Antony and Cleopatra offered satirical depictions of the queen connecting her and the environment she lived in with the modern age.[469] Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra was considered canonical by the Victorian era.[470] Its popularity led to the perception that the 1885 painting by Lawrence Alma-Tadema depicted the meeting of Antony and Cleopatra on her pleasure barge in Tarsus, although Alma-Tadema revealed in a private letter that it depicts a subsequent meeting of theirs in Alexandria.[471] Also based on Shakespeare's play was Samuel Barber's opera Antony and Cleopatra (1966), commissioned for the opening of the Metropolitan Opera House.[472] In his unfinished 1825 short story The Egyptian Nights, Alexander Pushkin popularized the claims of the 4th-century Roman historian Aurelius Victor, previously largely ignored, that Cleopatra had prostituted herself to men who paid for sex with their lives.[473][474] Cleopatra also became appreciated outside the Western world and Middle East, as the Qing-dynasty Chinese scholar Yan Fu wrote an extensive biography of her.[475]

Georges Méliès's Robbing Cleopatra's Tomb (French: Cléopâtre), an 1899 French silent horror film, was the first film to depict the character of Cleopatra.[476] Hollywood films of the 20th century were influenced by earlier Victorian media, which helped to shape the character of Cleopatra played by Theda Bara in Cleopatra (1917), Claudette Colbert in Cleopatra (1934), and Elizabeth Taylor in Cleopatra (1963).[477] In addition to her portrayal as a "vampire" queen, Bara's Cleopatra also incorporated tropes familiar from 19th-century Orientalist painting, such as despotic behavior, mixed with dangerous and overt female sexuality.[478] Colbert's character of Cleopatra served as a glamour model for selling Egyptian-themed products in department stores in the 1930s, targeting female moviegoers.[479] In preparation for the film starring Taylor as Cleopatra, women's magazines of the early 1960s advertised how to use makeup, clothes, jewelry, and hairstyles to achieve the "Egyptian" look similar to the queens Cleopatra and Nefertiti.[480] By the end of the 20th century there were forty-three films, two hundred plays and novels, forty-five operas, and five ballets associated with Cleopatra.[481]

Written works

Whereas myths about Cleopatra persist in popular media, important aspects of her career go largely unnoticed, such as her command of naval forces and administrative acts. Publications on ancient Greek medicine attributed to her are,[376] however, likely to be the work of a physician by the same name writing in the late first century AD.[482] Ingrid D. Rowland, who highlights that the "Berenice called Cleopatra" cited by the 3rd- or 4th-century female Roman physician Metrodora was likely conflated by medieval scholars as referring to Cleopatra.[483] Only fragments exist of these medical and cosmetic writings, such as those preserved by Galen, including remedies for hair disease, baldness, and dandruff, along with a list of weights and measures for pharmacological purposes.[484][19][485] Aëtius of Amida attributed a recipe for perfumed soap to Cleopatra, while Paul of Aegina preserved alleged instructions of hers for dyeing and curling hair.[484]

Ancestry

 
 
Left: A Hellenistic bust of Ptolemy I Soter, now in the Louvre, Paris
Right: A bust of Seleucus I Nicator, a Roman copy of a Greek original, from the Villa of the Papyri, Herculaneum, and now in the National Archaeological Museum, Naples
 
 
A likely sculpture of Cleopatra V Tryphaena (also known as Cleopatra VI), 1st century BC, from Lower Egypt, now in the Musée Saint-Raymond[486]

Cleopatra belonged to the Macedonian Greek dynasty of the Ptolemies,[8][487][488][note 76] their European origins tracing back to northern Greece.[489] Through her father, Ptolemy XII Auletes, she was a descendant of two prominent companions of Alexander the Great of Macedon: the general Ptolemy I Soter, founder of the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt, and Seleucus I Nicator, the Macedonian Greek founder of the Seleucid Empire of West Asia.[8][490][491][note 77] While Cleopatra's paternal line can be traced, the identity of her mother is unknown.[492][493][494][note 78] She was presumably the daughter of Cleopatra VI Tryphaena (also known as Cleopatra V Tryphaena),[note 4] the sister-wife of Ptolemy XII who had previously given birth to their daughter Berenice IV.[13][493][495][note 79]

Cleopatra I Syra was the only member of the Ptolemaic dynasty known for certain to have introduced some non-Greek ancestry.[496][497] Her mother Laodice III was a daughter born to King Mithridates II of Pontus, a Persian of the Mithridatic dynasty, and his wife Laodice who had a mixed Greek-Persian heritage.[498] Cleopatra I Syra's father Antiochus III the Great was a descendant of Queen Apama, the Sogdian Iranian wife of Seleucus I Nicator.[496][497][499][note 80] It is generally believed that the Ptolemies did not intermarry with native Egyptians.[40][500][note 81] Michael Grant asserts that there is only one known Egyptian mistress of a Ptolemy and no known Egyptian wife of a Ptolemy, further arguing that Cleopatra probably did not have any Egyptian ancestry and "would have described herself as Greek."[496][note 82] Stacy Schiff writes that Cleopatra was a Macedonian Greek with some Persian ancestry, arguing that it was rare for the Ptolemies to have an Egyptian mistress.[501][note 83] Duane W. Roller speculates that Cleopatra could have been the daughter of a theoretical half-Macedonian-Greek, half-Egyptian woman from Memphis in northern Egypt belonging to a family of priests dedicated to Ptah (a hypothesis not generally accepted in scholarship),[note 84] but contends that whatever Cleopatra's ancestry, she valued her Greek Ptolemaic heritage the most.[502][note 85] Ernle Bradford writes that Cleopatra challenged Rome not as an Egyptian woman "but as a civilized Greek."[503]

Claims that Cleopatra was an illegitimate child never appeared in Roman propaganda against her.[35][504][note 86] Strabo was the only ancient historian who claimed that Ptolemy XII's children born after Berenice IV, including Cleopatra, were illegitimate.[35][504][505] Cleopatra V (or VI) was expelled from the court of Ptolemy XII in late 69 BC, a few months after the birth of Cleopatra, while Ptolemy XII's three younger children were all born during the absence of his wife.[41] The high degree of inbreeding among the Ptolemies is also illustrated by Cleopatra's immediate ancestry, of which a reconstruction is shown below.[note 87] The family tree given below also lists Cleopatra V, Ptolemy XII's wife, as a daughter of Ptolemy X Alexander I and Berenice III, which would make her a cousin of her husband, Ptolemy XII, but she could have been a daughter of Ptolemy IX Lathyros, which would have made her a sister-wife of Ptolemy XII instead.[506][35] The confused accounts in ancient primary sources have also led scholars to number Ptolemy XII's wife as either Cleopatra V or Cleopatra VI; the latter may have actually been a daughter of Ptolemy XII, and some use her as an indication that Cleopatra V had died in 69 BC rather than reappearing as a co-ruler with Berenice IV in 58 BC (during Ptolemy XII's exile in Rome).[57][507]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For further validation about the Berlin Cleopatra, see Pina Polo (2013, pp. 184–186), Roller (2010, pp. 54, 174–175), Jones (2006, p. 33), and Hölbl (2001, p. 234).
  2. ^ a b Roller (2010, p. 149) and Skeat (1953, pp. 99–100) explain the nominal short-lived reign of Caesarion as lasting 18 days in 30 August BC. However, Duane W. Roller, relaying Theodore Cressy Skeat, affirms that Caesarion's reign "was essentially a fiction created by Egyptian chronographers to close the gap between [Cleopatra's] death and official Roman control of Egypt (under the new pharaoh, Octavian)", citing, for instance, the Stromata by Clement of Alexandria (Roller 2010, pp. 149, 214, footnote 103).
    Plutarch, translated by Jones (2006, p. 187), wrote in vague terms that "Octavian had Caesarion killed later, after Cleopatra's death."
  3. ^ a b 12 August 30 BC in the later Julian calendar. Skeat (1953, pp. 98–100).
  4. ^ a b c Grant (1972, pp. 3–4, 17), Fletcher (2008, pp. 69, 74, 76), Jones (2006, p. xiii), Preston (2009, p. 22), Schiff (2011, p. 28) and Burstein (2004, p. 11) label the wife of Ptolemy XII Auletes as Cleopatra V Tryphaena, while Dodson & Hilton (2004, pp. 268–269, 273) and Roller (2010, p. 18) call her Cleopatra VI Tryphaena, due to the confusion in primary sources conflating these two figures, who may have been one and the same. As explained by Whitehorne (1994, p. 182), Cleopatra VI may have actually been a daughter of Ptolemy XII who appeared in 58 BC to rule jointly with her alleged sister Berenice IV (while Ptolemy XII was exiled and living in Rome), whereas Ptolemy XII's wife Cleopatra V perhaps died as early as the winter of 69–68 BC, when she disappears from historical records. Roller (2010, pp. 18–19) assumes that Ptolemy XII's wife, who he numbers as Cleopatra VI, was merely absent from the court for a decade after being expelled for an unknown reason, eventually ruling jointly with her daughter Berenice IV. Fletcher (2008, p. 76) explains that the Alexandrians deposed Ptolemy XII and installed "his eldest daughter, Berenike IV, and as co-ruler recalled Cleopatra V Tryphaena from 10 years' exile from the court. Although later historians assumed she must have been another of Auletes' daughters and numbered her 'Cleopatra VI', it seems she was simply the fifth one returning to replace her brother and former husband Auletes."
  5. ^ She was also a diplomat, naval commander, linguist, and medical author; see Roller (2010, p. 1) and Bradford (2000, p. 13).
  6. ^ Southern (2009, p. 43) writes about Ptolemy I Soter: "The Ptolemaic dynasty, of which Cleopatra was the last representative, was founded at the end of the fourth century BC. The Ptolemies were not of Egyptian extraction, but stemmed from Ptolemy Soter, a Macedonian Greek in the entourage of Alexander the Great."
    For additional sources that describe the Ptolemaic dynasty as "Macedonian Greek", please see Roller (2010, pp. 15–16), Jones (2006, pp. xiii, 3, 279), Kleiner (2005, pp. 9, 19, 106, 183), Jeffreys (1999, p. 488) and Johnson (1999, p. 69). Alternatively, Grant (1972, p. 3) describes them as a "Macedonian, Greek-speaking" dynasty. Other sources such as Burstein (2004, p. 64) and Pfrommer & Towne-Markus (2001, p. 9) describe the Ptolemies as "Greco-Macedonian", or rather Macedonians who possessed a Greek culture, as in Pfrommer & Towne-Markus (2001, pp. 9–11, 20).
  7. ^ a b Grant (1972, pp. 5–6) notes that the Hellenistic period, beginning with the reign of Alexander the Great, came to an end with the death of Cleopatra in 30 BC. Michael Grant stresses that the Hellenistic Greeks were viewed by contemporary Romans as having declined and diminished in greatness since the age of Classical Greece, an attitude that has continued even into the works of modern historiography. Regarding Hellenistic Egypt, Grant argues, "Cleopatra VII, looking back upon all that her ancestors had done during that time, was not likely to make the same mistake. But she and her contemporaries of the first century BC had another, peculiar, problem of their own. Could the 'Hellenistic Age' (which we ourselves often regard as coming to an end in about her time) still be said to exist at all, could any Greek age, now that the Romans were the dominant power? This was a question never far from Cleopatra's mind. But it is quite certain that she considered the Greek epoch to be by no means finished, and intended to do everything in her power to ensure its perpetuation."
  8. ^ a b The refusal of Ptolemaic rulers to speak the native language, Late Egyptian, is why Ancient Greek (i.e. Koine Greek) was used along with Late Egyptian on official court documents such as the Rosetta Stone ("Radio 4 Programmes – A History of the World in 100 Objects, Empire Builders (300 BC – 1 AD), Rosetta Stone". BBC. from the original on 23 May 2010. Retrieved 7 June 2010.).
    As explained by Burstein (2004, pp. 43–54), Ptolemaic Alexandria was considered a polis (city-state) separate from the country of Egypt, with citizenship reserved for Greeks and Ancient Macedonians, but various other ethnic groups resided there, especially the Jews, as well as native Egyptians, Syrians, and Nubians.
    For further validation, see Grant (1972, p. 3).
    For the multiple languages spoken by Cleopatra, see Roller (2010, pp. 46–48) and Burstein (2004, pp. 11–12).
    For further validation about Ancient Greek being the official language of the Ptolemaic dynasty, see Jones (2006, p. 3).
  9. ^ Tyldesley (2017) offers an alternative rendering of the title Cleopatra VII Thea Philopator as "Cleopatra the Father-Loving Goddess".
  10. ^ For a thorough explanation about the foundation of Alexandria by Alexander the Great and its largely Hellenistic Greek nature during the Ptolemaic period, along with a survey of the various ethnic groups residing there, see Burstein (2004, pp. 43–61).
    For further validation about the founding of Alexandria by Alexander the Great, see Jones (2006, p. 6).
    For further validation of Ptolemaic rulers being crowned at Memphis, see Jeffreys (1999, p. 488).
  11. ^ For further information, see Grant (1972, pp. 20, 256, footnote 42).
  12. ^ For the list of languages spoken by Cleopatra as mentioned by the ancient historian Plutarch, see Jones (2006, pp. 33–34), who also mentions that the rulers of Ptolemaic Egypt gradually abandoned the Ancient Macedonian language. For further information and validation see Schiff (2011, p. 36).
  13. ^ Grant (1972, p. 3) states that Cleopatra could have been born in either late 70 BC or early 69 BC.
  14. ^ For further information and validation see Schiff (2011, p. 28), Kleiner (2005, p. 22), Bennett (1997, p. 60-63) and Meadows (2001, p. 23). For alternate speculation, see Burstein (2004, p. 11) and Roller (2010, pp. 15, 18, 166).
  15. ^ Due to discrepancies in academic works, in which some consider Cleopatra VI to be either a daughter of Ptolemy XII or his wife, identical to that of Cleopatra V, Jones (2006, p. 28) states that Ptolemy XII had six children, while Roller (2010, p. 16) mentions only five.
  16. ^ Fletcher (2008, p. 87) describes the painting from Herculaneum further: "Cleopatra's hair was maintained by her highly skilled hairdresser Eiras. Although rather artificial looking wigs set in the traditional tripartite style of long straight hair would have been required for her appearances before her Egyptian subjects, a more practical option for general day-to-day wear was the no-nonsense 'melon hairdo' in which her natural hair was drawn back in sections resembling the lines on a melon and then pinned up in a bun at the back of the head. A trademark style of Arsinoe II and Berenice II, the style had fallen from fashion for almost two centuries until revived by Cleopatra; yet as both traditionalist and innovator, she wore her version without her predecessor's fine head veil. And whereas they had both been blonde like Alexander, Cleopatra may well have been a redhead, judging from the portrait of a flame-haired woman wearing the royal diadem surrounded by Egyptian motifs which has been identified as Cleopatra."
  17. ^ For further information and validation, see Grant (1972, pp. 12–13). In 1972, Michael Grant calculated that 6,000 talents, the price of Ptolemy XII's fee for receiving the title "friend and ally of the Roman people" from the triumvirs Pompey and Julius Caesar, would be worth roughly £7 million or US$17 million, roughly the entire annual tax revenue for Ptolemaic Egypt.
  18. ^ For political background information on the Roman annexation of Cyprus, a move pushed for in the Roman Senate by Publius Clodius Pulcher, see Grant (1972, pp. 13–14).
  19. ^ For further information, see Grant (1972, pp. 15–16).
  20. ^ Fletcher (2008, pp. 76–77) expresses little doubt about this: "deposed in late summer 58 BC and fearing for his life, Auletes had fled both his palace and his kingdom, although he was not completely alone. For one Greek source reveals he had been accompanied 'by one of his daughters', and since his eldest Berenice IV, was monarch, and the youngest, Arisone, little more than a toddler, it is generally assumed that this must have been his middle daughter and favourite child, eleven-year-old Cleopatra."
  21. ^ For further information, see Grant (1972, p. 16).
  22. ^ For further information on Roman financier Rabirius, as well as the Gabiniani left in Egypt by Gabinius, see Grant (1972, pp. 18–19).
  23. ^ For further information, see Grant (1972, p. 18).
  24. ^ For further information, see Grant (1972, pp. 19–20, 27–29).
  25. ^ For further information, see Grant (1972, pp. 28–30).
  26. ^ For further information, see Fletcher (2008, pp. 88–92) and Jones (2006, pp. 31, 34–35).
    Fletcher (2008, pp. 85–86) states that the partial solar eclipse of 7 March 51 BC marked the death of Ptolemy XII and accession of Cleopatra to the throne, although she apparently suppressed the news of his death, alerting the Roman Senate to this fact months later in a message they received on 30 June 51 BC.
    However, Grant (1972, p. 30) claims that the Senate was informed of his death on 1 August 51 BC. Michael Grant indicates that Ptolemy XII could have been alive as late as May, while an ancient Egyptian source affirms he was still ruling with Cleopatra by 15 July 51 BC, although by this point Cleopatra most likely "hushed up her father's death" so that she could consolidate her control of Egypt.
  27. ^ Pfrommer & Towne-Markus (2001, p. 34) writes the following about the sibling marriage of Ptolemy II and Arsinoe II: "Ptolemy Keraunos, who wanted to become king of Macedon ... killed Arsinoë's small children in front of her. Now queen without a kingdom, Arsinoë fled to Egypt, where she was welcomed by her full brother Ptolemy II. Not content, however, to spend the rest of her life as a guest at the Ptolemaic court, she had Ptolemy II's wife exiled to Upper Egypt and married him herself around 275 B.C. Though such an incestuous marriage was considered scandalous by the Greeks, it was allowed by Egyptian custom. For that reason, the marriage split public opinion into two factions. The loyal side celebrated the couple as a return of the divine marriage of Zeus and Hera, whereas the other side did not refrain from profuse and obscene criticism. One of the most sarcastic commentators, a poet with a very sharp pen, had to flee Alexandria. The unfortunate poet was caught off the shore of Crete by the Ptolemaic navy, put in an iron basket, and drowned. This and similar actions seemingly slowed down vicious criticism."
  28. ^ For further information, see Fletcher (2008, pp. 92–93).
  29. ^ For further information, see Fletcher (2008, pp. 96–97) and Jones (2006, p. 39).
  30. ^ For further information, see Jones (2006, pp. 39–41).
  31. ^ a b For further information, see Fletcher (2008, p. 98) and Jones (2006, pp. 39–43, 53–55).
  32. ^ For further information, see Fletcher (2008, pp. 98–100) and Jones (2006, pp. 53–55).
  33. ^ For further information, see Burstein (2004, p. 18) and Fletcher (2008, pp. 101–103).
  34. ^ a b For further information, see Fletcher (2008, p. 113).
  35. ^ For further information, see Fletcher (2008, p. 118).
  36. ^ For further information, see Burstein (2004, p. 76).
  37. ^ For further information, see Burstein (2004, pp. xxi, 19) and Fletcher (2008, pp. 118–120).
  38. ^ For further information, see Fletcher (2008, pp. 119–120).
    As part of the siege of Alexandria, Burstein (2004, p. 19) states that Caesar's reinforcements came in January, but Roller (2010, p. 63) says that his reinforcements came in March.
  39. ^ For further information and validation, see Anderson (2003, p. 39) and Fletcher (2008, p. 120).
  40. ^ For further information and validation, see Fletcher (2008, p. 121) and Jones (2006, p. xiv).
    Roller (2010, pp. 64–65) states that at this point (47 BC) Ptolemy XIV was 12 years old, while Burstein (2004, p. 19) claims that he was still only 10 years of age.
  41. ^ For further information and validation, see Anderson (2003, p. 39) and Fletcher (2008, pp. 154, 161–162).
  42. ^ Roller (2010, p. 70) writes the following about Caesar and his parentage of Caesarion: "The matter of parentage became so tangled in the propaganda war between Antonius and Octavian in the late 30s B.C.—it was essential for one side to prove and the other to reject Caesar's role—that it is impossible today to determine Caesar's actual response. The extant information is almost contradictory: it was said that Caesar denied parentage in his will but acknowledged it privately and allowed the use of the name Caesarion. Caesar's associate C. Oppius even wrote a pamphlet proving that Caesarion was not Caesar's child, and C. Helvius Cinna—the poet who was killed by rioters after Antonius' funeral oration—was prepared in 44 B.C. to introduce legislation to allow Caesar to marry as many wives as he wished for the purpose of having children. Although much of this talk was generated after Caesar's death, it seems that he wished to be as quiet as possible about the child but had to contend with Cleopatra's repeated assertions."
  43. ^ For further information and validation, see Jones (2006, pp. xiv, 78).
  44. ^ For further information, see Fletcher (2008, pp. 214–215).
  45. ^ As explained by Burstein (2004, p. 23), Cleopatra, having read Antony's personality, boldly presented herself to him as the Egyptian goddess Isis (in the appearance of the Greek goddess Aphrodite) meeting her divine husband Osiris (in the form of the Greek god Dionysus), knowing that the priests of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus had associated Antony with Dionysus shortly before this encounter. According to Brown (2011), a cult surrounding Isis had been spreading across the region for hundreds of years, and Cleopatra, like many of her predecessors, sought to identify herself with Isis and be venerated. In addition, some surviving coins of Cleopatra also depict her as Venus–Aphrodite, as explained by Fletcher (2008, p. 205).
  46. ^ For further information about Publius Ventidius Bassus and his victory over Parthian forces at the Battle of Mount Gindarus, see Kennedy (1996, pp. 80–81).
  47. ^ a b c Ferroukhi (2001a, p. 219) provides a detailed discussion about this bust and its ambiguities, noting that it could represent Cleopatra, but that it is more likely her daughter Cleopatra Selene II. Kleiner (2005, pp. 155–156) argues in favor of its depicting Cleopatra rather than her daughter, while Varner (2004, p. 20) mentions only Cleopatra as a possible likeness. Roller (2003, p. 139) observes that it could be either Cleopatra or Cleopatra Selene II, while arguing the same ambiguity applies to the other sculpted head from Cherchel featuring a veil. In regards to the latter head, Ferroukhi (2001b, p. 242) indicates it as a possible portrait of Cleopatra, not Cleoptra Selene II, from the early 1st century AD while also arguing that its masculine features, earrings, and apparent toga (the veil being a component of it) could likely mean it was intended to depict a Numidian nobleman. Fletcher (2008, image plates between pp. 246–247) disagrees about the veiled head, arguing that it was commissioned by Cleopatra Selene II at Iol (Caesarea Mauretaniae) and was meant to depict her mother, Cleopatra.
  48. ^ According to Roller (2010, pp. 91–92), these client state rulers installed by Antony included Herod, Amyntas of Galatia, Polemon I of Pontus, and Archelaus of Cappadocia.
  49. ^ Bringmann (2007, p. 301) claims that Octavia Minor provided Antony with 1,200 troops, not 2,000 as stated in Roller (2010, pp. 97–98) and Burstein (2004, pp. 27–28).
  50. ^ Roller (2010, p. 100) says that it is unclear if Antony and Cleopatra were ever truly married. Burstein (2004, pp. xxii, 29) says that the marriage publicly sealed Antony's alliance with Cleopatra and in defiance of Octavian he would divorce Octavia in 32 BC. Coins of Antony and Cleopatra depict them in the typical manner of a Hellenistic royal couple, as explained by Roller (2010, p. 100).
  51. ^ Jones (2006, p. xiv) writes that "Octavian waged a propaganda war against Antony and Cleopatra, stressing Cleopatra's status as a woman and a foreigner who wished to share in Roman power."
  52. ^ Stanley M. Burstein, in Burstein (2004, p. 33) provides the name Quintus Cascellius as the recipient of the tax exemption, not the Publius Canidius Crassus provided by Duane W. Roller in Roller (2010, p. 134).
  53. ^ Reece (2017, p. 203) notes that "[t]he fragmentary texts of ancient Greek papyri do not often make their way into the modern public arena, but this one has, and with fascinating results, while remaining almost entirely unacknowledged is the remarkable fact that Cleopatra's one-word subscription contains a blatant spelling error: γινέσθωι, with a superfluous iota adscript." This spelling error "has not been noted by the popular media", however, being "simply transliterated [...] including, without comment, the superfluous iota adscript" (p. 208). Even in academic sources, the misspelling was largely unacknowledged or quietly corrected (pp. 206–208, 210).
    Although described as "'normal' orthography" (in contrast with "'correct' orthography") by Peter van Minnen (p. 208), the spelling error is "much rarer and more puzzling" than the sort one would expect from the Greek papyri from Egypt (p. 210)—so rare, in fact, that it occurs only twice in the 70,000 Greek papyri between the 3rd century BC and 8th century AD in the Papyrological Navigator's database. This is especially so when considering it was added to a word "with no etymological or morphological reason for having an iota adscript" (p. 210) and was written by "the well-educated, native Greek-speaking, queen of Egypt" Cleopatra VII (p. 208).
  54. ^ As explained by Jones (2006, p. 147), "politically, Octavian had to walk a fine line as he prepared to engage in open hostilities with Antony. He was careful to minimize associations with civil war, as the Roman people had already suffered through many years of civil conflict and Octavian could risk losing support if he declared war on a fellow citizen."
  55. ^ For the translated accounts of both Plutarch and Dio, Jones (2006, pp. 194–195) writes that the implement used to puncture Cleopatra's skin was a hairpin.
  56. ^ Jones (2006, p. 187), translating Plutarch, quotes Arius Didymus as saying to Octavian that "it is not good to have too many Caesars", which was apparently enough to convince Octavian to have Caesarion killed.
  57. ^ Contrary to regular Roman provinces, Egypt was established by Octavian as territory under his personal control, barring the Roman Senate from intervening in any of its affairs and appointing his own equestrian governors of Egypt, the first of whom was Gallus. For further information, see Southern (2014, p. 185) and Roller (2010, p. 151).
  58. ^ Walker (2001, p. 312) writes the following about the raised relief on the gilded silver dish: "Conspicuously mounted on the cornucopia is a gilded crescent moon set on a pine cone. Around it are piled pomegranates and bunches of grapes. Engraved on the horn are images of Helios (the sun), in the form of a youth dressed in a short cloak, with the hairstyle of Alexander the Great, the head surrounded by rays ... The symbols on the cornucopia can indeed be read as references to the Ptolemaic royal house and specifically to Cleopatra Selene, represented in the crescent moon, and to her twin brother, Alexander Helios, whose eventual fate after the conquest of Egypt is unknown. The viper seems to be linked with the pantheress and the intervening symbols of fecundity rather than the suicide of Cleopatra VII. The elephant scalp could refer to Cleopatra Selene's status as ruler, with Juba II, of Mauretania. The visual correspondence with the veiled head from Cherchel encourages this identification, and many of the symbols used on the dish also appear on the coinage of Juba II."
  59. ^ Jones (2006, p. 60) offers speculation that the author of De Bello Alexandrino, written in Latin prose sometime between 46 and 43 BC, was a certain Aulus Hirtius, a military officer serving under Caesar.
  60. ^ Burstein (2004, p. 30) writes that Virgil, in his Aeneid, described the Battle of Actium against Cleopatra "as a clash of civilizations in which Octavian and the Roman gods preserved Italy from conquest by Cleopatra and the barbaric animal-headed gods of Egypt."
  61. ^ For further information and extracts of Strabo's account of Cleopatra in his Geographica see Jones (2006, pp. 28–30).
  62. ^ As explained by Chauveau (2000, pp. 2–3), this source material from Egypt dated to the reign of Cleopatra includes about 50 papyri documents in Ancient Greek, mostly from the city of Heracleopolis, and only a few papyri from Faiyum, written in the Demotic Egyptian language. Overall this is a much smaller body of surviving native texts than those of any other period of Ptolemaic Egypt.
  63. ^ For the description of Cleopatra by Plutarch, who claimed that her beauty was not "completely incomparable" but that she had a "captivating" and "stimulating" personality, see Jones (2006, pp. 32–33).
  64. ^ Fletcher (2008, p. 205) writes the following: "Cleopatra was the only female Ptolemy to issue coins on her own behalf, some showing her as Venus-Aphrodite. Caesar now followed her example and, taking the same bold step, became the first living Roman to appear on coins, his rather haggard profile accompanied by the title 'Parens Patriae', 'Father of the Fatherland'."
  65. ^ For further information, see Raia & Sebesta (2017).
  66. ^ There is academic disagreement on whether the following portraits are considered "heads" or "busts". For instance, Raia & Sebesta (2017) exclusively uses the former, while Grout (2017b) prefers the latter.
  67. ^ For further information and validation, see Curtius (1933, pp. 182–192), Walker (2008, p. 348), Raia & Sebesta (2017) and Grout (2017b).
  68. ^ For further information and validation, see Grout (2017b) and Roller (2010, pp. 174–175).
  69. ^ For further information, see Curtius (1933, pp. 182–192), Walker (2008, p. 348) and Raia & Sebesta (2017).
  70. ^ The observation that the left cheek of the Vatican Cleopatra once had a cupid's hand that was broken off was first suggested by Ludwig Curtius in 1933. Kleiner concurs with this assessment. See Kleiner (2005, p. 153), as well as Walker (2008, p. 40) and Curtius (1933, pp. 182–192). While Kleiner (2005, p. 153) has suggested the lump on top of this marble head perhaps contained a broken-off uraeus, Curtius (1933, p. 187) offered the explanation that it once held a sculpted representation of a jewel.
  71. ^ Curtius (1933, p. 187) wrote that the damaged lump along the hairline and diadem of the Vatican Cleopatra likely contained a sculpted representation of a jewel, which Walker (2008, p. 40) directly compares to the painted red jewel in the diadem worn by Venus, most likely Cleopatra, in the fresco from Pompeii.
  72. ^ For further information about the painting in the House of Giuseppe II (Joseph II) at Pompeii and the possible identification of Cleopatra as one of the figures, see Pucci (2011, pp. 206–207, footnote 27).
  73. ^ In Pratt & Fizel (1949, pp. 14–15), Frances Pratt and Becca Fizel rejected the idea proposed by some scholars in the 19th and early 20th centuries that the painting was perhaps done by an artist of the Italian Renaissance. Pratt and Fizel highlighted the Classical style of the painting as preserved in textual descriptions and the steel engraving. They argued that it was unlikely for a Renaissance period painter to have created works with encaustic materials, conducted thorough research into Hellenistic period Egyptian clothing and jewelry as depicted in the painting, and then precariously placed it in the ruins of the Egyptian temple at Hadrian's Villa.
  74. ^ Walker & Higgs (2001, pp. 314–315) describe her hair as reddish brown, while Fletcher (2008, p. 87) describes her as a flame-haired redhead and, in Fletcher (2008, image plates and captions between pp. 246–247), likewise describes her as a red-haired woman.
  75. ^ Preston (2009, p. 305) comes to a similar conclusion about native Egyptian depictions of Cleopatra: "Apart from certain temple carvings, which are anyway in a highly stylised pharaonic style and give little clue to Cleopatra's real appearance, the only certain representations of Cleopatra are those on coins. The marble head in the Vatican is one of three sculptures generally, though not universally, accepted by scholars to be depictions of Cleopatra."
  76. ^ For further information on Cleopatra's Macedonian Greek lineage, see Pucci (2011, p. 201), Grant (1972, pp. 3–5), Burstein (2004, pp. 3, 34, 36, 43, 63–64) and Royster (2003, pp. 47–49).
  77. ^ For further information and validation of the foundation of Hellenistic Egypt by Alexander the Great and Cleopatra's ancestry stretching back to Ptolemy I Soter, see Grant (1972, pp. 7–8) and Jones (2006, p. 3).
  78. ^ For further information, see Grant (1972, pp. 3–4) and Burstein (2004, p. 11).
  79. ^ For further information, see Fletcher (2008, pp. 69, 74, 76). Contrary to other sources cited here, Dodson & Hilton (2004, pp. 268–269, 273) refer to Cleopatra V Tryphaena as a possible cousin or sister of Ptolemy XII Auletes.
  80. ^ For the Sogdian ancestry of Apama, wife of Seleucus I Nicator, see Holt (1989, pp. 64–65, footnote 63).
  81. ^ As explained by Burstein (2004, pp. 47–50), the main ethnic groups of Ptolemaic Egypt were Egyptians, Greeks, and Jews, each of whom were legally segregated, living in different residential quarters and forbidden to intermarry with one another in the multicultural cities of Alexandria, Naucratis, and Ptolemais Hermiou. However, as explained by Fletcher (2008, pp. 82, 88–93), the native Egyptian priesthood was strongly linked to their Ptolemaic royal patrons, to the point where Cleopatra is speculated to have had an Egyptian half-cousin, Pasherienptah III, the High Priest of Ptah at Memphis, Egypt.
  82. ^ Grant (1972, p. 5) argues that Cleopatra's grandmother, i.e. the mother of Ptolemy XII, might have been a Syrian (though conceding that "it is possible she was also partly Greek"), but almost certainly not an Egyptian because there is only one known Egyptian mistress of a Ptolemaic ruler throughout their entire dynasty.
  83. ^ Schiff (2011, p. 42) further argues that, considering Cleopatra's ancestry, she was not dark-skinned, though notes Cleopatra was likely not among the Ptolemies with fair features, and instead would have been honey-skinned, citing as evidence that her relatives were described as such and it "would have presumably applied to her as well." Goldsworthy (2010, pp. 127, 128) agrees to this, contending that Cleopatra, having Macedonian blood with a little Syrian, was probably not dark-skinned (as Roman propaganda never mentions it), writing "fairer skin is marginally more likely considering her ancestry," though also notes she could have had a "darker more Mediterranean complexion" because of her mixed ancestry. Grant (1972, p. 5) agrees to Goldsworthy's latter speculation of her skin color, that though almost certainly not Egyptian, Cleopatra had a darker complexion due to being Greek mixed with Persian and possible Syrian ancestry. Preston (2009, p. 77) agrees with Grant that, considering this ancestry, Cleopatra was "almost certainly dark-haired and olive-skinned." Bradford (2000, p. 14) contends that it is "reasonable to infer" Cleopatra had dark hair and "pale olive skin."
  84. ^ For further information on the identity of Cleopatra's mother, see Burstein (2004, p. 11), Fletcher (2008, p. 73), Goldsworthy (2010, pp. 127, 128), Grant (1972, p. 4), and Roller (2010, pp. 165–166). Joann Fletcher finds this hypothesis to be dubious and lacking evidence. Stanley M. Burstein claims that strong circumstantial evidence suggests Cleopatra's mother could have been a member of the priestly family of Ptah, but that historians generally assume her mother was Cleopatra V Tryphaena, wife of Ptolemy XII. Adrian Goldsworthy dismisses the idea of Cleopatra's mother being a member of an Egyptian priestly family as "pure conjecture," adding that either Cleopatra V or a concubine "probably of Greek origin" would be Cleopatra VII's mother. Michael Grant contends that Cleopatra V was most likely Cleopatra VII's mother. Duane W. Roller notes that while Cleopatra could have been the daughter of the priestly family of Ptah, the other main candidate would be Cleopatra VI, maintaining the uncertainty stems from Cleopatra V/VI's "loss of favor" that "obscured the issue." Roller (2010, pp. 165–166) also posits that Cleopatra being the only known ruler of the Ptolemaic Dynasty to speak Egyptian, along with her daughter Cleopatra Selene II as Queen of Mauretania publicly honoring the native Egyptian elite, both lend credence to the priestly class mistress hypothesis for maternity.
  85. ^ Schiff (2011, pp. 2) concurs with this, concluding that Cleopatra "upheld the family tradition." As noted by Dudley (1960, pp. 57), Cleopatra and her family were "the successor[s] to the native Pharaohs, exploiting through a highly organized bureaucracy the great natural resources of the Nile Valley."
  86. ^ Grant (1972, p. 4) argues that if Cleopatra had been illegitimate, her "numerous Roman enemies would have revealed this to the world."
  87. ^ The family tree and short discussions of the individuals can be found in Dodson & Hilton (2004, pp. 268–281). Aidan Dodson and Dyan Hilton refer to Cleopatra V as Cleopatra VI and Cleopatra Selene of Syria is called Cleopatra V Selene. Dotted lines in the chart below indicate possible but disputed parentage.

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cleopatra, other, uses, disambiguation, philopator, koinē, greek, Κλεοπάτρα, Φιλοπάτωρ, father, beloved, august, queen, ptolemaic, kingdom, egypt, from, last, active, ruler, note, member, ptolemaic, dynasty, descendant, founder, ptolemy, soter, macedonian, gre. For other uses see Cleopatra disambiguation Cleopatra VII Philopator Koine Greek Kleopatra Filopatwr Cleopatra the father beloved 5 69 BC 10 August 30 BC was Queen of the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt from 51 to 30 BC and its last active ruler note 5 A member of the Ptolemaic dynasty she was a descendant of its founder Ptolemy I Soter a Macedonian Greek general and companion of Alexander the Great note 6 After the death of Cleopatra Egypt became a province of the Roman Empire marking the end of the last Hellenistic state in the Mediterranean and of the age that had lasted since the reign of Alexander 336 323 BC note 7 Her native language was Koine Greek and she was the only Ptolemaic ruler to learn the Egyptian language note 8 CleopatraThe Berlin Cleopatra a Roman sculpture of Cleopatra wearing a royal diadem mid 1st century BC around the time of her visits to Rome in 46 44 BC discovered in an Italian villa along the Via Appia and now located in the Altes Museum in Germany 1 2 3 note 1 Queen of the Ptolemaic KingdomReign51 30 BC 21 years 4 PredecessorPtolemy XII AuletesSuccessorPtolemy XV Caesarion note 2 Co rulersSee list Ptolemy XII AuletesPtolemy XIII Theos PhilopatorPtolemy XIV PhilopatorPtolemy XV CaesarionRoyal titularyBornEarly 69 BCAlexandria Ptolemaic KingdomDied10 August 30 BC aged 39 note 3 Alexandria Roman EgyptBurialUnlocated tomb probably in Egypt SpousesPtolemy XIII Theos PhilopatorPtolemy XIVMark AntonyIssueCaesarionAlexander HeliosCleopatra Selene IIPtolemy PhiladelphusNamesCleopatra VII Thea PhilopatorDynastyPtolemaicFatherPtolemy XII AuletesMotherPresumably Cleopatra VI Tryphaena also known as Cleopatra V Tryphaena note 4 In 58 BC Cleopatra presumably accompanied her father Ptolemy XII Auletes during his exile to Rome after a revolt in Egypt a Roman client state allowed his rival daughter Berenice IV to claim his throne Berenice was killed in 55 BC when Ptolemy returned to Egypt with Roman military assistance When he died in 51 BC the joint reign of Cleopatra and her brother Ptolemy XIII began but a falling out between them led to open civil war After losing the 48 BC Battle of Pharsalus in Greece against his rival Julius Caesar a Roman dictator and consul in Caesar s Civil War the Roman statesman Pompey fled to Egypt Pompey had been a political ally of Ptolemy XII but Ptolemy XIII at the urging of his court eunuchs had Pompey ambushed and killed before Caesar arrived and occupied Alexandria Caesar then attempted to reconcile the rival Ptolemaic siblings but Ptolemy s chief adviser Potheinos viewed Caesar s terms as favoring Cleopatra so his forces besieged her and Caesar at the palace Shortly after the siege was lifted by reinforcements Ptolemy XIII died in the 47 BC Battle of the Nile Cleopatra s half sister Arsinoe IV was eventually exiled to Ephesus for her role in carrying out the siege Caesar declared Cleopatra and her brother Ptolemy XIV joint rulers but maintained a private affair with Cleopatra that produced a son Caesarion Cleopatra traveled to Rome as a client queen in 46 and 44 BC where she stayed at Caesar s villa After the assassination of Caesar and on her orders Ptolemy XIV in 44 BC she named Caesarion co ruler as Ptolemy XV In the Liberators civil war of 43 42 BC Cleopatra sided with the Roman Second Triumvirate formed by Caesar s grandnephew and heir Octavian Mark Antony and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus After their meeting at Tarsos in 41 BC the queen had an affair with Antony He carried out the execution of Arsinoe at her request and became increasingly reliant on Cleopatra for both funding and military aid during his invasions of the Parthian Empire and the Kingdom of Armenia The Donations of Alexandria declared their children Alexander Helios Cleopatra Selene II and Ptolemy Philadelphus rulers over various erstwhile territories under Antony s triumviral authority This event their marriage and Antony s divorce of Octavian s sister Octavia Minor led to the final war of the Roman Republic Octavian engaged in a war of propaganda forced Antony s allies in the Roman Senate to flee Rome in 32 BC and declared war on Cleopatra After defeating Antony and Cleopatra s naval fleet at the 31 BC Battle of Actium Octavian s forces invaded Egypt in 30 BC and defeated Antony leading to Antony s suicide When Cleopatra learned that Octavian planned to bring her to his Roman triumphal procession she killed herself by poisoning contrary to the popular belief that she was bitten by an asp Cleopatra s legacy survives in ancient and modern works of art Roman historiography and Latin poetry produced a generally critical view of the queen that pervaded later Medieval and Renaissance literature In the visual arts her ancient depictions include Roman busts paintings and sculptures cameo carvings and glass Ptolemaic and Roman coinage and reliefs In Renaissance and Baroque art she was the subject of many works including operas paintings poetry sculptures and theatrical dramas She has become a pop culture icon of Egyptomania since the Victorian era and in modern times Cleopatra has appeared in the applied and fine arts burlesque satire Hollywood films and brand images for commercial products Contents 1 Etymology 2 Biography 2 1 Background 2 2 Early childhood 2 3 Reign and exile of Ptolemy XII 2 4 Accession to the throne 2 5 Assassination of Pompey 2 6 Relationship with Julius Caesar 2 7 Cleopatra in the Liberators civil war 2 8 Relationship with Mark Antony 2 9 Donations of Alexandria 2 10 Battle of Actium 2 11 Downfall and death 3 Cleopatra s kingdom and role as a monarch 4 Legacy 4 1 Children and successors 4 2 Roman literature and historiography 4 3 Cultural depictions 4 3 1 Depictions in ancient art 4 3 1 1 Statues 4 3 1 2 Coinage portraits 4 3 1 3 Greco Roman busts and heads 4 3 1 4 Paintings 4 3 1 5 Portland Vase 4 3 1 6 Native Egyptian art 4 3 2 Medieval and Early Modern reception 4 3 3 Modern depictions and brand imaging 4 4 Written works 5 Ancestry 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Sources 8 1 1 Online 8 1 2 Print 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymologyThe Latinized form Cleopatra comes from the Ancient Greek Kleopatra Kleopatra meaning glory of her father 6 from kleos kleos glory and pathr patḗr father 7 The masculine form would have been written either as Kleopatros Kleopatros or Patroklos Patroklos 7 Cleopatra was the name of Alexander the Great s sister as well as Cleopatra Alcyone wife of Meleager in Greek mythology 8 Through the marriage of Ptolemy V Epiphanes and Cleopatra I Syra a Seleucid princess the name entered the Ptolemaic dynasty 9 10 Cleopatra s adopted title Thea Philopatōra 8eᾱ Filopatwra means goddess who loves her father 11 12 note 9 BiographyBackground Main article Early life of Cleopatra Hellenistic portrait of Ptolemy XII Auletes the father of Cleopatra located in the Louvre Paris 13 Ptolemaic pharaohs were crowned by the Egyptian high priest of Ptah at Memphis but resided in the multicultural and largely Greek city of Alexandria established by Alexander the Great of Macedon 14 15 16 note 10 They spoke Greek and governed Egypt as Hellenistic Greek monarchs refusing to learn the native Egyptian language 17 18 19 note 8 In contrast Cleopatra could speak multiple languages by adulthood and was the first Ptolemaic ruler to learn the Egyptian language 20 21 19 note 11 Plutarch implies that she also spoke Ethiopian the language of the Troglodytes Hebrew or Aramaic Arabic the Syrian language perhaps Syriac Median and Parthian and she could apparently also speak Latin although her Roman contemporaries would have preferred to speak with her in her native Koine Greek 21 19 22 note 12 Aside from Greek Egyptian and Latin these languages reflected Cleopatra s desire to restore North African and West Asian territories that once belonged to the Ptolemaic Kingdom 23 Roman interventionism in Egypt predated the reign of Cleopatra 24 25 26 When Ptolemy IX Lathyros died in late 81 BC he was succeeded by his daughter Berenice III 27 28 However with opposition building at the royal court against the idea of a sole reigning female monarch Berenice III accepted joint rule and marriage with her cousin and stepson Ptolemy XI Alexander II an arrangement made by the Roman dictator Sulla 27 28 Ptolemy XI had his wife killed shortly after their marriage in 80 BC but was lynched soon thereafter in the resulting riot over the assassination 27 29 30 Ptolemy XI and perhaps his uncle Ptolemy IX or father Ptolemy X Alexander I willed the Ptolemaic Kingdom to Rome as collateral for loans so that the Romans had legal grounds to take over Egypt their client state after the assassination of Ptolemy XI 27 31 32 The Romans chose instead to divide the Ptolemaic realm among the illegitimate sons of Ptolemy IX bestowing Cyprus on Ptolemy of Cyprus and Egypt on Ptolemy XII Auletes 27 29 Early childhood Main article Early life of Cleopatra Cleopatra VII was born in early 69 BC to the ruling Ptolemaic pharaoh Ptolemy XII and an unknown mother 33 34 note 13 presumably Ptolemy XII s wife Cleopatra VI Tryphaena also known as Cleopatra V Tryphaena 35 36 37 note 14 note 4 the mother of Cleopatra s older sister Berenice IV Epiphaneia 38 39 40 note 15 Cleopatra Tryphaena disappears from official records a few months after the birth of Cleopatra in 69 BC 41 42 The three younger children of Ptolemy XII Cleopatra s sister Arsinoe IV and brothers Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator and Ptolemy XIV 38 39 40 were born in the absence of his wife 43 44 Cleopatra s childhood tutor was Philostratos from whom she learned the Greek arts of oration and philosophy 45 During her youth Cleopatra presumably studied at the Musaeum including the Library of Alexandria 46 47 Reign and exile of Ptolemy XII Main article Early life of Cleopatra Further information First Triumvirate Most likely a posthumously painted portrait of Cleopatra with red hair and her distinct facial features wearing a royal diadem and pearl studded hairpins from Roman Herculaneum Italy 1st century AD 48 49 note 16 In 65 BC the Roman censor Marcus Licinius Crassus argued before the Roman Senate that Rome should annex Ptolemaic Egypt but his proposed bill and the similar bill of tribune Servilius Rullus in 63 BC were rejected 50 51 Ptolemy XII responded to the threat of possible annexation by offering remuneration and lavish gifts to powerful Roman statesmen such as Pompey during his campaign against Mithridates VI of Pontus and eventually Julius Caesar after he became Roman consul in 59 BC 52 53 54 note 17 However Ptolemy XII s profligate behavior bankrupted him and he was forced to acquire loans from the Roman banker Gaius Rabirius Postumus 55 56 57 In 58 BC the Romans annexed Cyprus and on accusations of piracy drove Ptolemy of Cyprus Ptolemy XII s brother to commit suicide instead of enduring exile to Paphos 58 59 57 note 18 Ptolemy XII remained publicly silent on the death of his brother a decision which along with ceding traditional Ptolemaic territory to the Romans damaged his credibility among subjects already enraged by his economic policies 58 60 61 Ptolemy XII was then exiled from Egypt by force traveling first to Rhodes then Athens and finally the villa of triumvir Pompey in the Alban Hills near Praeneste Italy 58 59 62 note 19 Ptolemy XII spent nearly a year there on the outskirts of Rome ostensibly accompanied by his daughter Cleopatra then about 11 58 62 note 20 Berenice IV sent an embassy to Rome to advocate for her rule and oppose the reinstatement of her father Ptolemy XII but Ptolemy had assassins kill the leaders of the embassy an incident that was covered up by his powerful Roman supporters 63 56 64 note 21 When the Roman Senate denied Ptolemy XII the offer of an armed escort and provisions for a return to Egypt he decided to leave Rome in late 57 BC and reside at the Temple of Artemis in Ephesus 65 66 67 The Roman financiers of Ptolemy XII remained determined to restore him to power 68 Pompey persuaded Aulus Gabinius the Roman governor of Syria to invade Egypt and restore Ptolemy XII offering him 10 000 talents for the proposed mission 68 69 70 Although it put him at odds with Roman law Gabinius invaded Egypt in the spring of 55 BC by way of Hasmonean Judea where Hyrcanus II had Antipater the Idumaean father of Herod the Great furnish the Roman led army with supplies 68 71 As a young cavalry officer Mark Antony was under Gabinius s command He distinguished himself by preventing Ptolemy XII from massacring the inhabitants of Pelousion and for rescuing the body of Archelaos the husband of Berenice IV after he was killed in battle ensuring him a proper royal burial 72 73 Cleopatra then 14 years of age would have traveled with the Roman expedition into Egypt years later Antony would profess that he had fallen in love with her at this time 72 74 The Roman Republic green and Ptolemaic Egypt yellow in 40 BC Gabinius was put on trial in Rome for abusing his authority for which he was acquitted but his second trial for accepting bribes led to his exile from which he was recalled seven years later in 48 BC by Caesar 75 76 Crassus replaced him as governor of Syria and extended his provincial command to Egypt but he was killed by the Parthians at the Battle of Carrhae in 53 BC 75 77 Ptolemy XII had Berenice IV and her wealthy supporters executed seizing their properties 78 79 80 He allowed Gabinius s largely Germanic and Gallic Roman garrison the Gabiniani to harass people in the streets of Alexandria and installed his longtime Roman financier Rabirius as his chief financial officer 78 81 82 note 22 Within a year Rabirius was placed under protective custody and sent back to Rome after his life was endangered for draining Egypt of its resources 83 84 80 note 23 Despite these problems Ptolemy XII created a will designating Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII as his joint heirs oversaw major construction projects such as the Temple of Edfu and a temple at Dendera and stabilized the economy 85 84 86 note 24 On 31 May 52 BC Cleopatra was made a regent of Ptolemy XII as indicated by an inscription in the Temple of Hathor at Dendera 87 88 89 note 25 Rabirius was unable to collect the entirety of Ptolemy XII s debt by the time of the latter s death and so it was passed on to his successors Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII 83 76 Accession to the throne Main articles Early life of Cleopatra and Reign of Cleopatra Left Cleopatra dressed as a pharaoh and presenting offerings to the goddess Isis on a limestone stele dedicated by a Greek man named Onnophris dated 51 BC and located in the Louvre ParisRight The cartouches of Cleopatra and Caesarion on a limestone stele of the High Priest of Ptah in Egypt dated to the Ptolemaic period and located in the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London Ptolemy XII died sometime before 22 March 51 BC when Cleopatra in her first act as queen began her voyage to Hermonthis near Thebes to install a new sacred Buchis bull worshiped as an intermediary for the god Montu in the Ancient Egyptian religion 5 90 91 note 26 Cleopatra faced several pressing issues and emergencies shortly after taking the throne These included famine caused by drought and a low level of the annual flooding of the Nile and lawless behavior instigated by the Gabiniani the now unemployed and assimilated Roman soldiers left by Gabinius to garrison Egypt 92 93 Inheriting her father s debts Cleopatra also owed the Roman Republic 17 5 million drachmas 94 In 50 BC Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus proconsul of Syria sent his two eldest sons to Egypt most likely to negotiate with the Gabiniani and recruit them as soldiers in the desperate defense of Syria against the Parthians 95 However the Gabiniani tortured and murdered these two perhaps with secret encouragement by rogue senior administrators in Cleopatra s court 95 96 Cleopatra sent the Gabiniani culprits to Bibulus as prisoners awaiting his judgment but he sent them back to Cleopatra and chastised her for interfering in their adjudication which was the prerogative of the Roman Senate 97 96 Bibulus siding with Pompey in Caesar s Civil War failed to prevent Caesar from landing a naval fleet in Greece which ultimately allowed Caesar to reach Egypt in pursuit of Pompey 97 By 29 August 51 BC official documents started listing Cleopatra as the sole ruler evidence that she had rejected her brother Ptolemy XIII as a co ruler 94 96 98 She had probably married him 77 but there is no record of this 5 The Ptolemaic practice of sibling marriage was introduced by Ptolemy II and his sister Arsinoe II 99 100 101 A long held royal Egyptian practice it was loathed by contemporary Greeks 99 100 101 note 27 By the reign of Cleopatra however it was considered a normal arrangement for Ptolemaic rulers 99 100 101 Despite Cleopatra s rejection of him Ptolemy XIII still retained powerful allies notably the eunuch Potheinos his childhood tutor regent and administrator of his properties 102 93 103 Others involved in the cabal against Cleopatra included Achillas a prominent military commander and Theodotus of Chios another tutor of Ptolemy XIII 102 104 Cleopatra seems to have attempted a short lived alliance with her brother Ptolemy XIV but by the autumn of 50 BC Ptolemy XIII had the upper hand in their conflict and began signing documents with his name before that of his sister followed by the establishment of his first regnal date in 49 BC 5 105 106 note 28 Assassination of Pompey Main article Reign of Cleopatra A Roman portrait of Pompey made during the reign of Augustus 27 BC 14 AD a copy of an original from 70 to 60 BC and located in the Venice National Archaeological Museum Italy In the summer of 49 BC Cleopatra and her forces were still fighting against Ptolemy XIII within Alexandria when Pompey s son Gnaeus Pompeius arrived seeking military aid on behalf of his father 105 After returning to Italy from the wars in Gaul and crossing the Rubicon in January of 49 BC Caesar had forced Pompey and his supporters to flee to Greece 107 108 In perhaps their last joint decree both Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII agreed to Gnaeus Pompeius s request and sent his father 60 ships and 500 troops including the Gabiniani a move that helped erase some of the debt owed to Rome 107 109 Losing the fight against her brother Cleopatra was then forced to flee Alexandria and withdraw to the region of Thebes 110 111 112 By the spring of 48 BC Cleopatra had traveled to Roman Syria with her younger sister Arsinoe IV to gather an invasion force that would head to Egypt 113 106 114 She returned with an army but her advance to Alexandria was blocked by her brother s forces including some Gabiniani mobilized to fight against her so she camped outside Pelousion in the eastern Nile Delta 115 106 116 In Greece Caesar and Pompey s forces engaged each other at the decisive Battle of Pharsalus on 9 August 48 BC leading to the destruction of most of Pompey s army and his forced flight to Tyre Lebanon 115 117 118 note 29 Given his close relationship with the Ptolemies Pompey ultimately decided that Egypt would be his place of refuge where he could replenish his forces 119 118 116 note 30 Ptolemy XIII s advisers however feared the idea of Pompey using Egypt as his base in a protracted Roman civil war 119 120 121 In a scheme devised by Theodotus Pompey arrived by ship near Pelousion after being invited by a written message only to be ambushed and stabbed to death on 28 September 48 BC 119 117 122 note 31 Ptolemy XIII believed he had demonstrated his power and simultaneously defused the situation by having Pompey s head severed and embalmed sent to Caesar who arrived in Alexandria by early October and took up residence at the royal palace 123 124 125 note 31 Caesar expressed grief and outrage over the killing of Pompey and called on both Ptolemy XIII and Cleopatra to disband their forces and reconcile with each other 123 126 125 note 32 Relationship with Julius Caesar Main article Reign of Cleopatra Further information Military campaigns of Julius Caesar Siege of Alexandria 47 BC Battle of the Nile 47 BC and Caesareum of Alexandria Ptolemy XIII arrived at Alexandria at the head of his army in clear defiance of Caesar s demand that he disband and leave his army before his arrival 127 128 Cleopatra initially sent emissaries to Caesar but upon allegedly hearing that Caesar was inclined to having affairs with royal women she came to Alexandria to see him personally 127 129 128 Historian Cassius Dio records that she did so without informing her brother dressed in an attractive manner and charmed Caesar with her wit 127 130 131 Plutarch provides an entirely different and perhaps mythical account that alleges she was bound inside a bed sack to be smuggled into the palace to meet Caesar 127 132 133 note 33 The Tusculum portrait a contemporary Roman sculpture of Julius Caesar located in the Archaeological Museum of Turin Italy When Ptolemy XIII realized that his sister was in the palace consorting directly with Caesar he attempted to rouse the populace of Alexandria into a riot but he was arrested by Caesar who used his oratorical skills to calm the frenzied crowd 134 135 136 Caesar then brought Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII before the assembly of Alexandria where Caesar revealed the written will of Ptolemy XII previously possessed by Pompey naming Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIII as his joint heirs 137 135 129 note 34 Caesar then attempted to arrange for the other two siblings Arsinoe IV and Ptolemy XIV to rule together over Cyprus thus removing potential rival claimants to the Egyptian throne while also appeasing the Ptolemaic subjects still bitter over the loss of Cyprus to the Romans in 58 BC 138 135 139 note 34 Judging that this agreement favored Cleopatra over Ptolemy XIII and that the latter s army of 20 000 including the Gabiniani could most likely defeat Caesar s army of 4 000 unsupported troops Potheinos decided to have Achillas lead their forces to Alexandria to attack both Caesar and Cleopatra 138 135 140 note 35 After Caesar managed to execute Potheinos Arsinoe IV joined forces with Achillas and was declared queen but soon afterward had her tutor Ganymedes kill Achillas and take his position as commander of her army 141 142 143 note 36 Ganymedes then tricked Caesar into requesting the presence of the erstwhile captive Ptolemy XIII as a negotiator only to have him join the army of Arsinoe IV 141 144 145 The resulting siege of the palace with Caesar and Cleopatra trapped together inside lasted into the following year of 47 BC 146 126 147 note 37 Sometime between January and March of 47 BC Caesar s reinforcements arrived including those led by Mithridates of Pergamon and Antipater the Idumaean 141 126 148 note 38 Ptolemy XIII and Arsinoe IV withdrew their forces to the Nile where Caesar attacked them Ptolemy XIII tried to flee by boat but it capsized and he drowned 149 126 150 note 39 Ganymedes may have been killed in the battle Theodotus was found years later in Asia by Marcus Junius Brutus and executed Arsinoe IV was forcefully paraded in Caesar s triumph in Rome before being exiled to the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus 151 152 153 Cleopatra was conspicuously absent from these events and resided in the palace most likely because she had been pregnant with Caesar s child since September 48 BC 154 155 156 Caesar s term as consul had expired at the end of 48 BC 151 However Antony an officer of his helped to secure Caesar s appointment as dictator lasting for a year until October 47 BC providing Caesar with the legal authority to settle the dynastic dispute in Egypt 151 Wary of repeating the mistake of Cleopatra s sister Berenice IV in having a female monarch as sole ruler Caesar appointed Cleopatra s 12 year old brother Ptolemy XIV as joint ruler with the 22 year old Cleopatra in a nominal sibling marriage but Cleopatra continued living privately with Caesar 157 126 148 note 40 The exact date at which Cyprus was returned to her control is not known although she had a governor there by 42 BC 158 148 Cleopatra and Caesar 1866 a painting by Jean Leon Gerome Caesar is alleged to have joined Cleopatra for a cruise of the Nile and sightseeing of Egyptian monuments 126 159 160 although this may be a romantic tale reflecting later well to do Roman proclivities and not a real historical event 161 The historian Suetonius provided considerable details about the voyage including use of Thalamegos the pleasure barge constructed by Ptolemy IV which during his reign measured 90 metres 300 ft in length and 24 metres 80 ft in height and was complete with dining rooms state rooms holy shrines and promenades along its two decks resembling a floating villa 161 162 Caesar could have had an interest in the Nile cruise owing to his fascination with geography he was well read in the works of Eratosthenes and Pytheas and perhaps wanted to discover the source of the river but turned back before reaching Ethiopia 163 164 Caesar departed from Egypt around April 47 BC allegedly to confront Pharnaces II of Pontus the son of Mithridates VI of Pontus who was stirring up trouble for Rome in Anatolia 165 It is possible that Caesar married to the prominent Roman woman Calpurnia also wanted to avoid being seen together with Cleopatra when she bore him their son 165 159 He left three legions in Egypt later increased to four under the command of the freedman Rufio to secure Cleopatra s tenuous position but also perhaps to keep her activities in check 165 166 167 Caesarion Cleopatra s alleged child with Caesar was born 23 June 47 BC and was originally named Pharaoh Caesar as preserved on a stele at the Serapeum of Saqqara 168 126 169 note 41 Perhaps owing to his still childless marriage with Calpurnia Caesar remained publicly silent about Caesarion but perhaps accepted his parentage in private 170 note 42 Cleopatra on the other hand made repeated official declarations about Caesarion s parentage naming Caesar as the father 170 171 172 Egyptian portrait of a Ptolemaic queen possibly Cleopatra c 51 30 BC located in the Brooklyn Museum 173 Cleopatra and her nominal joint ruler Ptolemy XIV visited Rome sometime in late 46 BC presumably without Caesarion and were given lodging in Caesar s villa within the Horti Caesaris 174 169 175 note 43 As with their father Ptolemy XII Caesar awarded both Cleopatra and Ptolemy XIV the legal status of friend and ally of the Roman people Latin socius et amicus populi Romani in effect client rulers loyal to Rome 176 177 178 Cleopatra s visitors at Caesar s villa across the Tiber included the senator Cicero who found her arrogant 179 180 Sosigenes of Alexandria one of the members of Cleopatra s court aided Caesar in the calculations for the new Julian calendar put into effect 1 January 45 BC 181 182 183 The Temple of Venus Genetrix established in the Forum of Caesar on 25 September 46 BC contained a golden statue of Cleopatra which stood there at least until the 3rd century AD associating the mother of Caesar s child directly with the goddess Venus mother of the Romans 184 182 185 The statue also subtly linked the Egyptian goddess Isis with the Roman religion 179 Cleopatra s presence in Rome most likely had an effect on the events at the Lupercalia festival a month before Caesar s assassination 186 187 Antony attempted to place a royal diadem on Caesar s head but the latter refused in what was most likely a staged performance perhaps to gauge the Roman public s mood about accepting Hellenistic style kingship 186 187 Cicero who was present at the festival mockingly asked where the diadem came from an obvious reference to the Ptolemaic queen whom he abhorred 186 187 Caesar was assassinated on the Ides of March 15 March 44 BC but Cleopatra stayed in Rome until about mid April in the vain hope of having Caesarion recognized as Caesar s heir 188 189 190 However Caesar s will named his grandnephew Octavian as the primary heir and Octavian arrived in Italy around the same time Cleopatra decided to depart for Egypt 188 189 191 A few months later Cleopatra had Ptolemy XIV killed by poisoning elevating her son Caesarion as her co ruler 192 193 172 note 44 Cleopatra in the Liberators civil war Main article Reign of Cleopatra Further information Liberators civil war Cleopatra s Gate in Tarsos now Tarsus Mersin Turkey the site where she met Mark Antony in 41 BC 194 Octavian Antony and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus formed the Second Triumvirate in 43 BC in which they were each elected for five year terms to restore order in the Republic and bring Caesar s assassins to justice 195 196 Cleopatra received messages from both Gaius Cassius Longinus one of Caesar s assassins and Publius Cornelius Dolabella proconsul of Syria and Caesarian loyalist requesting military aid 195 She decided to write Cassius an excuse that her kingdom faced too many internal problems while sending the four legions left by Caesar in Egypt to Dolabella 195 197 However these troops were captured by Cassius in Palestine 195 197 While Serapion Cleopatra s governor of Cyprus defected to Cassius and provided him with ships Cleopatra took her own fleet to Greece to personally assist Octavian and Antony but her ships were heavily damaged in a Mediterranean storm and she arrived too late to aid in the fighting 195 198 By the autumn of 42 BC Antony had defeated the forces of Caesar s assassins at the Battle of Philippi in Greece leading to the suicide of Cassius and Brutus 195 199 By the end of 42 BC Octavian had gained control over much of the western half of the Roman Republic and Antony the eastern half with Lepidus largely marginalized 200 In the summer of 41 BC Antony established his headquarters at Tarsos in Anatolia and summoned Cleopatra there in several letters which she rebuffed until Antony s envoy Quintus Dellius convinced her to come 201 202 The meeting would allow Cleopatra to clear up the misconception that she had supported Cassius during the civil war and address territorial exchanges in the Levant but Antony also undoubtedly desired to form a personal romantic relationship with the queen 203 202 Cleopatra sailed up the Kydnos River to Tarsos in Thalamegos hosting Antony and his officers for two nights of lavish banquets on board the ship 204 205 note 45 Cleopatra managed to clear her name as a supposed supporter of Cassius arguing she had really attempted to help Dolabella in Syria and convinced Antony to have her exiled sister Arsinoe IV executed at Ephesus 206 207 Cleopatra s former rebellious governor of Cyprus was also handed over to her for execution 206 208 Relationship with Mark Antony Main article Reign of Cleopatra A Roman marble bust of the consul and triumvir Mark Antony late 1st century AD Vatican Museums Cleopatra invited Antony to come to Egypt before departing from Tarsos which led Antony to visit Alexandria by November 41 BC 206 209 Antony was well received by the populace of Alexandria both for his heroic actions in restoring Ptolemy XII to power and coming to Egypt without an occupation force like Caesar had done 210 211 In Egypt Antony continued to enjoy the lavish royal lifestyle he had witnessed aboard Cleopatra s ship docked at Tarsos 212 208 He also had his subordinates such as Publius Ventidius Bassus drive the Parthians out of Anatolia and Syria 211 213 214 note 46 Cleopatra carefully chose Antony as her partner for producing further heirs as he was deemed to be the most powerful Roman figure following Caesar s demise 215 With his powers as a triumvir Antony also had the broad authority to restore former Ptolemaic lands which were currently in Roman hands to Cleopatra 216 217 While it is clear that both Cilicia and Cyprus were under Cleopatra s control by 19 November 38 BC the transfer probably occurred earlier in the winter of 41 40 BC during her time spent with Antony 216 By the spring of 40 BC Antony left Egypt due to troubles in Syria where his governor Lucius Decidius Saxa was killed and his army taken by Quintus Labienus a former officer under Cassius who now served the Parthian Empire 218 Cleopatra provided Antony with 200 ships for his campaign and as payment for her newly acquired territories 218 She would not see Antony again until 37 BC but she maintained correspondence and evidence suggests she kept a spy in his camp 218 By the end of 40 BC Cleopatra had given birth to twins a boy named Alexander Helios and a girl named Cleopatra Selene II both of whom Antony acknowledged as his children 219 220 Helios the Sun and Selene the Moon were symbolic of a new era of societal rejuvenation 221 as well as an indication that Cleopatra hoped Antony would repeat the exploits of Alexander the Great by conquering the Parthians 211 The Meeting of Antony and Cleopatra 1885 by Lawrence Alma Tadema Mark Antony s Parthian campaign in the east was disrupted by the events of the Perusine War 41 40 BC initiated by his ambitious wife Fulvia against Octavian in the hopes of making her husband the undisputed leader of Rome 221 222 It has been suggested that Fulvia wanted to cleave Antony away from Cleopatra but the conflict emerged in Italy even before Cleopatra s meeting with Antony at Tarsos 223 Fulvia and Antony s brother Lucius Antonius were eventually besieged by Octavian at Perusia modern Perugia Italy and then exiled from Italy after which Fulvia died at Sicyon in Greece while attempting to reach Antony 224 Her sudden death led to a reconciliation of Octavian and Antony at Brundisium in Italy in September 40 BC 224 211 Although the agreement struck at Brundisium solidified Antony s control of the Roman Republic s territories east of the Ionian Sea it also stipulated that he concede Italia Hispania and Gaul and marry Octavian s sister Octavia the Younger a potential rival for Cleopatra 225 226 In December 40 BC Cleopatra received Herod in Alexandria as an unexpected guest and refugee who fled a turbulent situation in Judea 227 Herod had been installed as a tetrarch there by Antony but he was soon at odds with Antigonus II Mattathias of the long established Hasmonean dynasty 227 The latter had imprisoned Herod s brother and fellow tetrarch Phasael who was executed while Herod was fleeing toward Cleopatra s court 227 Cleopatra attempted to provide him with a military assignment but Herod declined and traveled to Rome where the triumvirs Octavian and Antony named him king of Judea 228 229 This act put Herod on a collision course with Cleopatra who would desire to reclaim the former Ptolemaic territories that comprised his new Herodian kingdom 228 An ancient Roman sculpture possibly depicting either Cleopatra of Ptolemaic Egypt 230 231 note 47 or her daughter Cleopatra Selene II Queen of Mauretania 232 located in the Archaeological Museum of Cherchell Algeria Relations between Antony and Cleopatra perhaps soured when he not only married Octavia but also sired her two children Antonia the Elder in 39 BC and Antonia Minor in 36 BC and moved his headquarters to Athens 233 However Cleopatra s position in Egypt was secure 211 Her rival Herod was occupied with civil war in Judea that required heavy Roman military assistance but received none from Cleopatra 233 Since the authority of Antony and Octavian as triumvirs had expired on 1 January 37 BC Octavia arranged for a meeting at Tarentum where the triumvirate was officially extended to 33 BC 234 With two legions granted by Octavian and a thousand soldiers lent by Octavia Antony traveled to Antioch where he made preparations for war against the Parthians 235 Antony summoned Cleopatra to Antioch to discuss pressing issues such as Herod s kingdom and financial support for his Parthian campaign 235 236 Cleopatra brought her now three year old twins to Antioch where Antony saw them for the first time and where they probably first received their surnames Helios and Selene as part of Antony and Cleopatra s ambitious plans for the future 237 238 In order to stabilize the east Antony not only enlarged Cleopatra s domain 236 he also established new ruling dynasties and client rulers who would be loyal to him yet would ultimately outlast him 239 217 note 48 In this arrangement Cleopatra gained significant former Ptolemaic territories in the Levant including nearly all of Phoenicia Lebanon minus Tyre and Sidon which remained in Roman hands 240 217 236 She also received Ptolemais Akko modern Acre Israel a city that was established by Ptolemy II 240 Given her ancestral relations with the Seleucids she was granted the region of Coele Syria along the upper Orontes River 241 236 She was even given the region surrounding Jericho in Palestine but she leased this territory back to Herod 242 229 At the expense of the Nabataean king Malichus I a cousin of Herod Cleopatra was also given a portion of the Nabataean Kingdom around the Gulf of Aqaba on the Red Sea including Ailana modern Aqaba Jordan 243 229 To the west Cleopatra was handed Cyrene along the Libyan coast as well as Itanos and Olous in Roman Crete 244 236 Although still administered by Roman officials these territories nevertheless enriched her kingdom and led her to declare the inauguration of a new era by double dating her coinage in 36 BC 245 246 Roman aureus bearing the portraits of Mark Antony left and Octavian right issued in 41 BC to celebrate the establishment of the Second Triumvirate by Octavian Antony and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus in 43 BC Antony s enlargement of the Ptolemaic realm by relinquishing directly controlled Roman territory was exploited by his rival Octavian who tapped into the public sentiment in Rome against the empowerment of a foreign queen at the expense of their Republic 247 Octavian fostering the narrative that Antony was neglecting his virtuous Roman wife Octavia granted both her and Livia his own wife extraordinary privileges of sacrosanctity 247 Some 50 years before Cornelia Africana daughter of Scipio Africanus had been the first living Roman woman to have a statue dedicated to her 245 She was now followed by Octavia and Livia whose statues were most likely erected in the Forum of Caesar to rival that of Cleopatra s erected by Caesar 245 In 36 BC Cleopatra accompanied Antony to the Euphrates in his journey toward invading the Parthian Empire 248 She then returned to Egypt perhaps due to her advanced state of pregnancy 249 By the summer of 36 BC she had given birth to Ptolemy Philadelphus her second son with Antony 249 236 Antony s Parthian campaign in 36 BC turned into a complete debacle for a number of reasons in particular the betrayal of Artavasdes II of Armenia who defected to the Parthian side 250 217 251 After losing some 30 000 men more than Crassus at Carrhae an indignity he had hoped to avenge Antony finally arrived at Leukokome near Berytus modern Beirut Lebanon in December engaged in heavy drinking before Cleopatra arrived to provide funds and clothing for his battered troops 250 252 Antony desired to avoid the risks involved in returning to Rome and so he traveled with Cleopatra back to Alexandria to see his newborn son 250 Donations of Alexandria Main articles Donations of Alexandria and Reign of Cleopatra A denarius minted by Antony in 34 BC with his portrait on the obverse which bears the inscription reading ANTONIVS ARMENIA DEVICTA alluding to his Armenian campaign The reverse features Cleopatra with the inscription CLEOPATR AE REGINAE REGVM FILIORVM REGVM The mention of her children on the reverse refers to the Donations of Alexandria 253 254 As Antony prepared for another Parthian expedition in 35 BC this time aimed at their ally Armenia Octavia traveled to Athens with 2 000 troops in alleged support of Antony but most likely in a scheme devised by Octavian to embarrass him for his military losses 255 256 note 49 Antony received these troops but told Octavia not to stray east of Athens as he and Cleopatra traveled together to Antioch only to suddenly and inexplicably abandon the military campaign and head back to Alexandria 255 256 When Octavia returned to Rome Octavian portrayed his sister as a victim wronged by Antony although she refused to leave Antony s household 257 217 Octavian s confidence grew as he eliminated his rivals in the west including Sextus Pompeius and even Lepidus the third member of the triumvirate who was placed under house arrest after revolting against Octavian in Sicily 257 217 252 Dellius was sent as Antony s envoy to Artavasdes II in 34 BC to negotiate a potential marriage alliance that would wed the Armenian king s daughter to Alexander Helios the son of Antony and Cleopatra 258 259 When this was declined Antony marched his army into Armenia defeated their forces and captured the king and Armenian royal family 258 260 Antony then held a military parade in Alexandria as an imitation of a Roman triumph dressed as Dionysus and riding into the city on a chariot to present the royal prisoners to Cleopatra who was seated on a golden throne above a silver dais 258 261 News of this event was heavily criticized in Rome as a perversion of time honored Roman rites and rituals to be enjoyed instead by an Egyptian queen 258 A papyrus document dated February 33 BC granting tax exemptions to a person in Egypt and containing the signature of Cleopatra written by an official but with gines8wi ginesthōi lit make it happen 262 263 or so be it 264 added in Greek likely by the queen s own hand 262 263 264 In an event held at the gymnasium soon after the triumph Cleopatra dressed as Isis and declared that she was the Queen of Kings with her son Caesarion King of Kings while Alexander Helios was declared king of Armenia Media and Parthia and two year old Ptolemy Philadelphos was declared king of Syria and Cilicia 265 266 267 Cleopatra Selene II was bestowed with Crete and Cyrene 268 269 Antony and Cleopatra may have been wed during this ceremony 268 267 note 50 Antony sent a report to Rome requesting ratification of these territorial claims now known as the Donations of Alexandria Octavian wanted to publicize it for propaganda purposes but the two consuls both supporters of Antony had it censored from public view 270 269 In late 34 BC Antony and Octavian engaged in a heated war of propaganda that would last for years 271 269 172 note 51 Antony claimed that his rival had illegally deposed Lepidus from their triumvirate and barred him from raising troops in Italy while Octavian accused Antony of unlawfully detaining the king of Armenia marrying Cleopatra despite still being married to his sister Octavia and wrongfully claiming Caesarion as the heir of Caesar instead of Octavian 271 269 The litany of accusations and gossip associated with this propaganda war have shaped the popular perceptions about Cleopatra from Augustan period literature through to various media in modern times 272 273 Cleopatra was said to have brainwashed Mark Antony with witchcraft and sorcery and was as dangerous as Homer s Helen of Troy in destroying civilization 274 Pliny the Elder claims in his Natural History that Cleopatra once dissolved a pearl worth tens of millions of sesterces in vinegar just to win a dinner party bet 275 276 The accusation that Antony had stolen books from the Library of Pergamum to restock the Library of Alexandria later turned out to be an admitted fabrication by Gaius Calvisius Sabinus 277 A papyrus document dated to February 33 BC later used to wrap a mummy contains the signature of Cleopatra probably written by an official authorized to sign for her 262 263 It concerns certain tax exemptions in Egypt granted to either Quintus Caecillius or Publius Canidius Crassus note 52 a former Roman consul and Antony s confidant who would command his land forces at Actium 278 263 A subscript in a different handwriting at the bottom of the papyrus reads make it happen 278 263 or so be it 264 Ancient Greek gines8wi romanized ginesthōi note 53 this is likely the autograph of the queen as it was Ptolemaic practice to countersign documents to avoid forgery 278 263 Battle of Actium Main articles Battle of Actium and Reign of Cleopatra A reconstructed statue of Augustus as a younger Octavian dated c 30 BC In a speech to the Roman Senate on the first day of his consulship on 1 January 33 BC Octavian accused Antony of attempting to subvert Roman freedoms and territorial integrity as a slave to his Oriental queen 279 Before Antony and Octavian s joint imperium expired on 31 December 33 BC Antony declared Caesarion as the true heir of Caesar in an attempt to undermine Octavian 279 In 32 BC the Antonian loyalists Gaius Sosius and Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus became consuls The former gave a fiery speech condemning Octavian now a private citizen without public office and introduced pieces of legislation against him 278 280 During the next senatorial session Octavian entered the Senate house with armed guards and levied his own accusations against the consuls 278 281 Intimidated by this act the consuls and over 200 senators still in support of Antony fled Rome the next day to join the side of Antony 278 281 282 Antony and Cleopatra traveled together to Ephesus in 32 BC where she provided him with 200 of the 800 naval ships he was able to acquire 278 Ahenobarbus wary of having Octavian s propaganda confirmed to the public attempted to persuade Antony to have Cleopatra excluded from the campaign against Octavian 283 284 Publius Canidius Crassus made the counterargument that Cleopatra was funding the war effort and was a competent monarch 283 284 Cleopatra refused Antony s requests that she return to Egypt judging that by blocking Octavian in Greece she could more easily defend Egypt 283 284 Cleopatra s insistence that she be involved in the battle for Greece led to the defections of prominent Romans such as Ahenobarbus and Lucius Munatius Plancus 283 281 During the spring of 32 BC Antony and Cleopatra traveled to Athens where she persuaded Antony to send Octavia an official declaration of divorce 283 281 267 This encouraged Plancus to advise Octavian that he should seize Antony s will invested with the Vestal Virgins 283 281 269 Although a violation of sacred and legal rights Octavian forcefully acquired the document from the Temple of Vesta and it became a useful tool in the propaganda war against Antony and Cleopatra 283 269 Octavian highlighted parts of the will such as Caesarion being named heir to Caesar that the Donations of Alexandria were legal that Antony should be buried alongside Cleopatra in Egypt instead of Rome and that Alexandria would be made the new capital of the Roman Republic 285 281 269 In a show of loyalty to Rome Octavian decided to begin construction of his own mausoleum at the Campus Martius 281 Octavian s legal standing was also improved by being elected consul in 31 BC 281 With Antony s will made public Octavian had his casus belli and Rome declared war on Cleopatra 285 286 287 not Antony note 54 The legal argument for war was based less on Cleopatra s territorial acquisitions with former Roman territories ruled by her children with Antony and more on the fact that she was providing military support to a private citizen now that Antony s triumviral authority had expired 288 Left A silver tetradrachm of Cleopatra minted at Seleucia Pieria SyriaRight A silver tetradrachm of Cleopatra minted at Ascalon Israel Antony and Cleopatra had a larger fleet than Octavian but the crews of Antony and Cleopatra s navy were not all well trained some of them perhaps from merchant vessels whereas Octavian had a fully professional force 289 284 Antony wanted to cross the Adriatic Sea and blockade Octavian at either Tarentum or Brundisium 290 but Cleopatra concerned primarily with defending Egypt overrode the decision to attack Italy directly 291 284 Antony and Cleopatra set up their winter headquarters at Patrai in Greece and by the spring of 31 BC they had moved to Actium on the southern side of the Ambracian Gulf 291 290 Cleopatra and Antony had the support of various allied kings but Cleopatra had already been in conflict with Herod and an earthquake in Judea provided him with an excuse to be absent from the campaign 292 They also lost the support of Malichus I which would prove to have strategic consequences 293 Antony and Cleopatra lost several skirmishes against Octavian around Actium during the summer of 31 BC while defections to Octavian s camp continued including Antony s long time companion Dellius 293 and the allied kings Amyntas of Galatia and Deiotaros of Paphlagonia 293 While some in Antony s camp suggested abandoning the naval conflict to retreat inland Cleopatra urged for a naval confrontation to keep Octavian s fleet away from Egypt 294 On 2 September 31 BC the naval forces of Octavian led by Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa met those of Antony and Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium 294 290 286 Cleopatra aboard her flagship the Antonias commanded 60 ships at the mouth of the Ambracian Gulf at the rear of the fleet in what was likely a move by Antony s officers to marginalize her during the battle 294 Antony had ordered that their ships should have sails on board for a better chance to pursue or flee from the enemy which Cleopatra ever concerned about defending Egypt used to swiftly move through the area of major combat in a strategic withdrawal to the Peloponnese 295 296 297 Burstein writes that partisan Roman writers would later accuse Cleopatra of cowardly deserting Antony but their original intention of keeping their sails on board may have been to break the blockade and salvage as much of their fleet as possible 297 Antony followed Cleopatra and boarded her ship identified by its distinctive purple sails as the two escaped the battle and headed for Tainaron 295 Antony reportedly avoided Cleopatra during this three day voyage until her ladies in waiting at Tainaron urged him to speak with her 298 The Battle of Actium raged on without Cleopatra and Antony until the morning of 3 September and was followed by massive defections of officers troops and allied kings to Octavian s side 298 296 299 Downfall and death Main article Death of Cleopatra Further information Epaphroditus freedman of Augustus and Tomb of Antony and Cleopatra A Roman painting from the House of Giuseppe II in Pompeii early 1st century AD most likely depicting Cleopatra wearing her royal diadem and consuming poison in an act of suicide while her son Caesarion also wearing a royal diadem stands behind her 300 301 While Octavian occupied Athens Antony and Cleopatra landed at Paraitonion in Egypt 298 302 The couple then went their separate ways Antony to Cyrene to raise more troops and Cleopatra to the harbor at Alexandria in an attempt to mislead the oppositional party and portray the activities in Greece as a victory 298 She was afraid that news about the outcome of the battle of Actium would lead to a rebellion 303 It is uncertain whether or not at this time she actually executed Artavasdes II and sent his head to his rival Artavasdes I of Media Atropatene in an attempt to strike an alliance with him 304 305 Lucius Pinarius Mark Antony s appointed governor of Cyrene received word that Octavian had won the Battle of Actium before Antony s messengers could arrive at his court 304 Pinarius had these messengers executed and then defected to Octavian s side surrendering to him the four legions under his command that Antony desired to obtain 304 Antony nearly committed suicide after hearing news of this but was stopped by his staff officers 304 In Alexandria he built a reclusive cottage on the island of Pharos that he nicknamed the Timoneion after the philosopher Timon of Athens who was famous for his cynicism and misanthropy 304 Herod who had personally advised Antony after the Battle of Actium that he should betray Cleopatra traveled to Rhodes to meet Octavian and resign his kingship out of loyalty to Antony 306 Octavian was impressed by his speech and sense of loyalty so he allowed him to maintain his position in Judea further isolating Antony and Cleopatra 306 Cleopatra perhaps started to view Antony as a liability by the late summer of 31 BC when she prepared to leave Egypt to her son Caesarion 307 Cleopatra planned to relinquish her throne to him take her fleet from the Mediterranean into the Red Sea and then set sail to a foreign port perhaps in India where she could spend time recuperating 307 305 However these plans were ultimately abandoned when Malichus I as advised by Octavian s governor of Syria Quintus Didius managed to burn Cleopatra s fleet in revenge for his losses in a war with Herod that Cleopatra had largely initiated 307 305 Cleopatra had no other option but to stay in Egypt and negotiate with Octavian 307 Although most likely later pro Octavian propaganda it was reported that at this time Cleopatra started testing the strengths of various poisons on prisoners and even her own servants 308 The Death of Cleopatra 1658 by Guido Cagnacci Cleopatra had Caesarion enter into the ranks of the ephebi which along with reliefs on a stele from Koptos dated 21 September 31 BC demonstrated that Cleopatra was now grooming her son to become the sole ruler of Egypt 309 In a show of solidarity Antony also had Marcus Antonius Antyllus his son with Fulvia enter the ephebi at the same time 307 Separate messages and envoys from Antony and Cleopatra were then sent to Octavian still stationed at Rhodes although Octavian seems to have replied only to Cleopatra 308 Cleopatra requested that her children should inherit Egypt and that Antony should be allowed to live in exile in Egypt offered Octavian money in the future and immediately sent him lavish gifts 308 305 Octavian sent his diplomat Thyrsos to Cleopatra after she threatened to burn herself and vast amounts of her treasure within a tomb already under construction 310 Thyrsos advised her to kill Antony so that her life would be spared but when Antony suspected foul intent he had this diplomat flogged and sent back to Octavian without a deal 311 After lengthy negotiations that ultimately produced no results Octavian set out to invade Egypt in the spring of 30 BC 312 stopping at Ptolemais in Phoenicia where his new ally Herod provided his army with fresh supplies 313 Octavian moved south and swiftly took Pelousion while Cornelius Gallus marching eastward from Cyrene defeated Antony s forces near Paraitonion 314 315 Octavian advanced quickly to Alexandria but Antony returned and won a small victory over Octavian s tired troops outside the city s hippodrome 314 315 However on 1 August 30 BC Antony s naval fleet surrendered to Octavian followed by Antony s cavalry 314 296 316 Cleopatra hid herself in her tomb with her close attendants and sent a message to Antony that she had committed suicide 314 317 318 In despair Antony responded to this by stabbing himself in the stomach and taking his own life at age 53 314 296 305 According to Plutarch he was still dying when brought to Cleopatra at her tomb telling her he had died honorably and that she could trust Octavian s companion Gaius Proculeius over anyone else in his entourage 314 319 320 It was Proculeius however who infiltrated her tomb using a ladder and detained the queen denying her the ability to burn herself with her treasures 321 322 Cleopatra was then allowed to embalm and bury Antony within her tomb before she was escorted to the palace 321 305 The Death of Cleopatra 1796 1797 by Jean Baptiste Regnault Octavian entered Alexandria occupied the palace and seized Cleopatra s three youngest children 321 323 When she met with Octavian Cleopatra told him bluntly I will not be led in a triumph Ancient Greek oὑ 8riambeysomai romanized ou thriambeusomai according to Livy a rare recording of her exact words 324 325 Octavian promised that he would keep her alive but offered no explanation about his future plans for her kingdom 326 When a spy informed her that Octavian planned to move her and her children to Rome in three days she prepared for suicide as she had no intentions of being paraded in a Roman triumph like her sister Arsinoe IV 326 296 305 It is unclear if Cleopatra s suicide on 10 August 30 BC at age 39 took place within the palace or her tomb 327 328 note 3 It is said she was accompanied by her servants Eiras and Charmion who also took their own lives 326 329 Octavian was said to have been angered by this outcome but had Cleopatra buried in royal fashion next to Antony in her tomb 326 330 331 Cleopatra s physician Olympos did not explain her cause of death although the popular belief is that she allowed an asp or Egyptian cobra to bite and poison her 332 333 305 Plutarch relates this tale but then suggests an implement knῆstis knestis lit spine cheese grater was used to introduce the toxin by scratching while Dio says that she injected the poison with a needle belonh belone and Strabo argued for an ointment of some kind 334 333 335 note 55 No venomous snake was found with her body but she did have tiny puncture wounds on her arm that could have been caused by a needle 332 335 331 Cleopatra decided in her last moments to send Caesarion away to Upper Egypt perhaps with plans to flee to Kushite Nubia Ethiopia or India 336 337 315 Caesarion now Ptolemy XV would reign for a mere 18 days until executed on the orders of Octavian on 29 August 30 BC after returning to Alexandria under the false pretense that Octavian would allow him to be king 338 339 340 note 2 Octavian was convinced by the advice of the philosopher Arius Didymus that there was room for only one Caesar in the world 341 note 56 With the fall of the Ptolemaic Kingdom the Roman province of Egypt was established 342 296 343 note 57 marking the end of the Hellenistic period 344 345 note 7 In January of 27 BC Octavian was renamed Augustus the revered and amassed constitutional powers that established him as the first Roman emperor inaugurating the Principate era of the Roman Empire 346 Cleopatra s kingdom and role as a monarch Cleopatra on a coin of 40 drachms from 51 to 30 BC minted at Alexandria on the obverse is a portrait of Cleopatra wearing a diadem and on the reverse an inscription reading BASILISSHS KLEOPATRAS with an eagle standing on a thunderbolt Main article Reign of Cleopatra Egypt under the monarchy of Cleopatra Further information Ptolemaic coinage and Ancient Greek coinage Following the tradition of Macedonian rulers Cleopatra ruled Egypt and other territories such as Cyprus as an absolute monarch serving as the sole lawgiver of her kingdom 347 She was the chief religious authority in her realm presiding over religious ceremonies dedicated to the deities of both the Egyptian and Greek polytheistic faiths 348 She oversaw the construction of various temples to Egyptian and Greek gods 349 a synagogue for the Jews in Egypt and even built the Caesareum of Alexandria dedicated to the cult worship of her patron and lover Julius Caesar 350 351 Cleopatra was directly involved in the administrative affairs of her domain 352 tackling crises such as famine by ordering royal granaries to distribute food to the starving populace during a drought at the beginning of her reign 353 Although the command economy that she managed was more of an ideal than a reality 354 the government attempted to impose price controls tariffs and state monopolies for certain goods fixed exchange rates for foreign currencies and rigid laws forcing peasant farmers to stay in their villages during planting and harvesting seasons 355 356 357 Apparent financial troubles led Cleopatra to debase her coinage which included silver and bronze currencies but no gold coins like those of some of her distant Ptolemaic predecessors 358 LegacyChildren and successors Left A Roman head of either Cleopatra or her daughter Cleopatra Selene II Queen of Mauretania from the late 1st century BC located in the Archaeological Museum of Cherchell Algeria 232 359 360 note 47 Right A likely depiction of Cleopatra Selene II wearing an elephant skin cap raised relief image on a gilded silver dish from the Boscoreale Treasure dated to the early 1st century AD 361 362 note 58 After her suicide Cleopatra s three surviving children Cleopatra Selene II Alexander Helios and Ptolemy Philadelphos were sent to Rome with Octavian s sister Octavia the Younger a former wife of their father as their guardian 363 364 Cleopatra Selene II and Alexander Helios were present in the Roman triumph of Octavian in 29 BC 363 238 The fates of Alexander Helios and Ptolemy Philadelphus are unknown after this point 363 238 Octavia arranged the betrothal of Cleopatra Selene II to Juba II son of Juba I whose North African kingdom of Numidia had been turned into a Roman province in 46 BC by Julius Caesar due to Juba I s support of Pompey 365 364 323 The emperor Augustus installed Juba II and Cleopatra Selene II after their wedding in 25 BC as the new rulers of Mauretania where they transformed the old Carthaginian city of Iol into their new capital renamed Caesarea Mauretaniae modern Cherchell Algeria 365 238 Cleopatra Selene II imported many important scholars artists and advisers from her mother s royal court in Alexandria to serve her in Caesarea now permeated in Hellenistic Greek culture 366 She also named her son Ptolemy of Mauretania in honor of their Ptolemaic dynastic heritage 367 368 Cleopatra Selene II died around 5 BC and when Juba II died in 23 24 AD he was succeeded by his son Ptolemy 367 369 However Ptolemy was eventually executed by the Roman emperor Caligula in 40 AD perhaps under the pretense that Ptolemy had unlawfully minted his own royal coinage and utilized regalia reserved for the Roman emperor 370 371 Ptolemy of Mauretania was the last known monarch of the Ptolemaic dynasty although Queen Zenobia of the short lived Palmyrene Empire during the Crisis of the Third Century would claim descent from Cleopatra 372 373 A cult dedicated to Cleopatra still existed as late as 373 AD when Petesenufe an Egyptian scribe of the book of Isis explained that he overlaid the figure of Cleopatra with gold 374 Roman literature and historiography Further information Roman historiography Greek historiography Latin literature and Latin poetry Cleopatra Testing Poisons on Condemned Prisoners 1887 by Alexandre Cabanel 375 Although almost 50 ancient works of Roman historiography mention Cleopatra these often include only terse accounts of the Battle of Actium her suicide and Augustan propaganda about her personal deficiencies 376 Despite not being a biography of Cleopatra the Life of Antonius written by Plutarch in the 1st century AD provides the most thorough surviving account of Cleopatra s life 377 378 379 Plutarch lived a century after Cleopatra but relied on primary sources such as Philotas of Amphissa who had access to the Ptolemaic royal palace Cleopatra s personal physician named Olympos and Quintus Dellius a close confidant of Mark Antony and Cleopatra 380 Plutarch s work included both the Augustan view of Cleopatra which became canonical for his period as well as sources outside of this tradition such as eyewitness reports 377 379 The Jewish Roman historian Josephus writing in the 1st century AD provides valuable information on the life of Cleopatra via her diplomatic relationship with Herod the Great 381 382 However this work relies largely on Herod s memoirs and the biased account of Nicolaus of Damascus the tutor of Cleopatra s children in Alexandria before he moved to Judea to serve as an adviser and chronicler at Herod s court 381 382 The Roman History published by the official and historian Cassius Dio in the early 3rd century AD while failing to fully comprehend the complexities of the late Hellenistic world nevertheless provides a continuous history of the era of Cleopatra s reign 381 A restructured marble Roman statue of Cleopatra wearing a diadem and melon hairstyle similar to coinage portraits found along the Via Cassia near the Tomba di Nerone it Rome and now located in the Museo Pio Clementino 1 383 384 Cleopatra is barely mentioned in De Bello Alexandrino the memoirs of an unknown staff officer who served under Caesar 385 386 387 note 59 The writings of Cicero who knew her personally provide an unflattering portrait of Cleopatra 385 The Augustan period authors Virgil Horace Propertius and Ovid perpetuated the negative views of Cleopatra approved by the ruling Roman regime 385 388 although Virgil established the idea of Cleopatra as a figure of romance and epic melodrama 389 note 60 Horace also viewed Cleopatra s suicide as a positive choice 390 388 an idea that found acceptance by the Late Middle Ages with Geoffrey Chaucer 391 392 The historians Strabo Velleius Valerius Maximus Pliny the Elder and Appian while not offering accounts as full as Plutarch Josephus or Dio provided some details of her life that had not survived in other historical records 385 note 61 Inscriptions on contemporary Ptolemaic coinage and some Egyptian papyrus documents demonstrate Cleopatra s point of view but this material is very limited in comparison to Roman literary works 385 393 note 62 The fragmentary Libyka commissioned by Cleopatra s son in law Juba II provides a glimpse at a possible body of historiographic material that supported Cleopatra s perspective 385 Cleopatra s gender has perhaps led to her depiction as a minor if not insignificant figure in ancient medieval and even modern historiography about ancient Egypt and the Greco Roman world 394 For instance the historian Ronald Syme asserted that she was of little importance to Caesar and that the propaganda of Octavian magnified her importance to an excessive degree 394 Although the common view of Cleopatra was one of a prolific seductress she had only two known sexual partners Caesar and Antony the two most prominent Romans of the time period who were most likely to ensure the survival of her dynasty 395 396 Plutarch described Cleopatra as having had a stronger personality and charming wit than physical beauty 397 16 398 note 63 Cultural depictions Further information List of cultural depictions of Cleopatra Depictions in ancient art Further information Hellenistic art Art of ancient Egypt and Death of Cleopatra Depictions in art and literature Statues Further information Roman portraiture Roman sculpture Esquiline Venus and Sleeping Ariadne Left An Egyptian statue of either Arsinoe II or Cleopatra as an Egyptian goddess in black basalt from the second half of the 1st century BC 399 located in the Hermitage Museum Saint PetersburgRight The Esquiline Venus a Roman or Hellenistic Egyptian statue of Venus Aphrodite that may be a depiction of Cleopatra 400 located in the Capitoline Museums Rome Cleopatra was depicted in various ancient works of art in the Egyptian as well as Hellenistic Greek and Roman styles 2 Surviving works include statues busts reliefs and minted coins 2 375 as well as ancient carved cameos 401 such as one depicting Cleopatra and Antony in Hellenistic style now in the Altes Museum Berlin 1 Contemporary images of Cleopatra were produced both in and outside of Ptolemaic Egypt For instance a large gilded bronze statue of Cleopatra once existed inside the Temple of Venus Genetrix in Rome the first time that a living person had their statue placed next to that of a deity in a Roman temple 3 184 402 It was erected there by Caesar and remained in the temple at least until the 3rd century AD its preservation perhaps owing to Caesar s patronage although Augustus did not remove or destroy artworks in Alexandria depicting Cleopatra 403 404 In regards to surviving Roman statuary a life sized Roman style statue of Cleopatra was found near the Tomba di Nerone it Rome along the Via Cassia and is now housed in the Museo Pio Clementino part of the Vatican Museums 1 383 384 Plutarch in his Life of Antonius claimed that the public statues of Antony were torn down by Augustus but those of Cleopatra were preserved following her death thanks to her friend Archibius paying the emperor 2 000 talents to dissuade him from destroying hers 405 374 330 Since the 1950s scholars have debated whether or not the Esquiline Venus discovered in 1874 on the Esquiline Hill in Rome and housed in the Palazzo dei Conservatori of the Capitoline Museums is a depiction of Cleopatra based on the statue s hairstyle and facial features apparent royal diadem worn over the head and the uraeus Egyptian cobra wrapped around the base 400 406 407 Detractors of this theory argue that the face in this statue is thinner than the face on the Berlin portrait and assert that it was unlikely she would be depicted as the naked goddess Venus or the Greek Aphrodite 400 406 407 However she was depicted in an Egyptian statue as the goddess Isis 408 while some of her coinage depicts her as Venus Aphrodite 409 410 She also dressed as Aphrodite when meeting Antony at Tarsos 205 The Esquiline Venus is generally thought to be a mid 1st century AD Roman copy of a 1st century BC Greek original from the school of Pasiteles 406 Coinage portraits Further information Ptolemaic coinage Roman currency and Ancient Greek coinage Cleopatra and Mark Antony on the obverse and reverse respectively of a silver tetradrachm struck at the Antioch mint in 36 BC with Greek legends BACILICCA KLEOPATRA 8EA NEWTERA ANTWNIOC AYTOKPATWP TPITON TPIWN ANDPWN Surviving coinage of Cleopatra s reign include specimens from every regnal year from 51 to 30 BC 411 Cleopatra the only Ptolemaic queen to issue coins on her own behalf almost certainly inspired her partner Caesar to become the first living Roman to present his portrait on his own coins 409 note 64 Cleopatra was also the first foreign queen to have her image appear on Roman currency 412 Coins dated to the period of her marriage to Antony which also bear his image portray the queen as having a very similar aquiline nose and prominent chin as that of her husband 3 413 These similar facial features followed an artistic convention that represented the mutually observed harmony of a royal couple 3 2 Her strong almost masculine facial features in these particular coins are strikingly different from the smoother softer and perhaps idealized sculpted images of her in either the Egyptian or Hellenistic styles 2 414 415 Her masculine facial features on minted currency are similar to that of her father Ptolemy XII Auletes 416 114 and perhaps also to those of her Ptolemaic ancestor Arsinoe II 316 260 BC 2 417 and even depictions of earlier queens such as Hatshepsut and Nefertiti 415 It is likely due to political expediency that Antony s visage was made to conform not only to hers but also to those of her Macedonian Greek ancestors who founded the Ptolemaic dynasty to familiarize himself to her subjects as a legitimate member of the royal house 2 The inscriptions on the coins are written in Greek but also in the nominative case of Roman coins rather than the genitive case of Greek coins in addition to having the letters placed in a circular fashion along the edges of the coin instead of across it horizontally or vertically as was customary for Greek ones 2 These facets of their coinage represent the synthesis of Roman and Hellenistic culture and perhaps also a statement to their subjects however ambiguous to modern scholars about the superiority of either Antony or Cleopatra over the other 2 Diana Kleiner argues that Cleopatra in one of her coins minted with the dual image of her husband Antony made herself more masculine looking than other portraits and more like an acceptable Roman client queen than a Hellenistic ruler 414 Cleopatra had actually achieved this masculine look in coinage predating her affair with Antony such as the coins struck at the Ashkelon mint during her brief period of exile to Syria and the Levant which Joann Fletcher explains as her attempt to appear like her father and as a legitimate successor to a male Ptolemaic ruler 114 418 Various coins such as a silver tetradrachm minted sometime after Cleopatra s marriage with Antony in 37 BC depict her wearing a royal diadem and a melon hairstyle 3 418 The combination of this hairstyle with a diadem is also featured in two surviving sculpted marble heads 419 375 420 note 65 This hairstyle with hair braided back into a bun is the same as that worn by her Ptolemaic ancestors Arsinoe II and Berenice II in their own coinage 3 421 After her visit to Rome in 46 44 BC it became fashionable for Roman women to adopt it as one of their hairstyles but it was abandoned for a more modest austere look during the conservative rule of Augustus 3 419 420 Greco Roman busts and heads An ancient Roman portrait head c 50 30 BC now located in the British Museum London that depicts a woman from Ptolemaic Egypt either Queen Cleopatra or a member of her entourage during her 46 44 BC visit to Rome with her lover Julius Caesar 419 Of the surviving Greco Roman style busts and heads of Cleopatra note 66 the sculpture known as the Berlin Cleopatra located in the Antikensammlung Berlin collection at the Altes Museum possesses her full nose whereas the head known as the Vatican Cleopatra located in the Vatican Museums is damaged with a missing nose 422 423 424 note 67 Both the Berlin Cleopatra and Vatican Cleopatra have royal diadems similar facial features and perhaps once resembled the face of her bronze statue housed in the Temple of Venus Genetrix 423 425 424 note 68 Both heads are dated to the mid 1st century BC and were found in Roman villas along the Via Appia in Italy the Vatican Cleopatra having been unearthed in the Villa of the Quintilii 3 422 424 note 69 Francisco Pina Polo writes that Cleopatra s coinage present her image with certainty and asserts that the sculpted portrait of the Berlin head is confirmed as having a similar profile with her hair pulled back into a bun a diadem and a hooked nose 426 A third sculpted portrait of Cleopatra accepted by scholars as being authentic survives at the Archaeological Museum of Cherchell Algeria 404 359 360 This portrait features the royal diadem and similar facial features as the Berlin and Vatican heads but has a more unique hairstyle and may actually depict Cleopatra Selene II daughter of Cleopatra 360 427 232 note 47 A possible Parian marble sculpture of Cleopatra wearing a vulture headdress in Egyptian style is located at the Capitoline Museums 428 Discovered near a sanctuary of Isis in Rome and dated to the 1st century BC it is either Roman or Hellenistic Egyptian in origin 429 Other possible sculpted depictions of Cleopatra include one in the British Museum London made of limestone which perhaps only depicts a woman in her entourage during her trip to Rome 1 419 The woman in this portrait has facial features similar to others including the pronounced aquiline nose but lacks a royal diadem and sports a different hairstyle 1 419 However the British Museum head once belonging to a full statue could potentially represent Cleopatra at a different stage in her life and may also betray an effort by Cleopatra to discard the use of royal insignia i e the diadem to make herself more appealing to the citizens of Republican Rome 419 Duane W Roller speculates that the British Museum head along with those in the Egyptian Museum Cairo the Capitoline Museums and in the private collection of Maurice Nahmen while having similar facial features and hairstyles as the Berlin portrait but lacking a royal diadem most likely represent members of the royal court or even Roman women imitating Cleopatra s popular hairstyle 430 Cleopatra mid 1st century BC with a melon hairstyle and Hellenistic royal diadem worn over her head now in the Vatican Museums 1 3 422 Profile view of the Vatican Cleopatra Cleopatra mid 1st century BC showing Cleopatra with a melon hairstyle and Hellenistic royal diadem worn over the head now in the Altes Museum 1 3 422 Profile view of the Berlin CleopatraPaintings A Roman Second Style painting in the House of Marcus Fabius Rufus at Pompeii Italy depicting Cleopatra as Venus Genetrix and her son Caesarion as a cupid mid 1st century BC 406 431 In the House of Marcus Fabius Rufus at Pompeii Italy a mid 1st century BC Second Style wall painting of the goddess Venus holding a cupid near massive temple doors is most likely a depiction of Cleopatra as Venus Genetrix with her son Caesarion 406 431 The commission of the painting most likely coincides with the erection of the Temple of Venus Genetrix in the Forum of Caesar in September 46 BC where Caesar had a gilded statue erected depicting Cleopatra 406 431 This statue likely formed the basis of her depictions in both sculpted art as well as this painting at Pompeii 406 432 The woman in the painting wears a royal diadem over her head and is strikingly similar in appearance to the Vatican Cleopatra which bears possible marks on the marble of its left cheek where a cupid s arm may have been torn off 406 433 424 note 70 The room with the painting was walled off by its owner perhaps in reaction to the execution of Caesarion in 30 BC by order of Octavian when public depictions of Cleopatra s son would have been unfavorable with the new Roman regime 406 434 Behind her golden diadem crowned with a red jewel is a translucent veil with crinkles that suggest the melon hairstyle favored by the queen 433 note 71 Her ivory white skin round face long aquiline nose and large round eyes were features common in both Roman and Ptolemaic depictions of deities 433 Roller affirms that there seems little doubt that this is a depiction of Cleopatra and Caesarion before the doors of the Temple of Venus in the Forum Julium and as such it becomes the only extant contemporary painting of the queen 406 A steel engraving published by John Sartain in 1885 left depicting the now lost painted death portrait of Cleopatra an encaustic painting discovered in 1818 in the ancient Roman ruins of the Egyptian temple of Serapis at Hadrian s Villa in Tivoli Lazio 435 she is seen here wearing the knotted garment of Isis corresponding with Plutarch s description of her wearing the robes of Isis 436 as well as the radiant crown of the Ptolemaic rulers such as Ptolemy V pictured to the right in a golden octodrachm minted in 204 203 BC 437 Another painting from Pompeii dated to the early 1st century AD and located in the House of Giuseppe II contains a possible depiction of Cleopatra with her son Caesarion both wearing royal diadems while she reclines and consumes poison in an act of suicide 300 301 note 72 The painting was originally thought to depict the Carthaginian noblewoman Sophonisba who toward the end of the Second Punic War 218 201 BC drank poison and committed suicide at the behest of her lover Masinissa King of Numidia 300 Arguments in favor of it depicting Cleopatra include the strong connection of her house with that of the Numidian royal family Masinissa and Ptolemy VIII Physcon having been associates and Cleopatra s own daughter marrying the Numidian prince Juba II 300 Sophonisba was also a more obscure figure when the painting was made while Cleopatra s suicide was far more famous 300 An asp is absent from the painting but many Romans held the view that she received poison in another manner than a venomous snakebite 438 A set of double doors on the rear wall of the painting positioned very high above the people in it suggests the described layout of Cleopatra s tomb in Alexandria 300 A male servant holds the mouth of an artificial Egyptian crocodile possibly an elaborate tray handle while another man standing by is dressed as a Roman 300 In 1818 a now lost encaustic painting was discovered in the Temple of Serapis at Hadrian s Villa near Tivoli Lazio Italy that depicted Cleopatra committing suicide with an asp biting her bare chest 435 A chemical analysis performed in 1822 confirmed that the medium for the painting was composed of one third wax and two thirds resin 435 The thickness of the painting over Cleopatra s bare flesh and her drapery were reportedly similar to the paintings of the Fayum mummy portraits 439 A steel engraving published by John Sartain in 1885 depicting the painting as described in the archaeological report shows Cleopatra wearing authentic clothing and jewelry of Egypt in the late Hellenistic period 440 as well as the radiant crown of the Ptolemaic rulers as seen in their portraits on various coins minted during their respective reigns 437 After Cleopatra s suicide Octavian commissioned a painting to be made depicting her being bitten by a snake parading this image in her stead during his triumphal procession in Rome 439 336 312 The portrait painting of Cleopatra s death was perhaps among the great number of artworks and treasures taken from Rome by Emperor Hadrian to decorate his private villa where it was found in an Egyptian temple 435 note 73 Ancient Roman fresco in the Pompeian Third Style possibly depicting Cleopatra from the House of the Orchard at Pompeii Italy mid 1st century AD 48 A Roman panel painting from Herculaneum Italy dated to the 1st century AD possibly depicts Cleopatra 48 49 In it she wears a royal diadem red or reddish brown hair pulled back into a bun note 74 pearl studded hairpins 441 and earrings with ball shaped pendants the white skin of her face and neck set against a stark black background 48 Her hair and facial features are similar to those in the sculpted Berlin and Vatican portraits as well as her coinage 48 A highly similar painted bust of a woman with a blue headband in the House of the Orchard at Pompeii features Egyptian style imagery such as a Greek style sphinx and may have been created by the same artist 48 Portland Vase Further information Portland Vase A possible depiction of Mark Antony on the Portland Vase being lured by Cleopatra straddling a serpent while Anton Antony s alleged ancestor looks on and Eros flies above 442 443 The Portland Vase a Roman cameo glass vase dated to the Augustan period and now in the British Museum includes a possible depiction of Cleopatra with Antony 442 444 In this interpretation Cleopatra can be seen grasping Antony and drawing him toward her while a serpent i e the asp rises between her legs Eros floats above and Anton the alleged ancestor of the Antonian family looks on in despair as his descendant Antony is led to his doom 442 443 The other side of the vase perhaps contains a scene of Octavia abandoned by her husband Antony but watched over by her brother the emperor Augustus 442 443 The vase would thus have been created no earlier than 35 BC when Antony sent his wife Octavia back to Italy and stayed with Cleopatra in Alexandria 442 Native Egyptian art Further information Portraiture in ancient Egypt and Reign of Cleopatra Egypt under the monarchy of Cleopatra Cleopatra and her son Caesarion at the Temple of Dendera The Bust of Cleopatra in the Royal Ontario Museum represents a bust of Cleopatra in the Egyptian style 445 Dated to the mid 1st century BC it is perhaps the earliest depiction of Cleopatra as both a goddess and ruling pharaoh of Egypt 445 The sculpture also has pronounced eyes that share similarities with Roman copies of Ptolemaic sculpted works of art 446 The Dendera Temple complex near Dendera Egypt contains Egyptian style carved relief images along the exterior walls of the Temple of Hathor depicting Cleopatra and her young son Caesarion as a grown adult and ruling pharaoh making offerings to the gods 447 448 Augustus had his name inscribed there following the death of Cleopatra 447 449 A large Ptolemaic black basalt statue measuring 104 centimetres 41 in in height now in the Hermitage Museum Saint Petersburg is thought to represent Arsinoe II wife of Ptolemy II but recent analysis has indicated that it could depict her descendant Cleopatra due to the three uraei adorning her headdress an increase from the two used by Arsinoe II to symbolize her rule over Lower and Upper Egypt 405 401 399 The woman in the basalt statue also holds a divided double cornucopia dikeras which can be seen on coins of both Arsinoe II and Cleopatra 405 399 In his Kleopatra und die Caesaren 2006 Bernard Andreae de contends that this basalt statue like other idealized Egyptian portraits of the queen does not contain realistic facial features and hence adds little to the knowledge of her appearance 450 note 75 Adrian Goldsworthy writes that despite these representations in the traditional Egyptian style Cleopatra would have dressed as a native only perhaps for certain rites and instead would usually dress as a Greek monarch which would include the Greek headband seen in her Greco Roman busts 451 A granite Egyptian bust of Cleopatra from the Royal Ontario Museum mid 1st century BC A marble statue of Cleopatra with her cartouche inscribed on the upper right arm and wearing a diadem with a triple uraeus from the Metropolitan Museum of Art 452 Possible sculpted head of Cleopatra VII wearing an Egyptian style vulture headdress discovered in Rome either Roman or Hellenistic Egyptian art Parian marble 1st century BC from the Capitoline Museums 428 429 Medieval and Early Modern reception Further information Medieval art Medieval literature Renaissance art Renaissance literature and Early Modern literature The Banquet of Cleopatra 1744 by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo now in the National Gallery of Victoria Melbourne 453 In modern times Cleopatra has become an icon of popular culture 375 a reputation shaped by theatrical representations dating back to the Renaissance as well as paintings and films 454 This material largely surpasses the scope and size of existent historiographic literature about her from classical antiquity and has made a greater impact on the general public s view of Cleopatra than the latter 455 The 14th century English poet Geoffrey Chaucer in The Legend of Good Women contextualized Cleopatra for the Christian world of the Middle Ages 456 His depiction of Cleopatra and Antony her shining knight engaged in courtly love has been interpreted in modern times as being either playful or misogynistic satire 456 However Chaucer highlighted Cleopatra s relationships with only two men as hardly the life of a seductress and wrote his works partly in reaction to the negative depiction of Cleopatra in De Mulieribus Claris and De Casibus Virorum Illustrium Latin works by the 14th century Italian poet Giovanni Boccaccio 457 392 The Renaissance humanist Bernardino Cacciante it in his 1504 Libretto apologetico delle donne was the first Italian to defend the reputation of Cleopatra and criticize the perceived moralizing and misogyny in Boccaccio s works 458 Works of Islamic historiography written in Arabic covered the reign of Cleopatra such as the 10th century Meadows of Gold by Al Masudi 459 although his work erroneously claimed that Octavian died soon after Cleopatra s suicide 460 Cleopatra appeared in miniatures for illuminated manuscripts such as a depiction of her and Antony lying in a Gothic style tomb by the Boucicaut Master in 1409 391 In the visual arts the sculpted depiction of Cleopatra as a free standing nude figure committing suicide began with the 16th century sculptors Bartolommeo Bandinelli and Alessandro Vittoria 461 Early prints depicting Cleopatra include designs by the Renaissance artists Raphael and Michelangelo as well as 15th century woodcuts in illustrated editions of Boccaccio s works 462 In the performing arts the death of Elizabeth I of England in 1603 and the German publication in 1606 of alleged letters of Cleopatra inspired Samuel Daniel to alter and republish his 1594 play Cleopatra in 1607 463 He was followed by William Shakespeare whose Antony and Cleopatra largely based on Plutarch was first performed in 1608 and provided a somewhat salacious view of Cleopatra in stark contrast to England s own Virgin Queen 464 Cleopatra was also featured in operas such as George Frideric Handel s 1724 Giulio Cesare in Egitto which portrayed the love affair of Caesar and Cleopatra 465 Domenico Cimarosa wrote Cleopatra on a similar subject in 1789 466 Modern depictions and brand imaging Further information List of cultural depictions of Cleopatra and Egyptomania The Triumph of Cleopatra 1821 by William Etty now in the Lady Lever Art Gallery Port Sunlight England In Victorian Britain Cleopatra was highly associated with many aspects of ancient Egyptian culture and her image was used to market various household products including oil lamps lithographs postcards and cigarettes 467 Fictional novels such as H Rider Haggard s Cleopatra 1889 and Theophile Gautier s One of Cleopatra s Nights 1838 depicted the queen as a sensual and mystic Easterner while the Egyptologist Georg Ebers s Cleopatra 1894 was more grounded in historical accuracy 467 468 The French dramatist Victorien Sardou and Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw produced plays about Cleopatra while burlesque shows such as F C Burnand s Antony and Cleopatra offered satirical depictions of the queen connecting her and the environment she lived in with the modern age 469 Shakespeare s Antony and Cleopatra was considered canonical by the Victorian era 470 Its popularity led to the perception that the 1885 painting by Lawrence Alma Tadema depicted the meeting of Antony and Cleopatra on her pleasure barge in Tarsus although Alma Tadema revealed in a private letter that it depicts a subsequent meeting of theirs in Alexandria 471 Also based on Shakespeare s play was Samuel Barber s opera Antony and Cleopatra 1966 commissioned for the opening of the Metropolitan Opera House 472 In his unfinished 1825 short story The Egyptian Nights Alexander Pushkin popularized the claims of the 4th century Roman historian Aurelius Victor previously largely ignored that Cleopatra had prostituted herself to men who paid for sex with their lives 473 474 Cleopatra also became appreciated outside the Western world and Middle East as the Qing dynasty Chinese scholar Yan Fu wrote an extensive biography of her 475 Georges Melies s Robbing Cleopatra s Tomb French Cleopatre an 1899 French silent horror film was the first film to depict the character of Cleopatra 476 Hollywood films of the 20th century were influenced by earlier Victorian media which helped to shape the character of Cleopatra played by Theda Bara in Cleopatra 1917 Claudette Colbert in Cleopatra 1934 and Elizabeth Taylor in Cleopatra 1963 477 In addition to her portrayal as a vampire queen Bara s Cleopatra also incorporated tropes familiar from 19th century Orientalist painting such as despotic behavior mixed with dangerous and overt female sexuality 478 Colbert s character of Cleopatra served as a glamour model for selling Egyptian themed products in department stores in the 1930s targeting female moviegoers 479 In preparation for the film starring Taylor as Cleopatra women s magazines of the early 1960s advertised how to use makeup clothes jewelry and hairstyles to achieve the Egyptian look similar to the queens Cleopatra and Nefertiti 480 By the end of the 20th century there were forty three films two hundred plays and novels forty five operas and five ballets associated with Cleopatra 481 Written works Further information Ancient Greek literature and Ancient Egyptian literature Whereas myths about Cleopatra persist in popular media important aspects of her career go largely unnoticed such as her command of naval forces and administrative acts Publications on ancient Greek medicine attributed to her are 376 however likely to be the work of a physician by the same name writing in the late first century AD 482 Ingrid D Rowland who highlights that the Berenice called Cleopatra cited by the 3rd or 4th century female Roman physician Metrodora was likely conflated by medieval scholars as referring to Cleopatra 483 Only fragments exist of these medical and cosmetic writings such as those preserved by Galen including remedies for hair disease baldness and dandruff along with a list of weights and measures for pharmacological purposes 484 19 485 Aetius of Amida attributed a recipe for perfumed soap to Cleopatra while Paul of Aegina preserved alleged instructions of hers for dyeing and curling hair 484 AncestrySee also Cleopatra race controversy Left A Hellenistic bust of Ptolemy I Soter now in the Louvre ParisRight A bust of Seleucus I Nicator a Roman copy of a Greek original from the Villa of the Papyri Herculaneum and now in the National Archaeological Museum Naples A likely sculpture of Cleopatra V Tryphaena also known as Cleopatra VI 1st century BC from Lower Egypt now in the Musee Saint Raymond 486 Cleopatra belonged to the Macedonian Greek dynasty of the Ptolemies 8 487 488 note 76 their European origins tracing back to northern Greece 489 Through her father Ptolemy XII Auletes she was a descendant of two prominent companions of Alexander the Great of Macedon the general Ptolemy I Soter founder of the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt and Seleucus I Nicator the Macedonian Greek founder of the Seleucid Empire of West Asia 8 490 491 note 77 While Cleopatra s paternal line can be traced the identity of her mother is unknown 492 493 494 note 78 She was presumably the daughter of Cleopatra VI Tryphaena also known as Cleopatra V Tryphaena note 4 the sister wife of Ptolemy XII who had previously given birth to their daughter Berenice IV 13 493 495 note 79 Cleopatra I Syra was the only member of the Ptolemaic dynasty known for certain to have introduced some non Greek ancestry 496 497 Her mother Laodice III was a daughter born to King Mithridates II of Pontus a Persian of the Mithridatic dynasty and his wife Laodice who had a mixed Greek Persian heritage 498 Cleopatra I Syra s father Antiochus III the Great was a descendant of Queen Apama the Sogdian Iranian wife of Seleucus I Nicator 496 497 499 note 80 It is generally believed that the Ptolemies did not intermarry with native Egyptians 40 500 note 81 Michael Grant asserts that there is only one known Egyptian mistress of a Ptolemy and no known Egyptian wife of a Ptolemy further arguing that Cleopatra probably did not have any Egyptian ancestry and would have described herself as Greek 496 note 82 Stacy Schiff writes that Cleopatra was a Macedonian Greek with some Persian ancestry arguing that it was rare for the Ptolemies to have an Egyptian mistress 501 note 83 Duane W Roller speculates that Cleopatra could have been the daughter of a theoretical half Macedonian Greek half Egyptian woman from Memphis in northern Egypt belonging to a family of priests dedicated to Ptah a hypothesis not generally accepted in scholarship note 84 but contends that whatever Cleopatra s ancestry she valued her Greek Ptolemaic heritage the most 502 note 85 Ernle Bradford writes that Cleopatra challenged Rome not as an Egyptian woman but as a civilized Greek 503 Claims that Cleopatra was an illegitimate child never appeared in Roman propaganda against her 35 504 note 86 Strabo was the only ancient historian who claimed that Ptolemy XII s children born after Berenice IV including Cleopatra were illegitimate 35 504 505 Cleopatra V or VI was expelled from the court of Ptolemy XII in late 69 BC a few months after the birth of Cleopatra while Ptolemy XII s three younger children were all born during the absence of his wife 41 The high degree of inbreeding among the Ptolemies is also illustrated by Cleopatra s immediate ancestry of which a reconstruction is shown below note 87 The family tree given below also lists Cleopatra V Ptolemy XII s wife as a daughter of Ptolemy X Alexander I and Berenice III which would make her a cousin of her husband Ptolemy XII but she could have been a daughter of Ptolemy IX Lathyros which would have made her a sister wife of Ptolemy XII instead 506 35 The confused accounts in ancient primary sources have also led scholars to number Ptolemy XII s wife as either Cleopatra V or Cleopatra VI the latter may have actually been a daughter of Ptolemy XII and some use her as an indication that Cleopatra V had died in 69 BC rather than reappearing as a co ruler with Berenice IV in 58 BC during Ptolemy XII s exile in Rome 57 507 Ptolemy V EpiphanesCleopatra I SyraPtolemy VI PhilometorCleopatra IIPtolemy VIII PhysconCleopatra IIICleopatra Selene of SyriaPtolemy IX LathyrosCleopatra IVPtolemy X Alexander IBerenice IIICleopatra V TryphaenaPtolemy XII AuletesCleopatra VIISee alsoList of female hereditary rulersNotes For further validation about the Berlin Cleopatra see Pina Polo 2013 pp 184 186 Roller 2010 pp 54 174 175 Jones 2006 p 33 and Holbl 2001 p 234 a b Roller 2010 p 149 and Skeat 1953 pp 99 100 explain the nominal short lived reign of Caesarion as lasting 18 days in 30 August BC However Duane W Roller relaying Theodore Cressy Skeat affirms that Caesarion s reign was essentially a fiction created by Egyptian chronographers to close the gap between Cleopatra s death and official Roman control of Egypt under the new pharaoh Octavian citing for instance the Stromata by Clement of Alexandria Roller 2010 pp 149 214 footnote 103 Plutarch translated by Jones 2006 p 187 wrote in vague terms that Octavian had Caesarion killed later after Cleopatra s death a b 12 August 30 BC in the later Julian calendar Skeat 1953 pp 98 100 a b c Grant 1972 pp 3 4 17 Fletcher 2008 pp 69 74 76 Jones 2006 p xiii Preston 2009 p 22 Schiff 2011 p 28 and Burstein 2004 p 11 label the wife of Ptolemy XII Auletes as Cleopatra V Tryphaena while Dodson amp Hilton 2004 pp 268 269 273 and Roller 2010 p 18 call her Cleopatra VI Tryphaena due to the confusion in primary sources conflating these two figures who may have been one and the same As explained by Whitehorne 1994 p 182 Cleopatra VI may have actually been a daughter of Ptolemy XII who appeared in 58 BC to rule jointly with her alleged sister Berenice IV while Ptolemy XII was exiled and living in Rome whereas Ptolemy XII s wife Cleopatra V perhaps died as early as the winter of 69 68 BC when she disappears from historical records Roller 2010 pp 18 19 assumes that Ptolemy XII s wife who he numbers as Cleopatra VI was merely absent from the court for a decade after being expelled for an unknown reason eventually ruling jointly with her daughter Berenice IV Fletcher 2008 p 76 explains that the Alexandrians deposed Ptolemy XII and installed his eldest daughter Berenike IV and as co ruler recalled Cleopatra V Tryphaena from 10 years exile from the court Although later historians assumed she must have been another of Auletes daughters and numbered her Cleopatra VI it seems she was simply the fifth one returning to replace her brother and former husband Auletes She was also a diplomat naval commander linguist and medical author see Roller 2010 p 1 and Bradford 2000 p 13 Southern 2009 p 43 writes about Ptolemy I Soter The Ptolemaic dynasty of which Cleopatra was the last representative was founded at the end of the fourth century BC The Ptolemies were not of Egyptian extraction but stemmed from Ptolemy Soter a Macedonian Greek in the entourage of Alexander the Great For additional sources that describe the Ptolemaic dynasty as Macedonian Greek please see Roller 2010 pp 15 16 Jones 2006 pp xiii 3 279 Kleiner 2005 pp 9 19 106 183 Jeffreys 1999 p 488 and Johnson 1999 p 69 Alternatively Grant 1972 p 3 describes them as a Macedonian Greek speaking dynasty Other sources such as Burstein 2004 p 64 and Pfrommer amp Towne Markus 2001 p 9 describe the Ptolemies as Greco Macedonian or rather Macedonians who possessed a Greek culture as in Pfrommer amp Towne Markus 2001 pp 9 11 20 a b Grant 1972 pp 5 6 notes that the Hellenistic period beginning with the reign of Alexander the Great came to an end with the death of Cleopatra in 30 BC Michael Grant stresses that the Hellenistic Greeks were viewed by contemporary Romans as having declined and diminished in greatness since the age of Classical Greece an attitude that has continued even into the works of modern historiography Regarding Hellenistic Egypt Grant argues Cleopatra VII looking back upon all that her ancestors had done during that time was not likely to make the same mistake But she and her contemporaries of the first century BC had another peculiar problem of their own Could the Hellenistic Age which we ourselves often regard as coming to an end in about her time still be said to exist at all could any Greek age now that the Romans were the dominant power This was a question never far from Cleopatra s mind But it is quite certain that she considered the Greek epoch to be by no means finished and intended to do everything in her power to ensure its perpetuation a b The refusal of Ptolemaic rulers to speak the native language Late Egyptian is why Ancient Greek i e Koine Greek was used along with Late Egyptian on official court documents such as the Rosetta Stone Radio 4 Programmes A History of the World in 100 Objects Empire Builders 300 BC 1 AD Rosetta Stone BBC Archived from the original on 23 May 2010 Retrieved 7 June 2010 As explained by Burstein 2004 pp 43 54 Ptolemaic Alexandria was considered a polis city state separate from the country of Egypt with citizenship reserved for Greeks and Ancient Macedonians but various other ethnic groups resided there especially the Jews as well as native Egyptians Syrians and Nubians For further validation see Grant 1972 p 3 For the multiple languages spoken by Cleopatra see Roller 2010 pp 46 48 and Burstein 2004 pp 11 12 For further validation about Ancient Greek being the official language of the Ptolemaic dynasty see Jones 2006 p 3 Tyldesley 2017 offers an alternative rendering of the title Cleopatra VII Thea Philopator as Cleopatra the Father Loving Goddess For a thorough explanation about the foundation of Alexandria by Alexander the Great and its largely Hellenistic Greek nature during the Ptolemaic period along with a survey of the various ethnic groups residing there see Burstein 2004 pp 43 61 For further validation about the founding of Alexandria by Alexander the Great see Jones 2006 p 6 For further validation of Ptolemaic rulers being crowned at Memphis see Jeffreys 1999 p 488 For further information see Grant 1972 pp 20 256 footnote 42 For the list of languages spoken by Cleopatra as mentioned by the ancient historian Plutarch see Jones 2006 pp 33 34 who also mentions that the rulers of Ptolemaic Egypt gradually abandoned the Ancient Macedonian language For further information and validation see Schiff 2011 p 36 Grant 1972 p 3 states that Cleopatra could have been born in either late 70 BC or early 69 BC For further information and validation see Schiff 2011 p 28 Kleiner 2005 p 22 Bennett 1997 p 60 63 and Meadows 2001 p 23 For alternate speculation see Burstein 2004 p 11 and Roller 2010 pp 15 18 166 Due to discrepancies in academic works in which some consider Cleopatra VI to be either a daughter of Ptolemy XII or his wife identical to that of Cleopatra V Jones 2006 p 28 states that Ptolemy XII had six children while Roller 2010 p 16 mentions only five Fletcher 2008 p 87 describes the painting from Herculaneum further Cleopatra s hair was maintained by her highly skilled hairdresser Eiras Although rather artificial looking wigs set in the traditional tripartite style of long straight hair would have been required for her appearances before her Egyptian subjects a more practical option for general day to day wear was the no nonsense melon hairdo in which her natural hair was drawn back in sections resembling the lines on a melon and then pinned up in a bun at the back of the head A trademark style of Arsinoe II and Berenice II the style had fallen from fashion for almost two centuries until revived by Cleopatra yet as both traditionalist and innovator she wore her version without her predecessor s fine head veil And whereas they had both been blonde like Alexander Cleopatra may well have been a redhead judging from the portrait of a flame haired woman wearing the royal diadem surrounded by Egyptian motifs which has been identified as Cleopatra For further information and validation see Grant 1972 pp 12 13 In 1972 Michael Grant calculated that 6 000 talents the price of Ptolemy XII s fee for receiving the title friend and ally of the Roman people from the triumvirs Pompey and Julius Caesar would be worth roughly 7 million or US 17 million roughly the entire annual tax revenue for Ptolemaic Egypt For political background information on the Roman annexation of Cyprus a move pushed for in the Roman Senate by Publius Clodius Pulcher see Grant 1972 pp 13 14 For further information see Grant 1972 pp 15 16 Fletcher 2008 pp 76 77 expresses little doubt about this deposed in late summer 58 BC and fearing for his life Auletes had fled both his palace and his kingdom although he was not completely alone For one Greek source reveals he had been accompanied by one of his daughters and since his eldest Berenice IV was monarch and the youngest Arisone little more than a toddler it is generally assumed that this must have been his middle daughter and favourite child eleven year old Cleopatra For further information see Grant 1972 p 16 For further information on Roman financier Rabirius as well as the Gabiniani left in Egypt by Gabinius see Grant 1972 pp 18 19 For further information see Grant 1972 p 18 For further information see Grant 1972 pp 19 20 27 29 For further information see Grant 1972 pp 28 30 For further information see Fletcher 2008 pp 88 92 and Jones 2006 pp 31 34 35 Fletcher 2008 pp 85 86 states that the partial solar eclipse of 7 March 51 BC marked the death of Ptolemy XII and accession of Cleopatra to the throne although she apparently suppressed the news of his death alerting the Roman Senate to this fact months later in a message they received on 30 June 51 BC However Grant 1972 p 30 claims that the Senate was informed of his death on 1 August 51 BC Michael Grant indicates that Ptolemy XII could have been alive as late as May while an ancient Egyptian source affirms he was still ruling with Cleopatra by 15 July 51 BC although by this point Cleopatra most likely hushed up her father s death so that she could consolidate her control of Egypt Pfrommer amp Towne Markus 2001 p 34 writes the following about the sibling marriage of Ptolemy II and Arsinoe II Ptolemy Keraunos who wanted to become king of Macedon killed Arsinoe s small children in front of her Now queen without a kingdom Arsinoe fled to Egypt where she was welcomed by her full brother Ptolemy II Not content however to spend the rest of her life as a guest at the Ptolemaic court she had Ptolemy II s wife exiled to Upper Egypt and married him herself around 275 B C Though such an incestuous marriage was considered scandalous by the Greeks it was allowed by Egyptian custom For that reason the marriage split public opinion into two factions The loyal side celebrated the couple as a return of the divine marriage of Zeus and Hera whereas the other side did not refrain from profuse and obscene criticism One of the most sarcastic commentators a poet with a very sharp pen had to flee Alexandria The unfortunate poet was caught off the shore of Crete by the Ptolemaic navy put in an iron basket and drowned This and similar actions seemingly slowed down vicious criticism For further information see Fletcher 2008 pp 92 93 For further information see Fletcher 2008 pp 96 97 and Jones 2006 p 39 For further information see Jones 2006 pp 39 41 a b For further information see Fletcher 2008 p 98 and Jones 2006 pp 39 43 53 55 For further information see Fletcher 2008 pp 98 100 and Jones 2006 pp 53 55 For further information see Burstein 2004 p 18 and Fletcher 2008 pp 101 103 a b For further information see Fletcher 2008 p 113 For further information see Fletcher 2008 p 118 For further information see Burstein 2004 p 76 For further information see Burstein 2004 pp xxi 19 and Fletcher 2008 pp 118 120 For further information see Fletcher 2008 pp 119 120 As part of the siege of Alexandria Burstein 2004 p 19 states that Caesar s reinforcements came in January but Roller 2010 p 63 says that his reinforcements came in March For further information and validation see Anderson 2003 p 39 and Fletcher 2008 p 120 For further information and validation see Fletcher 2008 p 121 and Jones 2006 p xiv Roller 2010 pp 64 65 states that at this point 47 BC Ptolemy XIV was 12 years old while Burstein 2004 p 19 claims that he was still only 10 years of age For further information and validation see Anderson 2003 p 39 and Fletcher 2008 pp 154 161 162 Roller 2010 p 70 writes the following about Caesar and his parentage of Caesarion The matter of parentage became so tangled in the propaganda war between Antonius and Octavian in the late 30s B C it was essential for one side to prove and the other to reject Caesar s role that it is impossible today to determine Caesar s actual response The extant information is almost contradictory it was said that Caesar denied parentage in his will but acknowledged it privately and allowed the use of the name Caesarion Caesar s associate C Oppius even wrote a pamphlet proving that Caesarion was not Caesar s child and C Helvius Cinna the poet who was killed by rioters after Antonius funeral oration was prepared in 44 B C to introduce legislation to allow Caesar to marry as many wives as he wished for the purpose of having children Although much of this talk was generated after Caesar s death it seems that he wished to be as quiet as possible about the child but had to contend with Cleopatra s repeated assertions For further information and validation see Jones 2006 pp xiv 78 For further information see Fletcher 2008 pp 214 215 As explained by Burstein 2004 p 23 Cleopatra having read Antony s personality boldly presented herself to him as the Egyptian goddess Isis in the appearance of the Greek goddess Aphrodite meeting her divine husband Osiris in the form of the Greek god Dionysus knowing that the priests of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus had associated Antony with Dionysus shortly before this encounter According to Brown 2011 a cult surrounding Isis had been spreading across the region for hundreds of years and Cleopatra like many of her predecessors sought to identify herself with Isis and be venerated In addition some surviving coins of Cleopatra also depict her as Venus Aphrodite as explained by Fletcher 2008 p 205 For further information about Publius Ventidius Bassus and his victory over Parthian forces at the Battle of Mount Gindarus see Kennedy 1996 pp 80 81 a b c Ferroukhi 2001a p 219 provides a detailed discussion about this bust and its ambiguities noting that it could represent Cleopatra but that it is more likely her daughter Cleopatra Selene II Kleiner 2005 pp 155 156 argues in favor of its depicting Cleopatra rather than her daughter while Varner 2004 p 20 mentions only Cleopatra as a possible likeness Roller 2003 p 139 observes that it could be either Cleopatra or Cleopatra Selene II while arguing the same ambiguity applies to the other sculpted head from Cherchel featuring a veil In regards to the latter head Ferroukhi 2001b p 242 indicates it as a possible portrait of Cleopatra not Cleoptra Selene II from the early 1st century AD while also arguing that its masculine features earrings and apparent toga the veil being a component of it could likely mean it was intended to depict a Numidian nobleman Fletcher 2008 image plates between pp 246 247 disagrees about the veiled head arguing that it was commissioned by Cleopatra Selene II at Iol Caesarea Mauretaniae and was meant to depict her mother Cleopatra According to Roller 2010 pp 91 92 these client state rulers installed by Antony included Herod Amyntas of Galatia Polemon I of Pontus and Archelaus of Cappadocia Bringmann 2007 p 301 claims that Octavia Minor provided Antony with 1 200 troops not 2 000 as stated in Roller 2010 pp 97 98 and Burstein 2004 pp 27 28 Roller 2010 p 100 says that it is unclear if Antony and Cleopatra were ever truly married Burstein 2004 pp xxii 29 says that the marriage publicly sealed Antony s alliance with Cleopatra and in defiance of Octavian he would divorce Octavia in 32 BC Coins of Antony and Cleopatra depict them in the typical manner of a Hellenistic royal couple as explained by Roller 2010 p 100 Jones 2006 p xiv writes that Octavian waged a propaganda war against Antony and Cleopatra stressing Cleopatra s status as a woman and a foreigner who wished to share in Roman power Stanley M Burstein in Burstein 2004 p 33 provides the name Quintus Cascellius as the recipient of the tax exemption not the Publius Canidius Crassus provided by Duane W Roller in Roller 2010 p 134 Reece 2017 p 203 notes that t he fragmentary texts of ancient Greek papyri do not often make their way into the modern public arena but this one has and with fascinating results while remaining almost entirely unacknowledged is the remarkable fact that Cleopatra s one word subscription contains a blatant spelling error gines8wi with a superfluous iota adscript This spelling error has not been noted by the popular media however being simply transliterated including without comment the superfluous iota adscript p 208 Even in academic sources the misspelling was largely unacknowledged or quietly corrected pp 206 208 210 Although described as normal orthography in contrast with correct orthography by Peter van Minnen p 208 the spelling error is much rarer and more puzzling than the sort one would expect from the Greek papyri from Egypt p 210 so rare in fact that it occurs only twice in the 70 000 Greek papyri between the 3rd century BC and 8th century AD in the Papyrological Navigator s database This is especially so when considering it was added to a word with no etymological or morphological reason for having an iota adscript p 210 and was written by the well educated native Greek speaking queen of Egypt Cleopatra VII p 208 As explained by Jones 2006 p 147 politically Octavian had to walk a fine line as he prepared to engage in open hostilities with Antony He was careful to minimize associations with civil war as the Roman people had already suffered through many years of civil conflict and Octavian could risk losing support if he declared war on a fellow citizen For the translated accounts of both Plutarch and Dio Jones 2006 pp 194 195 writes that the implement used to puncture Cleopatra s skin was a hairpin Jones 2006 p 187 translating Plutarch quotes Arius Didymus as saying to Octavian that it is not good to have too many Caesars which was apparently enough to convince Octavian to have Caesarion killed Contrary to regular Roman provinces Egypt was established by Octavian as territory under his personal control barring the Roman Senate from intervening in any of its affairs and appointing his own equestrian governors of Egypt the first of whom was Gallus For further information see Southern 2014 p 185 and Roller 2010 p 151 Walker 2001 p 312 writes the following about the raised relief on the gilded silver dish Conspicuously mounted on the cornucopia is a gilded crescent moon set on a pine cone Around it are piled pomegranates and bunches of grapes Engraved on the horn are images of Helios the sun in the form of a youth dressed in a short cloak with the hairstyle of Alexander the Great the head surrounded by rays The symbols on the cornucopia can indeed be read as references to the Ptolemaic royal house and specifically to Cleopatra Selene represented in the crescent moon and to her twin brother Alexander Helios whose eventual fate after the conquest of Egypt is unknown The viper seems to be linked with the pantheress and the intervening symbols of fecundity rather than the suicide of Cleopatra VII The elephant scalp could refer to Cleopatra Selene s status as ruler with Juba II of Mauretania The visual correspondence with the veiled head from Cherchel encourages this identification and many of the symbols used on the dish also appear on the coinage of Juba II Jones 2006 p 60 offers speculation that the author of De Bello Alexandrino written in Latin prose sometime between 46 and 43 BC was a certain Aulus Hirtius a military officer serving under Caesar Burstein 2004 p 30 writes that Virgil in his Aeneid described the Battle of Actium against Cleopatra as a clash of civilizations in which Octavian and the Roman gods preserved Italy from conquest by Cleopatra and the barbaric animal headed gods of Egypt For further information and extracts of Strabo s account of Cleopatra in his Geographica see Jones 2006 pp 28 30 As explained by Chauveau 2000 pp 2 3 this source material from Egypt dated to the reign of Cleopatra includes about 50 papyri documents in Ancient Greek mostly from the city of Heracleopolis and only a few papyri from Faiyum written in the Demotic Egyptian language Overall this is a much smaller body of surviving native texts than those of any other period of Ptolemaic Egypt For the description of Cleopatra by Plutarch who claimed that her beauty was not completely incomparable but that she had a captivating and stimulating personality see Jones 2006 pp 32 33 Fletcher 2008 p 205 writes the following Cleopatra was the only female Ptolemy to issue coins on her own behalf some showing her as Venus Aphrodite Caesar now followed her example and taking the same bold step became the first living Roman to appear on coins his rather haggard profile accompanied by the title Parens Patriae Father of the Fatherland For further information see Raia amp Sebesta 2017 There is academic disagreement on whether the following portraits are considered heads or busts For instance Raia amp Sebesta 2017 exclusively uses the former while Grout 2017b prefers the latter For further information and validation see Curtius 1933 pp 182 192 Walker 2008 p 348 Raia amp Sebesta 2017 and Grout 2017b For further information and validation see Grout 2017b and Roller 2010 pp 174 175 For further information see Curtius 1933 pp 182 192 Walker 2008 p 348 and Raia amp Sebesta 2017 The observation that the left cheek of the Vatican Cleopatra once had a cupid s hand that was broken off was first suggested by Ludwig Curtius in 1933 Kleiner concurs with this assessment See Kleiner 2005 p 153 as well as Walker 2008 p 40 and Curtius 1933 pp 182 192 While Kleiner 2005 p 153 has suggested the lump on top of this marble head perhaps contained a broken off uraeus Curtius 1933 p 187 offered the explanation that it once held a sculpted representation of a jewel Curtius 1933 p 187 wrote that the damaged lump along the hairline and diadem of the Vatican Cleopatra likely contained a sculpted representation of a jewel which Walker 2008 p 40 directly compares to the painted red jewel in the diadem worn by Venus most likely Cleopatra in the fresco from Pompeii For further information about the painting in the House of Giuseppe II Joseph II at Pompeii and the possible identification of Cleopatra as one of the figures see Pucci 2011 pp 206 207 footnote 27 In Pratt amp Fizel 1949 pp 14 15 Frances Pratt and Becca Fizel rejected the idea proposed by some scholars in the 19th and early 20th centuries that the painting was perhaps done by an artist of the Italian Renaissance Pratt and Fizel highlighted the Classical style of the painting as preserved in textual descriptions and the steel engraving They argued that it was unlikely for a Renaissance period painter to have created works with encaustic materials conducted thorough research into Hellenistic period Egyptian clothing and jewelry as depicted in the painting and then precariously placed it in the ruins of the Egyptian temple at Hadrian s Villa Walker amp Higgs 2001 pp 314 315 describe her hair as reddish brown while Fletcher 2008 p 87 describes her as a flame haired redhead and in Fletcher 2008 image plates and captions between pp 246 247 likewise describes her as a red haired woman Preston 2009 p 305 comes to a similar conclusion about native Egyptian depictions of Cleopatra Apart from certain temple carvings which are anyway in a highly stylised pharaonic style and give little clue to Cleopatra s real appearance the only certain representations of Cleopatra are those on coins The marble head in the Vatican is one of three sculptures generally though not universally accepted by scholars to be depictions of Cleopatra For further information on Cleopatra s Macedonian Greek lineage see Pucci 2011 p 201 Grant 1972 pp 3 5 Burstein 2004 pp 3 34 36 43 63 64 and Royster 2003 pp 47 49 For further information and validation of the foundation of Hellenistic Egypt by Alexander the Great and Cleopatra s ancestry stretching back to Ptolemy I Soter see Grant 1972 pp 7 8 and Jones 2006 p 3 For further information see Grant 1972 pp 3 4 and Burstein 2004 p 11 For further information see Fletcher 2008 pp 69 74 76 Contrary to other sources cited here Dodson amp Hilton 2004 pp 268 269 273 refer to Cleopatra V Tryphaena as a possible cousin or sister of Ptolemy XII Auletes For the Sogdian ancestry of Apama wife of Seleucus I Nicator see Holt 1989 pp 64 65 footnote 63 As explained by Burstein 2004 pp 47 50 the main ethnic groups of Ptolemaic Egypt were Egyptians Greeks and Jews each of whom were legally segregated living in different residential quarters and forbidden to intermarry with one another in the multicultural cities of Alexandria Naucratis and Ptolemais Hermiou However as explained by Fletcher 2008 pp 82 88 93 the native Egyptian priesthood was strongly linked to their Ptolemaic royal patrons to the point where Cleopatra is speculated to have had an Egyptian half cousin Pasherienptah III the High Priest of Ptah at Memphis Egypt Grant 1972 p 5 argues that Cleopatra s grandmother i e the mother of Ptolemy XII might have been a Syrian though conceding that it is possible she was also partly Greek but almost certainly not an Egyptian because there is only one known Egyptian mistress of a Ptolemaic ruler throughout their entire dynasty Schiff 2011 p 42 further argues that considering Cleopatra s ancestry she was not dark skinned though notes Cleopatra was likely not among the Ptolemies with fair features and instead would have been honey skinned citing as evidence that her relatives were described as such and it would have presumably applied to her as well Goldsworthy 2010 pp 127 128 agrees to this contending that Cleopatra having Macedonian blood with a little Syrian was probably not dark skinned as Roman propaganda never mentions it writing fairer skin is marginally more likely considering her ancestry though also notes she could have had a darker more Mediterranean complexion because of her mixed ancestry Grant 1972 p 5 agrees to Goldsworthy s latter speculation of her skin color that though almost certainly not Egyptian Cleopatra had a darker complexion due to being Greek mixed with Persian and possible Syrian ancestry Preston 2009 p 77 agrees with Grant that considering this ancestry Cleopatra was almost certainly dark haired and olive skinned Bradford 2000 p 14 contends that it is reasonable to infer Cleopatra had dark hair and pale olive skin For further information on the identity of Cleopatra s mother see Burstein 2004 p 11 Fletcher 2008 p 73 Goldsworthy 2010 pp 127 128 Grant 1972 p 4 and Roller 2010 pp 165 166 Joann Fletcher finds this hypothesis to be dubious and lacking evidence Stanley M Burstein claims that strong circumstantial evidence suggests Cleopatra s mother could have been a member of the priestly family of Ptah but that historians generally assume her mother was Cleopatra V Tryphaena wife of Ptolemy XII Adrian Goldsworthy dismisses the idea of Cleopatra s mother being a member of an Egyptian priestly family as pure conjecture adding that either Cleopatra V or a concubine probably of Greek origin would be Cleopatra VII s mother Michael Grant contends that Cleopatra V was most likely Cleopatra VII s mother Duane W Roller notes that while Cleopatra could have been the daughter of the priestly family of Ptah the other main candidate would be Cleopatra VI maintaining the uncertainty stems from Cleopatra V VI s loss of favor that obscured the issue Roller 2010 pp 165 166 also posits that Cleopatra being the only known ruler of the Ptolemaic Dynasty to speak Egyptian along with her daughter Cleopatra Selene II as Queen of Mauretania publicly honoring the native Egyptian elite both lend credence to the priestly class mistress hypothesis for maternity Schiff 2011 pp 2 concurs with this concluding that Cleopatra upheld the family tradition As noted by Dudley 1960 pp 57 Cleopatra and her family were the successor s to the native Pharaohs exploiting through a highly organized bureaucracy the great natural resources of the Nile Valley Grant 1972 p 4 argues that if Cleopatra had been illegitimate her numerous Roman enemies would have revealed this to the world The family tree and short discussions of the individuals can be found in Dodson amp Hilton 2004 pp 268 281 Aidan Dodson and Dyan Hilton refer to Cleopatra V as Cleopatra VI and Cleopatra Selene of Syria is called Cleopatra V Selene Dotted lines in the chart below indicate possible but disputed parentage References a b c d e f g h Raia amp Sebesta 2017 a b c d e f g h i Sabino amp Gross Diaz 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Grout 2017b Burstein 2004 pp xx xxiii 155 a b c d Holbl 2001 p 231 Royster 2003 p 48 a b Muellner a b c Roller 2010 pp 15 16 Roller 2010 pp 15 16 39 Fletcher 2008 pp 55 57 Burstein 2004 p 15 Fletcher 2008 pp 84 215 a b Roller 2010 p 18 Roller 2010 pp 32 33 Fletcher 2008 pp 1 3 11 129 a b Burstein 2004 p 11 Roller 2010 pp 29 33 Fletcher 2008 pp 1 5 13 14 88 105 106 a b c d Burstein 2004 pp 11 12 Schiff 2011 p 35 a b Roller 2010 pp 46 48 Fletcher 2008 pp 5 82 88 105 106 Roller 2010 pp 46 48 100 Roller 2010 pp 38 42 Burstein 2004 pp xviii 10 Grant 1972 pp 9 12 a b c d e Roller 2010 p 17 a b Grant 1972 pp 10 11 a b Burstein 2004 p xix Grant 1972 p 11 Burstein 2004 p 12 Fletcher 2008 p 74 Grant 1972 p 3 Roller 2010 p 15 a b c d Grant 1972 p 4 Preston 2009 p 22 Jones 2006 pp xiii 28 a b Roller 2010 p 16 a b Anderson 2003 p 38 a b c Fletcher 2008 p 73 a b Roller 2010 pp 18 19 Fletcher 2008 pp 68 69 Roller 2010 p 19 Fletcher 2008 p 69 Roller 2010 pp 45 46 Roller 2010 p 45 Fletcher 2008 p 81 a b c d e f Walker amp Higgs 2001 pp 314 315 a b Fletcher 2008 p 87 image plates and captions between pp 246 247 Roller 2010 p 20 Burstein 2004 pp xix 12 13 Roller 2010 pp 20 21 Burstein 2004 pp xx 12 13 Fletcher 2008 pp 74 76 Roller 2010 p 21 a b Burstein 2004 p 13 a b c Fletcher 2008 p 76 a b c d Roller 2010 p 22 a b Burstein 2004 pp xx 13 75 Burstein 2004 pp 13 75 Grant 1972 pp 14 15 a b Fletcher 2008 pp 76 77 Roller 2010 p 23 Fletcher 2008 pp 77 78 Roller 2010 pp 23 24 Fletcher 2008 p 78 Grant 1972 p 16 a b c Roller 2010 p 24 Burstein 2004 pp xx 13 Grant 1972 pp 16 17 Burstein 2004 pp 13 76 a b Roller 2010 pp 24 25 Burstein 2004 p 76 Burstein 2004 pp 23 73 a b Roller 2010 p 25 a b Grant 1972 p 18 a b Burstein 2004 p xx a b Roller 2010 pp 25 26 Burstein 2004 pp 13 14 76 a b Fletcher 2008 pp 11 12 Burstein 2004 pp 13 14 Fletcher 2008 pp 11 12 80 a b Roller 2010 p 26 a b Burstein 2004 p 14 Roller 2010 pp 26 27 Fletcher 2008 pp 80 85 Roller 2010 p 27 Burstein 2004 pp xx 14 Fletcher 2008 pp 84 85 Roller 2010 pp 53 56 Burstein 2004 pp xx 15 16 Roller 2010 pp 53 54 a b Burstein 2004 pp 16 17 a b Roller 2010 p 53 a b Roller 2010 pp 54 56 a b c Burstein 2004 p 16 a b Roller 2010 p 56 Fletcher 2008 pp 91 92 a b c Roller 2010 pp 36 37 a b c Burstein 2004 p 5 a b c Grant 1972 pp 26 27 a b Roller 2010 pp 56 57 Fletcher 2008 pp 73 92 93 Fletcher 2008 pp 92 93 a b Roller 2010 p 57 a b c Burstein 2004 pp xx 17 a b Roller 2010 p 58 Fletcher 2008 pp 94 95 Fletcher 2008 p 95 Roller 2010 pp 58 59 Burstein 2004 p 17 Fletcher 2008 pp 95 96 Roller 2010 p 59 a b c Fletcher 2008 p 96 a b Roller 2010 pp 59 60 a b Fletcher 2008 pp 97 98 a b Bringmann 2007 p 259 a b Burstein 2004 pp xxi 17 a b c Roller 2010 p 60 Fletcher 2008 p 98 Jones 2006 pp 39 43 53 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 17 18 a b Roller 2010 pp 60 61 Bringmann 2007 pp 259 260 a b Burstein 2004 pp xxi 18 a b c d e f g Bringmann 2007 p 260 a b c d Roller 2010 p 61 a b Fletcher 2008 p 100 a b Burstein 2004 p 18 Holbl 2001 pp 234 235 Jones 2006 pp 56 57 Holbl 2001 p 234 Jones 2006 pp 57 58 Roller 2010 pp 61 62 a b c d Holbl 2001 p 235 Fletcher 2008 pp 112 113 Roller 2010 pp 26 62 a b Roller 2010 p 62 Burstein 2004 pp 18 76 Burstein 2004 pp 18 19 a b c Roller 2010 p 63 Holbl 2001 p 236 Fletcher 2008 pp 118 119 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 76 Fletcher 2008 p 119 Roller 2010 pp 62 63 Holbl 2001 pp 235 236 a b c Burstein 2004 p 19 Roller 2010 pp 63 64 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 19 76 a b c Roller 2010 p 64 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 19 21 76 Fletcher 2008 p 172 Roller 2010 pp 64 69 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 19 20 Fletcher 2008 p 120 Roller 2010 pp 64 65 Roller 2010 p 65 a b Burstein 2004 pp 19 20 Fletcher 2008 p 125 a b Roller 2010 pp 65 66 Fletcher 2008 p 126 Roller 2010 p 66 Fletcher 2008 pp 108 149 150 a b c Roller 2010 p 67 Burstein 2004 p 20 Fletcher 2008 p 153 Roller 2010 pp 69 70 a b Burstein 2004 pp xxi 20 a b Roller 2010 p 70 Fletcher 2008 pp 162 163 a b c Jones 2006 p xiv Ashton 2001b p 164 Roller 2010 p 71 Fletcher 2008 pp 179 182 Roller 2010 pp 21 57 72 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 20 64 Fletcher 2008 pp 181 182 a b Roller 2010 p 72 Fletcher 2008 pp 194 195 Roller 2010 pp 72 126 a b Burstein 2004 p 21 Fletcher 2008 pp 201 202 a b Roller 2010 pp 72 175 Fletcher 2008 pp 195 196 201 a b c Roller 2010 pp 72 74 a b c Fletcher 2008 pp 205 206 a b Roller 2010 p 74 a b Burstein 2004 pp xxi 21 Fletcher 2008 pp 207 213 Fletcher 2008 pp 213 214 Roller 2010 pp 74 75 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 22 Roller 2010 pp 77 79 Figure 6 a b c d e f Roller 2010 p 75 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 21 22 a b Burstein 2004 p 22 Burstein 2004 pp 22 23 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 22 23 Roller 2010 p 76 Roller 2010 pp 76 77 a b Burstein 2004 pp xxi 23 Roller 2010 p 77 Roller 2010 pp 77 79 a b Burstein 2004 p 23 a b c Roller 2010 p 79 Burstein 2004 pp xxi 24 76 a b Burstein 2004 p 24 Burstein 2004 pp xxii 24 Roller 2010 pp 79 80 a b c d e Burstein 2004 p 25 Roller 2010 pp 77 79 82 Bivar 1983 p 58 Brosius 2006 p 96 Roller 2010 pp 81 82 a b Roller 2010 pp 82 83 a b c d e f Bringmann 2007 p 301 a b c Roller 2010 p 83 Roller 2010 pp 83 84 Burstein 2004 pp xxii 25 a b Roller 2010 p 84 Burstein 2004 p 73 Roller 2010 pp 84 85 a b Roller 2010 p 85 Roller 2010 pp 85 86 Burstein 2004 pp xxii 25 73 a b c Roller 2010 p 86 a b Roller 2010 pp 86 87 a b c Burstein 2004 p 26 Fletcher 2008 image plates between pp 246 247 Ferroukhi 2001b p 242 a b c Roller 2003 p 139 a b Roller 2010 p 89 Roller 2010 pp 89 90 a b Roller 2010 p 90 a b c d e f Burstein 2004 pp xxii 25 26 Roller 2010 pp 90 91 a b c d Burstein 2004 p 77 Roller 2010 pp 91 92 a b Roller 2010 p 92 Roller 2010 pp 92 93 Roller 2010 pp 93 94 Roller 2010 pp 94 142 Roller 2010 p 94 a b c Roller 2010 p 95 Burstein 2004 pp 26 27 a b Roller 2010 pp 94 95 Roller 2010 pp 95 96 a b Roller 2010 p 96 a b c Roller 2010 p 97 Burstein 2004 pp xxii 27 a b Burstein 2004 p 27 Crawford 1974 pp 102 539 Newman 1990 pp 50 51 note 29 a b Roller 2010 pp 97 98 a b Burstein 2004 pp 27 28 a b Roller 2010 p 98 a b c d Roller 2010 p 99 Burstein 2004 p 28 Burstein 2004 pp xxii 28 Burstein 2004 pp 28 29 a b c Roller 2010 pp 133 134 a b c d e f Burstein 2004 p 33 a b c Reece 2017 pp 201 202 Roller 2010 pp 99 100 Bringmann 2007 pp 301 302 a b c Burstein 2004 pp xxii 29 a b Roller 2010 p 100 a b c d e f g Burstein 2004 p 29 Roller 2010 pp 100 101 a b Roller 2010 pp 129 130 Roller 2010 p 130 Burstein 2004 pp 65 66 Roller 2010 pp 130 131 Pliny the Elder Natural History 9 58 Archived 20 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine Roller 2010 p 132 Roller 2010 p 133 a b c d e f g Roller 2010 p 134 a b Bringmann 2007 p 302 Bringmann 2007 pp 302 303 a b c d e f g h Bringmann 2007 p 303 Burstein 2004 pp 29 30 a b c d e f g Roller 2010 p 135 a b c d e Burstein 2004 p 30 a b Roller 2010 p 136 a b Burstein 2004 pp xxii 30 Jones 2006 p 147 Roller 2010 pp 136 137 Roller 2010 pp 137 139 a b c Bringmann 2007 pp 303 304 a b Roller 2010 p 137 Roller 2010 pp 137 138 a b c Roller 2010 p 138 a b c Roller 2010 p 139 a b Roller 2010 pp 139 140 a b c d e f Bringmann 2007 p 304 a b Burstein 2004 pp 30 31 a b c d Roller 2010 p 140 Burstein 2004 pp xxii xxiii 30 31 a b c d e f g Roller 2010 pp 178 179 a b Elia 1956 pp 3 7 Burstein 2004 pp xxii xxiii Brambach 1996 p 312 a b c d e Roller 2010 p 141 a b c d e f g h Burstein 2004 p 31 a b Roller 2010 pp 141 142 a b c d e Roller 2010 p 142 a b c Roller 2010 p 143 Roller 2010 pp 142 143 Roller 2010 pp 143 144 Roller 2010 p 144 a b Burstein 2004 pp xxiii 31 Roller 2010 pp 144 145 a b c d e f Roller 2010 p 145 a b c Southern 2009 p 153 Southern 2009 pp 153 154 Southern 2009 p 154 Jones 2006 p 184 Southern 2009 pp 154 155 Jones 2006 pp 184 185 a b c Roller 2010 p 146 Jones 2006 pp 185 186 a b Southern 2009 p 155 Roller 2010 pp 146 147 213 footnote 83 Gurval 2011 p 61 a b c d Roller 2010 p 147 Roller 2010 pp 147 148 Burstein 2004 pp xxiii 31 32 Jones 2006 p 194 a b Burstein 2004 p 65 a b Jones 2006 pp 194 195 a b Roller 2010 pp 148 149 a b Anderson 2003 p 56 Roller 2010 p 148 a b Burstein 2004 pp 31 32 a b Roller 2010 p 149 Burstein 2004 p 32 Roller 2010 pp 149 150 Burstein 2004 pp xxiii 32 Skeat 1953 pp 99 100 Roller 2010 p 150 Roller 2010 pp 150 151 Jones 2006 pp 197 198 Burstein 2004 pp xxiii 1 Grant 1972 pp 5 6 Bringmann 2007 pp 304 307 Grant 1972 pp 6 7 Burstein 2004 p 34 Chauveau 2000 pp 69 71 Roller 2010 pp 104 110 113 Fletcher 2008 pp 216 217 Burstein 2004 pp 33 34 Roller 2010 pp 103 104 Burstein 2004 pp 39 41 Chauveau 2000 pp 78 80 Roller 2010 pp 104 105 Burstein 2004 pp 37 38 Roller 2010 pp 106 107 a b Ferroukhi 2001a p 219 a b c Kleiner 2005 pp 155 156 Roller 2003 pp 141 142 Walker 2001 pp 312 313 a b c Roller 2010 p 153 a b Burstein 2004 pp 32 76 77 a b Roller 2010 pp 153 154 Roller 2010 pp 154 155 a b Roller 2010 p 155 Burstein 2004 pp 32 77 Burstein 2004 pp xxiii 32 77 Roller 2010 pp 155 156 Burstein 2004 pp xxiii 32 77 78 Roller 2010 p 156 Burstein 2004 pp 32 69 77 78 a b Roller 2010 p 151 a b c d Anderson 2003 p 36 a b Roller 2010 p 7 a b Roller 2010 pp 7 8 Burstein 2004 pp 67 93 span cl, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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