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Cleopatra Photos |
Her ambition no less than her charm actively influenced Roman politics at a crucial period, and she came to represent, as did no other woman of antiquity the prototype of the romantic femme fatale.
The second daughter of King Ptolemy XII, Cleopatra was
destined to become the last sovereign of the Macedonian dynasty that ruled
Egypt between the death of Alexander the Great in 323 and its annexation by
Rome in 31. The line had been founded by Alexander's marshal Ptolemy. Cleopatra
was of Macedonian descent and had no Egyptian blood, although she alone of her
house took the trouble to learn Egyptian and, for political reasons, regarded
herself as the daughter of Re, the sun god.
Coin portraits of her show a countenance alive rather than
beautiful, with sensitive mouth, firm chin, liquid eyes, broad forehead, and
prominent nose. Her voice, says the Greek biographer Plutarch," was like
an instrument of many strings." He adds that" Plato admits four sorts
of flattery, but she had a thousand. "When Ptolemy XII died in 51, the
throne passed to his 15 - year - old son, Ptolemy XIII, and that king’s sister
bride, Cleopatra. They soon had a falling out, and civil war ensued.
Ptolemy XII had been expelled from Egypt in 58 and had been
restored three years later only by means of Roman arms. Rome now felt that it
had a right to interfere in the affairs of this independent, exceedingly rich
kingdom, over which it had in fact exercised a sort of protectorate since 168.
No one realized more clearly than Cleopatra that Rome was now the arbiter and
that to carry out her ambition she must remain on good terms with Rome and its
rulers.
Thus when Caesar, the victor in the civil war, arrived in
Egypt in October 48, in pursuit of Pompey ( who, a fugitive from his defeat at
Pharsalus in Thessaly, had been murdered as he landed four days before ),
Cleopatra set out to captivate him. She succeeded. Each was determined to use
the other. Caesar sought money - he claimed he was owed it for the expenses of
her father's restoration. Cleopatra's target was power: she was determined to
restore the glories of the first Ptolemy’s and to recover as much as possible
of their dominions, which had included southern Syria and Palestine.
Cleopatra realized that Caesar was the strong man, the dictator, of
Rome, and it was therefore on him that she relied. In the ensuing civil war in
Egypt Caesar was hard - pressed by the anti - Cleopatra party, led by her
brother, Ptolemy XIII, but Caesar eventually defeated them and reestablished
the joint rule brother and sister - wife. Caesar, having won his victory on
March 27, 47, left Egypt after a fortnight amorous respite. Whether Caesar was
in fact the father Cleopatra's son whom she called Caesarian cannot now be
known.
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Egypt Queen Cleopatra |
Caesar's assassination
put an end to Cleopatra ' s first campaign for power, and she retired to Egypt
to await the outcome of the next round in the Roman political struggle. When,
at the Battle of Philippi in 42, Caesar's assassins were routed, Mark Antony
became heir apparent of Caesar ' s authority - or so it seemed, for his great -
nephew and personal heir, Octavian, was but a sickly boy.
When Antony, bent on pursuing the eternal mirage of Roman
rulers, an invasion of Persia, sent for Cleopatra, she was delighted. Here was
a second chance of achieving her aim. She had known Antony when he had been in
Egypt as a young staff officer and she had been 14. She was now 28 or 29 and
completely confident of her powers. She set out for Tarsus in Asia Minor,
loaded with gifts, having delayed her departure to heighten Antony's
expectation. She entered the city by sailing up the Cygnus River in the famous
barge that Shakespeare immortalized in Antony and Cleopatra. Antony was
captivated, and Cleopatra subtly exploited his raffish and unstable character.
Forgetting his wife, Fluvial who in Italy was doing her best to maintain her
husband ' s interests against the growing menace of young Octavian, Antony put
off his Persian campaign and returned as Cleopatra's slave to Alexandria where
he treated her not as a " protected ” sovereign but as an independent
monarch.
“Her design of
attacking Rome by means of Romans, as one historian put it," was one of
such stupendous audacity that we must suppose that she saw no other way. "Her
first effort had been frustrated by Caesar's death; she felt now that she could
win all by using the far more pliant and apparently equally powerful Antony. In
Alexandria Cleopatra did all she could to pander to his weaknesses. They formed
a society of “inimitable livers,” whose members in fact lived a life of
debauchery and folly. Cleopatra, however, knew how to handle her catch.Yet the final struggle
for the dominion of Rome was to last for 10 years and was to end in disaster
for Cleopatra (no less than for Antony), largely promoted by Cleopatra herself.
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Egypt Great queen Cleopatra |
Meanwhile, during Antony's absence, Cleopatra had committed
another act of disastrous folly. She had antagonized Herod of Judaea, by far
the ablest, richest, and most powerful of the "protected" sovereigns,
or “client kings," of Rome. Herod and Antony were old friends; but in the
year 40, after Antony's departure, Cleopatra unsuccessfully tried to seduce
Herod on his way through Egypt. Cleopatra never forgave him for the rebuff. She
went much further: when she and Antony were reunited she persuaded him to give
her large portions of Syria and Lebanon and even the rich balsam groves of
Jericho in Herod's own kingdom. But Antony refused to sacrifice Herod wholly to
Cleopatra ' s greed whereupon she hated Herod more than ever and even
interfered in his unhappy family affairs by intriguing against him with the
women of his household. She made a tour of her new acquisitions, on which Herod
received her with simulated delight; but she remained as jealous and hostile as
ever, bitterly resentful that anyone other than herself should influence Antony
The fruit of her folly was soon to be gathered.
Cleopatra had merely
acquiesced in the Parthia campaign: she sought other ways of spending her
money. The campaign itself was a costly failure, was the temporary conquest of
Armenia Nevertheless, in 34 Antony celebrated a fantastic triumph in Alexandria.
Crowds beheld Antony and Cleopatra seated on golden thrones, with their own
three children and little Cartesian, whom Antony proclaimed to be Caesar ' s
son, thus relegating Octavian, who had been adopted by Caesar as his son and
heir, to legal bestiary. Cleopatra was hailed as queen of kings, Cartesian as
king of kings. Alexander Helios was awarded Armenia and the territory beyond
the Euphrates, his brother Ptolemy the lands to the west of it. The boys '
sister, Selena, was to be ruler of Cyrene. Octavian, now lord of the ascendant
in Italy, seized Antony ' s will from the temple of the Vestal Virgins, to whom
it had been entrusted, and revealed to the Roman people that not only had
Antony bestowed Roman possessions on this foreign woman but had intended to
transfer the capital from Rome to Alexandria, there to found a new dynasty.
Antony and Cleopatra spent the winter of 32 - 31 in Greece amid revels and dissipation. The Roman Senate deprived Antony of his prospective consulate for the following year. When it finally declared war against Cleopatra the un-wisdom of her policy against Herod was revealed, for she had contrived to embroil him with the king of Petra just when his ability and resources would have been of the utmost value to Antony. At the naval Battle of Actinium, in which Octavian faced the combined forces of Antony and Cleopatra on September 2, 31, Cleopatra suddenly broke off the engagement and set course for Egypt. Inevitable defeat followed. Antony went on board her flagship and for three days refused to see her, but they were reconciled before they reached Alexandria, styling themselves no longer " inimitable livers ” but "dyers together."
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Egypt Queen Cleopatra Photos |
When Octavian visited her, Cleopatra tried yet once again
to captivate the leading Roman. She used all her arts; she failed. She knew,
then, that Octavian intended that she and her children should adorn his triumph.
Rather than be dragged through the city in which she had been borne as a queen,
she killed herself, possibly by means of an asp, symbol of divine royalty.
Octavian, on receiving her letter asking that she might be buried with Antony, sent messengers posthaste. “ The messengers, " Plutarch says, “ came at full speed, and found the guards apprehensive of nothing ; but on opening the doors they saw her stone dead, lying upon a bed of gold, set out in all her royal ornaments. " She was 39 and had been a queen for 22 years and Antony's partner for 11. They were buried together, as both of them had wished, and with them was buried the Roman.
In retrospect, Cleopatra's political career ended in utter
failure. Had she been less ambitious she might have preserved her kingdom as a
client, as her rival Herod did with complete success. In overreaching herself she
ruined all. And yet it was this political failure that was to be transmuted
into the grand original of the great lover, consecrated by the art of
Shakespeare himself. The best epitaph on Cleopatra is that of the historian Dion
Cassius:" She captivated the two greatest Romans of her day, and because
of the third she destroyed herself."
Photo Gallery of Egypt Queen Cleopatra
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Egypt Queen Cleopatra Picture |
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