Loading AI tools
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an archive of past discussions about Cleopatra. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | → | Archive 5 |
The second and third paragraph of the section "Accession to the throne" should be rearranged; Tryphaena takes over and is assassinated without being identified (P2), then is identified and takes over the throne (P3). 131.211.191.107 (talk) 11:36, 11 February 2008 (UTC)
Edited:
"Centralization of power and corruption led to uprising in and loss of Cyprus and of Cyrenaica, making Ptolemy's reign one of the most calamitous of the dynasty. wes
In 58 BC Cleopatra's older sister, Berenice IV seized power from her father. With the assistance of the Roman governor of Syria, Aulus Gabinius, Ptolemy XII overturned his eldest daughter in 55 BC and had her executed. Cleopatra's other older sister Tryphaena seized the Crown of Egypt shortly after that, when Ptolemy made a journey to Rome with Cleopatra. Shortly after arrangements for Roman assistance in Egypt, Ptolemy's followers assassinated Tryphaena and killed her guard. Berenice's guards in turn killed those followers. This left Cleopatra with her husband and younger brother, Ptolemy XIII, joint heirs to the throne."
What about the thing about her bathing in asses milk? I've read elsewhere that it's true (I think Nero's wife did it too?). It's one of the most common things quoted about Cleopatra - and it's a scene frequently seen in the films noted in the article - so it would be nice to include that in the relevant section. Davidbod 12:06, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
cleopatra died of a venom posin of a snake Somebody put the scenes from the HBO series ROME into this entry. I don't know the history well enough to fix this. Can somebody help?
When Octavius invaded Egypt, where did he take the children captive? Were they all with Cleopatra and Mark Antony or were they all sent away and just ran into Octavius on the way? The children were Caesarion, Alexander Helios, Cleopatra Selene, Ptolemy Philadelphus and Mark Antony's two boys Antyllus and Iullus. Octavius killed Caesarion and Antyllus, but let the others go, sending them all to live with Octavia. Why did he let the others go? Selene I could understand, she a girl and couldn't cause too much trouble. The two boys Antony had with Cleopatra, were both quite young and may have been let off... But why Iullus? --80.193.19.191 20:19, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
"Do we have to have teh word Greek popping up everywhere all the time? I man have you actually read the number of instances it appears unnecssarily - under photo tags etc., Cleopatra's hair in a Greek bun? I mean...c'mon. Wikipedia is became a joke. 82.145.231.92 04:34, 19 February 2006 (UTC)
Cleopatra was not greek she was Macedonian. Macedonians and greeks have been in consistant battle even before Alexander the great of macedonia. Your right wikipedia has become a joke, a greek must have wrote cleopatra's article very biased. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.150.160.116 (talk) 16:53, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
"Cleopatra VII (69 BC - 30 BC) was pharaoh of ancient Egypt."
Was she actually Pharoah?
No, this was her brother and husband Ptolemy, wasn't it?
Not exactly.The Queens of the Ptolemaic dynasty were usualy siblings (and the rare niece), to their husbands and since they had rights to the throne (and ambitions) they acted as co-rulers. The male members of the dynasty apparently prefeared that to having them conspire against them, organise assasinations or revolts or them marrying other rivals to the throne. (The Dynasty's historie has examples of all of that). Both the written sources and the coins present both King and Queens as ruling. Cleopatra was as much a pharaoh as her three male co-rulers Ptolemy XIII, XIV and Ptolemy XIV Caesarion (Greek for little Caesar).
User: Dimadick
the placement of these images is awful. Kingturtle 05:25 Apr 18, 2003 (UTC)
Discussion of the movies should be merged with Cleopatra (movie), with just a link to that kept here. -- Infrogmation 22:00, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
The article is still the target of unexplained and difficult to verify additions. I have changed her list of "three children" (which included four children) back to those verified by the online genealogy cited, and put a notice about the possible factual inaccuracy on the page. -- Someone else 22:06, 12 Oct 2003 (UTC)
I'm removing the disputed notice because this dispute happened seven months ago, and the article seems fine, and if no one's going to voice further objections... Wally 00:41, 19 May 2004 (UTC)
Why the hell is it that according to Wikipedia Cleopatra killed herself 3 days before the battle of Actium? Wikipedia is reporting that today September 2nd, the battle of Actium took place. It is also reporting that on August 30th Cleopatra killed herself. Apparently she was clairvoyant.
Somebody has mixed their milk and meat, in other words, this definetly ain’t kosher.
It says on http://www.world-sex-records.com/ that Cleopatra was, um, well, an accomplished fellatrice. Can this be verified and, if so, should it be noted? - Furrykef 17:23, 13 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Article says : "The three sons of Cleopatra with Antony were spared and taken back to Rome where they were reared by Antony's wife, Octavia.".
Alexander Helios article says : "Alexander was probably killed when the Romans, led by Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus, invaded Egypt in 30 BC and his parents both killed themselves. There is no further mention of him."
Ptolemy Philadelphus article says: "Augustus Caesar took him (Ptolemy Philadelphus) and his sister Cleopatra Selene back to Rome as captives after their parents killed themselves (and their two brothers died) in 30 BC"
There is some inconsistency which needs to be corrected in one or the other articles. Jay 11:35, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
They were crucified -- the three theives (who stole roman territory). Because of the cultural and political implications of their names and families, none of them could have lived -- the would forever remain rallying points for revolt. Since they were all crowned Kings, they all had perceived legitmacy within the minds of the people conquered by roma. --M.James —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 71.52.16.198 (talk) 12:02, August 23, 2007 (UTC)
I moved this from higher up in the page to make any discussion easier to follow:
Encyclopaedia Britannica (2003 edition; Cleopatra article) states quite clearly that Antony and Cleopatra did indeed get married, even going so far as to cite the political problems such a union caused an already-married Antony. Does anyone have any sources that state they weren't married? And judging by both men's actions, neither one of thought a poor (or even a rich, for that matter) Roman citizen was "better" than Cleopatra--marrying her would have hardly been the only thing either one ever did on her account that risked the wrath of SPQR or put their political position back home in peril.Binabik80 17:01, 28 Feb 2005 (UTC)
I'm not sure whether this is the right place for this, but I have a question. Why did Caesar Augustus (Octavian) kill Ceasarion but spare Cleopatra's children by Marc Antony? It seems to me that the children of Antony would be just as much of a threat to his power as another Caesar. Of course, none of Antony's kids succeeded at rising up against him later, but even so, if I had been Octavian, I think I would have been just as worried that one of them would seek vengeance for the death of their father. Just a thought. Raphael 20:58, 5 July 2007 (UTC)
In my effort to merge the now-deleted list from the article Gay icon to the Gay icons category, I have added this page to the category. I engaged in this effort as a "human script", adding everyone from the list to the category, bypassing the fact-checking stage. That is what I am relying on you to do. Please check the article Gay icon and make a judgment as to whether this person or group fits the category. By distributing this task from the regular editors of one JESSICA to the regular editors of several articles, I believe that the task of fact-checking this information can be expedited. Thank you very much. Philwelch 20:23, 24 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I removed this:
This is incorrect on a couple of points. "Pharaoh" was not used as a title regularly until the Third Intermediate Period, and not during Dynasty 6 or 18. The claim that "Nitocris" was a female is an error on the part of Manetho and Herodotus; the real "Nitocris" of Dynasty 6 was a man. Sobekneferu of Dynasty 12 ruled as a female king. —Nefertum17 21:44, 23 May 2005 (UTC)
I can see how this section of the article represents an important debate in the literature over Cleopatra... But don't you think we're making these categories of Egyptologists and Afrocentric historians a little too black and white? Even if you could separate historians cleanly into these two groups (which you can't), they still probably wouldn't all have perfectly homogenous opinions about Cleopatra's racial background. I think we should revise the article to focus on the actual historical facts and different readings of those facts, without trying to make it into a battle between Egyptologists and Afrocentric historians.
On the contrary, I would say. We should not encourage the illusion that there is any serious debate. Afrocentrist considerations are certainly valid when it comes to classic Egyptian pharaohs, but there simply aren't any arguments to say that Cleopatra had any "black" ancestry. The debate goes no further than the shallow "She was an African queen and therefore she was black" or possibly the dogmatic "The Ptolemies MUST have had liasions with black people". This is but a parody of afrocentrism.
The article points out several reasons for disqualifying any serious afrocentric claims, and I have added a last: the Ptolemaic empire is often referred to as "Egypt": in fact it was an eastern Mediterranean state, with its centers in Alexandria, Libya and Cyprus. Cleopatra's father, grand-father and grand-grand- father all spent considerable time on the latter island. It would therefore be equally valid (or rather not valid) to have a Cyprocentric fraction which claim that Cleopatra was partly Cypriotic. Thankfully enough, there is no such fraction. The early Ptolemaic empire also comprised Libanon, Israel/Palestine and cities in Asia Minor, and the Ptolemaic kings spent as much time there as south of Alexandria. I find it much more probable that any unknown mistress would be a Greek-speaking woman from Alexandria or any of the dozens of Ptolemaic Mediterranean strongholds than a native Egypt woman.--Sponsianus 21:54, 29 November 2005 (UTC)
some of the Egyptologist views may state incorrect information about the demographics of modern day Egypt being mostly not-African, while really (quoting from wikipedia 'ancient egypt' modern day Egyptians "reflect a mixture of European, Middle Eastern, and African." research needed.
The only Egyptian-born people who are "non-African" are those born east of Sinai (because geographically that's Asia). The Caucasian and racially mixed peoples of North Africa are no less African than black sub-Saharan Africans.
personally, i thought the afrocentric view was misrepresented. i find it hard to believe that this dichotomy is the best wikipedia can do. and why is one "-centric" and the other "-ologist". the "ist" sounds like a legit ideology, while the other sounds like a subjective and wrong opinion. can we just say 'afrologist'?
Does the claim that Cleopatra had quote-African-unquote blood have any modicum of support? It's pure conjecture and I don't see any debate on the issue among serious scholars.Saltyseaweed 21:36, 24 February 2006 (UTC)
I have always felt the Afrocentric AND Eurocentric views surrounding Cleopatra are all ludicrous. It seems evident that during Classical times, there was a lot of intermarriage (not even including the various couplings between concubines, prostitutes, and slaves) between virtually all Mediterranean nations. It is also not clear to me that people even identified with "races" with the same perspective and loaded connotations that people do today. It seems that people identified more with their nationality than the color of their skin. Speaking on these terms, it seems to me that the Ptolemys were indeed Greek, except for the last one (Cleopatra) -- because she felt she needed to prove her "Egyptianness" in order to gain credibility with her people.
I'm not a historian, and I'm sure someone will remind me of that (although I might as well be, since I have spent the last few years studying it extensively). However, I think it is wrong for any one race of people to try to "claim" Cleopatra as theirs. I think it is more accurate to simply remember her as an Egyptian of Greek (and possibly other) descent. Thinking in those terms, I think we can ALL be proud of her as a symbol of independence and revolutionary thought. Raphael 21:11, 5 July 2007 (UTC)
With all respect Raphael, that view is about as wrong as it gets. The lineage of Cleopatra could be traced back to the generals of Alexander the Great with very few exceptions, those possibly being that her grand-mother may have been a concubine, very likely a Hellenistic woman in that case. The Ptolemies married incestously, which makes the genealogy far easier to trace, and every single one of her ancestors were thus Macedonian. There is an ounce of Persian blood coming in through the Seleucid dynasty.
So there is no need at all to introduce any vagueness. Cleopatra's lineage is the best known in the entire ancient world and almost all of her ancestors were Macedonians royalties.Sponsianus 10:48,
12 October 2007 (UTC)
it does not matter even if she had native egyptian mixture that dont mean shes black either falling into that arguement is falling into a common afrocentric trap and are basically concedeing that ancient egyptians were black folks,which of course when most scientist and egyptologist keep repeating that modern day egyptian represent the varying shades of the egyptians in the most ancient times we would conclude that only a small percentage of ancient egyptians would be considered black and would be from the fringes of southern upper ancient egypt,that is why there is even an arguement about the race of them because most do not pass as black and are called arabs by afrocentrics because most egyptians lack the phenotype of black people,also dont fall into the african origins afrocentric trap because we all have african origins that has been know for years im sure just as i do the ancient egyptians has african origins also but that dont mean they are black just as i am not black,so dont feed the afrocentric trolls--Mikmik2953 (talk) 18:14, 28 January 2008 (UTC)
The article introduces Cleopatra as queen of ancient Egypt, which is true in the common meaning of ancient ("really old"), and (at least according to Wikipedia) in the scholarly meaning of ancient (see Ancient History). The problem is that if you go to Ancient Egypt, the cutoff is listed as Egypt's conquest by Alexander the Great. This seems like a problem to me, since the article is linking to one that considers itself unrelated. If you want to read about the history of Cleopatra's Egypt you have to go to History of Greek and Roman Egypt. I was thinking about just changing the link to the latter, but the whole think seems a little sticky to me. Anyone? Xastic 12:35, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
Message to Merovingian: I'll let your change stand (unless someone else wants the word "millions" added back), but FYI - Yes, millions of mummies. For centuries egyptian mummies were dug up en mass and used for FERTILIZER (yech), and in the late 19th early 20th (I think) it was done using powered earth moving equipment. Every Egyptian tried to be mummified. If he couldn't actually afford that, his family tried to bury them so the hot/dry sands would have the same effect.24.10.102.46 18:42, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
http://www.celticguitarmusic.com/Mlandimperial_itch.htm
The truth in this is neglible to the point of laughable.
While this debate goes on I saw something on tv. A woman mudder investigater found evcidence that may prove that Cleopatra did not attempt suicide. But was murdered by her guard under the orders of Alexander Ceaser himself. Although the investigatter herself believed at one point that Cleopatra did commit suicide. She proved that not to be true.
While this debate has only been fairly popular for about a year now, it is a significant matter that must be better addressed in this article. It was even used as a primary reason on why it should not become a featured article, and still the problem has not been covered in the many months since then. A single, off-handed remark about an alternate theory does not give it much credit, especially considering that there is more evidence to support it than the African-heritage argument that is addressed in more depth in this article.
If it were my work to do, I would certainly make an entire section devoted to the events surrounding her death. It should include at least one paragraph on the many questionable aspects of her "suicide" (in addition to an edited version of what already exists about her death in this article), to include especially that the primary accepted account of her death comes from Plutarch, having written it an entire century after her death, and that there are no known contemporary accounts of her death. Along with this should also be qualifiers appended to any other statement in the article relating to her death denoting that the "suicide" tale is only what is most commonly accepted.
Since I have no history with this article, having never been one of its contributors, perhaps one of you more familiar with it would prefer to make these edits - it's your choice, but something certainly needs to be done. -- Faenor Mornedhel 09:17, 7 January 2006 (UTC)
I believe Augustus murdered Cleopatra. Cleopatra had power, power Augustus wanted. He had the motive, he had the ability. He did it. --66.218.17.115 02:25, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
"Cleopatra and Caesarion visited Rome between 46 BC and 44 BC and were present when Caesar was assassinated." Excuse me if I'm wrong, but I thought that it was Ptolemy XIV that accompanied her to Rome, not Caesarion. Anyone have some pages to back up either Little Caesarion or Ptolemy VIV?
THE ARTICLE DOES NOT ASCRIBE HIM HIS PROPER TITLE, HE WAS KING OF KINGS!!! If he had to die for it, the least we can do is recognize it. Also the article says he was "ruler only in title" -- At Dendera in the releif of Cleopatra and Caesarion she stands BEHIND HIM. BECAUSE THIS IS THE ONLY evidence of the nature of their relationship it must be of greater weight than speculation. Justy saying, she has written in stone her support of him, how can we conjecture otherwise? When he was a child he sat on her lap -- she depicted that too,why is the one acceptable and the other not?-M.James —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 71.52.16.198 (talk) 13:08, August 23, 2007 (UTC)
this section should not exist even the proper section states that it is a delusional theory.~Just keep to the facts not Afro-American theories. ---Pedro 13:28, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
This is a non-debate and a wound to historical truth due to politics. Either this section should be removed, or a section for intelligent design be added immediately to the evolution article. Double standards are hypocritical and do not forward scholarship.
The Romans were not at all fond of her and instituted a progaganda campaign against her during the Octavian/Marcus Antonius final split. If she had been black then they would surely have mentioned it. Darkmind1970 15:20, 12 January 2007 (UTC)
^ Romans incorporated many ethnicities and cultures into their empire. Including Greek, Egyptian, Etruscans, etc. Btw, Egyptians are Semitic related people, while Cleopatra was a Ptolemaic Greek. Intranetusa 00:22, 24 September 2007 (UTC)
IMO the issue is not whether Cleopatra was herself light skinned or dark skinned, but whether we can present the historical debate in an historically rigorous, consistent and informative way in the body of this article. To be blunt, I've never seen the "pro-African" side of the debate even presented in such a fashion in the first place, so I have my doubts. We should also recognize that it will become a lightning rod for revert wars and vandalism pretty quickly.... Geeman 23:01, 12 January 2007 (UTC)
hello i am doing my project on cleo patra sooo who whats to do it for me?
Wow. Why don't you learn to speak English, and then do the project yourself. Do you honestly think that some random person is going to do it for you because you typed in a run-on sentence with terrible spelling that asks them to?
Please correct your spelling, as I am uncertain about what you are referring to. The Macedonian ruling class in Egypt made a point of marrying within it a great deal, to the point where incest became the norm. There is admittedly no evidence of what race one of her grandparents was, but her parents were Macedonian in appearance so there's a very good chance that she was too. Secondly Egyptians of that era were semitic in origin and appearance. And thirdly if she was African in appearance then the Romans for one certainly never mentioned it. Cite your sources and prove your claims please. Darkmind1970 11:09, 19 September 2007 (UTC)
"She was the third daughter of the king Ptolemy XII Auletes"
"as Auletes' oldest child (one older sisters having died)"
So was she the second daughter, or did two older sisters die?
She had two old sisters, the eldest being another Cleopatra, and the other one being named Berenice. They both died.
i would like to know more about cleopatras children where do i look?
She had three sons and one daughter, I believe. Caesarion, Julius Caesar's son; the twins Cleopatra Selene and Alexander Helios; and then her youngest, Ptolemy Philadelphus, the latter three being fathered by Marc Antony. Caesarion was murdered by Octavian, I believe the other three were raised by Octavia, Marc Antony's Roman wife. Cleopatra Selene, I think, married a King, I'm not sure about Cleopatra's two other sons.
Cleopatra Selene, was wed to Juba II, they had a son Ptolemais that was later murdered by Caligula.
Some historians say that Helios and Philadelphus were taken back to rome, but after that it gets murky, some historians say in the first year they 'died from the cold', others say they went to live with Selene and Juba II. I think all of this is false, because there is never a mention of them in rome, they are never wed, never have any kids -- the history becomes too silent. Helios was engaged to Iotape; after octavian conquers Caesar(ion), she is given to one of Herod's sons -- that is one of the reasons I don't think he lived, another historian in the Jourrnal of Roman Studies ww.Tarn also notes that Helios was murdered and gives the political reasons for the necessity.
"However, Caesar refused to make the boy his heir, naming his grand-nephew Octavian instead."
Actually, by Roman law, Ptolemy Caesar (Caesarion) couldn't have been Caesar's heir. Not only was he a bastard, but foreign-born. I think we should replace the said sentence with:
"Because of Roman law, Ptolemy Caesar could not have been made Julius Caesar's heir, even if Julius Caesar had wished it so."
HERE IS THE KICKER -- ROMAN LAW DOES NOT DEFINE LIFE ON EARTH!!! Historian tend to make their assesments of Caesar's proposed action based on roman legal norms. Even if Romans did not accept him, the rest of the world did, he looked just like his father, how can you say he isn't his? Caesar did not ascribe to typical roman norms. He introduced "barbarians" to the senate -- that was not part of roman tradition. He made a golden statue of Cleopatra as Venus Genetrix, and set it in a public place(very much roman tradition)! There is a Historian that records the name of the scribe who took down an order from Caesar that in effect would make it possible for him to marry wives, FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROCURRING AN HEIR. That guy was murdered the same day Caesar was! J. Caesar traces his own descent in the Gens Julii back to Venus. Venus was the mother of the first king of Alba Longa in roman tradition. In his sister Julia's eulogy J. Caesar said:
"...Descended by her mother from Kings, and immortal gods, for the Marcii Rege go back to Ancus Marcius, and the Julii…to Venus. Our stock therefore has at once the sanctity of Kings, whose power is supreme among mortal men, and the claim to reverence which belongs to the Gods who hold sway over Kings themselves. "
Can a man feel this about his sister, and not feel at least the same (if not more) toward his own son? Julius Caesar did wish to make his son his heir, he demonstrated that when he made the statue of Cleopatra as Venus (it's implication is overt). Julius Caesar gave Caesar(ion) religious authority that surpassed the senate. He was actively changing politic when he was assasinated.
That will is False -- M.James —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 71.52.16.198 (talk) 12:55, August 23, 2007 (UTC)
Why are there no pictures of what she actually looked like, according to the coins with her image? Even if the coin images are not perfectly accurate, they're much more so than the romanticized depictions that came later. — BRIAN0918 • 2006-06-04 17:10
A good article (and a very interesting picture of Cleopatra) based on new information from Roman and 19th century sources gives an idea of her ethnic background and appearance: —Preceding unsigned comment added by Graffixguy (talk • contribs) 04:37, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
Not exactly a picture, but I've just uploaded a picture of a statue of Cleopatra to the WIkimedia site. I'm new to all this, so I don't yet know how to point folks to it. The statue is at the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum in San Jose and the placarding seemed to indicate it was a real "period" piece. (Some of their stuff is reproductions, this looked to be "real"). My Username on the media site is "chiefio" (I'm working on getting the same thing here...) and the picture is PD-self and named "DSC_092420.MOD.JPG". (I'm also working on a better naming
convention for pictures I upload ;-) The statue is in a very dark (black) stone. Perhaps
that's part of the "Black Cleopatra" genisis... At any rate, if someone can find the picture
of the statue and if it is found of merit, it might go well in the article. -E. M. Smith (chiefio) 2007-05-12
4.246.3.195 11:36, 13 May 2007 (UTC)
I appreciate this article is primarily about Cleopatra but this line:
IMHO needs further explaination. What part of his behaviour? His marrying Cleoptra? The wars he was waging? What? I guess maybe it's explained better in the Antony article and perhaps eslewhere but IMHO it does need brief explaination here. Nil Einne 16:42, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
For consisency, IMHO we should refer to Augustus as Octavian throughout the whole article. For starters, he was known as Octavian throughout the period discussed in the article I believe. More importantly, suddenly changing just confuses people who don't know the history that well. If you really need to change (AFAIK you don't), then this should be explained the first time it's done. E.g. Octavian, by now known as Augustus... Nil Einne 16:42, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
Cleopatra was the daughter of the King and his own sister that he married to
Help,
I want to thank you for being there and want to know if you people can helpme with my project that im doing on about Cleopatra.....what i need help is that i'm doinh an essay. But if you want to help can you give me some information.... Thank You, Larry Jackson
This section currently sounds like original research because it does not attribute these hypotheses to any person (thus making them sound like the author's alone). They need to be attributed and then cited in order to remain in the article. — Laura Scudder ☎ 04:03, 24 June 2006 (UTC)
A good article (and a very interesting picture of Cleopatra) based on new information from Roman and 19th century sources gives an idea of her ethnic background and appearance: —Preceding unsigned comment added by Graffixguy (talk • contribs) 04:39, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
Well, I don't think she is truly beautiful,an article said in one of her coins it showed that she had a hook nose! and how could she kill her own brothers like wht sh e did! She's acting s bit like a wild animal!
LOL! And teach that poor guy how to spell!
Jeeze, how could ol' Cleo be so inconsiderate? For info on why the image on a coin is not accurate, see COMPUTER RECONSTRUCTION OF WHAT CLEOPATRA LOOKED LIKE. -Pandora958
The coins in question were most likely clumsily re-worked images of Cleopatra's Father Ptolemy XI. Cleopatra was ethnically Macedonian. And there are references that give us a good idea of what she really looked like. For a scholarly article (with references) about Caesar Augustus' Portrait of Cleopatra, visit
How is it possible that the word "nose" isn't even once in the article? Shinobu 09:57, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
I found several instances of vandalism in this article tonight that were not reverted. I fixed those. I'm very tired now and am not able to proofread well so I may have missed others. Perhaps someone else can eyeball the article and see if any vandalism remains. The problem appears to be that some reverts were made, which brought back old vandalism. Otherwise, it's a very nice article. Very informative. --207.69.139.12 05:57, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
I would agree that illustrating the article with coins of Cleopatra would be the most accurate way of presenting an accurate visage.
ok rock on dude. whatever you say. be proud of who you are.
Would anyone object to moving this to plain old Cleopatra? It's clearly a primary use, and Cleopatra redirects here. The current title is kind of silly. john k 21:04, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
It should just be Cleopatra. I doubt even specialists would use 'Cleopatra VII', other than in highly refined debate. Or, to be more correct, should we start refering to Shakespeare's Anthony and Cleopatra VII in future?
What I would really like to know is by what process of assesment is her life considered to be a 'core' biography? Her role in history seems more akin to that of the fictitious Helen of Troy, and she hardly merits top consideration in her own right. If it had not been for Ceasar, Anthony and Octavian I suspect she would have remained as obscure as her predecessors and namesakes.' White Guard 01:42, 2 September 2006 (UTC)
She was the last independent ruler of ancient Egypt. I would add that sometimes legend is as important as actual importance to history. Personally, I think the number of core biographies is overly limited, and that we would be better off if we had a much larger number, but what can you do? At least Cleopatra is genuinely world famous, and unlike Helen of Troy, she actually existed. john k 17:57, 2 September 2006 (UTC)
This is all very true, but she was a foreign ruler of a foreign dynasty of an Egypt in decay. Who springs to mind when you think of the high noon of ancient Egypt? Surely Rameses the Great or even Akhenaten, not poor old Cleo, no matter how notorious! White Guard 23:35, 2 September 2006 (UTC)
Well, what can you do? My basic feeling is that "core biographies" should be of people that readers would expect to find biographies of in an encyclopedia, an issue which is generally easier to determine than who the "most important" people are, which is subjective. john k 08:28, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
H..mm, yes; I've had a look at the 'core' list and have to confess that there are some people even I have never heard of! All very eclectic. But we are getting too far from the point. Surely 'most people' have heard of Rameses? Perhaps I have not yet understood the logic behind 'core' biographies, but Cleopatra seems a figure of little real significance-an historical epiphenomenon, if you like. What biographies most people would expect to find would, I suspect, be a list with very little weight indeed. White Guard 19:44, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
The list of people that the most people have heard of is not the same as the list of the people that most people would expect to find in an encyclopedia. Whether or not, say, Dan Brown is more widely read than Charles Dickens, I think most people, in general, would more expect to find an encyclopedia article on Dickens. But this is all irrelevant. The core biographies is project is a project, as far as I'm concerned, to identify fairly important people and improve articles on them. Given that the basic goal is to improve articles, I don't particularly see why it matters. Beyond that, what about moving the article? Cleopatra VII of Egypt is deeply unnecessary. Cleopatra VII or Cleopatra would either one of them do. john k 21:22, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
Yes, of course: go for it. White Guard 22:11, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
I think I will move it to Cleopatra VII for the moment, as I think that should be wholly uncontroversial. Then I might do an RM to move it to Cleopatra, depending on how I feel. But this will probably happen tomorrow. john k 23:37, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
This is probably a stupid question but I am confused... why do historians refer to her as Cleopatra VII? Wasn't she the only Cleopatra to ever actually hold the throne alone? I know other Cleopatras were wives of kings, but consorts aren't usually given a number (right?). I think I am missing something.
BBC.co.uk History states that her name was Cleopatra, Thea Philopator, Philadelphus, Thea Neotera, Regina Regum Filiorum Regum. -- Pichote (talk) 12:38, 28 April 2008 (UTC)
Sorry, newbie here. I don't really find the "what did Cleopatra look like?" section very useful, and I would suggest deletion - its source material doesn't back up the claim that Cleopatra was more manipulative and intelligent than she was beautiful, as if these two qualities can be compared in the first place, and while it may be fitting to mention her reputation for beauty, making an assertion one way or another seems unprovable. Also, this whole seems to have been intended to dodge the moribund debate between egyptologists and afrologists. Seastreet 23:48, 1 September 2006 (UTC)
but there should be some records about about "how the lady look like?"..... how is this possible that nobody has found ant ancient document about how she looked like??
Cleopatra was indeed ethnically Macedonian. And there are references that give us a good idea of what she really looked like. For a scholarly article (with references) about Caesar Augustus' Portrait of Cleopatra, visit Graffixguy (talk) 11:43, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
A good article (and a very interesting picture of Cleopatra) based on new information from Roman and 19th century sources gives an idea of her ethnic background and appearance:
Does the article mention this?
Also, why is there the greek spelling and not the macedonian spelling?
Pece Kocovski 02:58, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
You are quite right; and though what you have written is-or should be-blindingly obvious, the challenge to ignorance is never pointless. White Guard 05:21, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
Cleopatra was indeed ethnically Macedonian. And there are references that give us a good idea of what she really looked like. For a scholarly article (with references) about Caesar Augustus' Portrait of Cleopatra, visit Graffixguy (talk) 11:44, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
'WAKE UP''''
Enough with this ethnic Macedonian and Macedonian-Greek thing. We are talking about the ancient times and not 20th century politics and whether there is a "Macedonian ethnicity" today, which has nothing to do with the ancient Macedon. Now, nobody says "ETHNIC SPARTAN" or "ETHNIC THESSALIAN" or "ETHINC THESPROTIAN" (the last two in case somebody says that Macedonia was not a city-state like Sparta, or some silly comment like that). Ancient Macedonia was greek at the Hellenistic times, even if by a miracle it is proven at some point that there was a Macedonian language that would have been extincted centuries ago at the time of Cleopatra. This cannot be disputed by anyone. Thank you. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 129.12.231.253 (talk) 08:45, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
Do we really want a fuzzy photo of a waxwork? Paul B 20:44, 1 October 2006 (UTC)
I've started an approach that may apply to Wikipedia's Core Biography articles: creating a branching list page based on in popular culture information. I started that last year while I raised Joan of Arc to featured article when I created Cultural depictions of Joan of Arc, which has become a featured list. Recently I also created Cultural depictions of Alexander the Great out of material that had been deleted from the biography article. Since cultural references sometimes get deleted without discussion, I'd like to suggest this approach as a model for the editors here. Regards, Durova 17:05, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
Recentally in the Month of september, on discovery the channel or history channel. A show premeired that put new light on the life of cleopatra.
New evidence shows that she was not the suicidal type, and that it is believed the snake thing comes from the fact that cleopatra is often though as the incarnation of the god Isis. Isis was depictied with a cobra, which is one of the snakes thought to have been used. in alternative to a asp. Also a Asp is to painful of a death, and she was not likely to use it as a choice. Snakes also only inject venom 50% of the time, thus making it not reliable. Yami 16:32, 19 October 2006 (UTC)
I edited the article to best fit other cases. The article is not neutrual and shows only one side of a complex story
This is off a Discovery Channel Site
http://www.discoverychannelasia.com/ontv_egyptweek/death_cleopatra/index.shtml
The Mysterious Death of Cleopatra tackles a cold case of regal proportions. Cleopatra inherited the throne of Egypt at age 17, before dodging assassination to rule for more than 20 years. Her life is filled with the enigmatic and the unexplained… as is her untimely death. For two millennia, only one cause has been recorded – suicide by snakebite. Now, cold case criminal profiler Pat Brown and a team of experts that includes an underwater archaeologist and a toxicologist, are re-examining the circumstances of her alleged suicide. Using techniques of 21st century criminal investigations, they reconstruct the 2,000-year-old death scene (which is now submerged beneath Alexandria harbor) and reveal the sinister power games that led to her death. Yami 16:40, 19 October 2006 (UTC)
I have heard that the Discovery Channel aired an image of Cleopatra that was a computer reconstruction. It was made from reconstructing the likeness from the various images of her on ancient coins and statues. I also read that Goddio's divers retrieved ancient coins which were used in a computer generated image of Cleopatra. I have tried in vain to locate a pictures of this images. Does any one know where it can be found? GWr —Preceding
The coins in question were most likely clumsily re-worked images of Cleopatra's Father Ptolemy XI. Cleopatra was indeed ethnically Macedonian. And there are references that give us a good idea of what she really looked like. For a scholarly article (with references) about Caesar Augustus' Portrait of Cleopatra, visit Graffixguy (talk) 11:48, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
A good article (and a very interesting picture of Cleopatra) based on new information from Roman and 19th century sources gives an idea of her ethnic background and appearance: —Preceding unsigned comment added by Graffixguy (talk • contribs) 04:45, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
unsigned comment added by 71.79.98.90 (talk) 00:25, 3 December 2006
It was customary for the image of a female ruler on a coin to be made to look ugly; this signified that she was a powerful ruler. For some reason, if the woman was portrayed as being beautiful it seemed to have detracted from her competency. Talk about sexist... kings were supposed to be physically handsome. An ugly king was looked down upon. Anyway, also considering the fact that egyptian art used cookie-cutter images of queens, any computer reconstructions would not be accurate, and probably very ugly. I doubt egyptologists have enough data to even attempt, and it would be foolish to try. -Pandora958
The coins in question were most likely clumsily re-worked images of Cleopatra's Father Ptolemy XII. Cleopatra was indeed ethnically Macedonian. And there are references that give us a good idea of what she really looked like. For a scholarly article (with references) about Caesar Augustus' Portrait of Cleopatra, visit Graffixguy (talk) 11:49, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
"Cleopatra and Caesarion visited Rome between 47 BC and 44 BC and were present when Caesar was assassinated on 15 March, 44 BC. Before or just after the assassination she returned to Egypt."
If they were present when Caesar was murdered, they can't have returned to Egypt before it happened...
There is quite a lot of vandalism on this article lately. I've requested semi-protection. ArthurWeasley 22:37, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
the royal diaries
daghter of the nile
by kristiana gregory
3 januarius, morning
At literature: other The Royal Diaries: Cleopatra: Daughter of the Nile, Egypt, 57 B.C. by Kristiana Gregory (ficitionlized story of Cleopatra's childhood and _adolecense_) (adolescense is the correct spelling, I don't have an account)
In the article it says, "It is said that Cleopatra took her own life on August 12, 30 BC, allegedly by means of an asp."
in the Biographipcal summary on the side of the page under her photograph it says the date of death is November 30 BC. This is either incorrect or written in a confusing manner...
Jemusser 05:25, 28 December 2006 (UTC)jemusser
Some historians were relieved that it confirmed Caesar's interest in women, despite tales of his adventures in Bythinia and elsewhere
I don't believe that this needs to be in the Cleopatra article, whether or not historians were "relieved" about Caesar's sexuality does not seem to belong in an encylopedic entry on Cleopatra. It also doesn't feel very NPOV to me. Nautafoeda 05:24, 6 January 2007 (UTC)
In the sentence, "Her unions with her brothers produced no children: it is possible that they were never consummated; in any case, they were not close", the phrase "they were not close" is not clear. Since the word "close" has several meanings that could be applied in this particular sentence, it leaves confusion. One needs to know if they lived close to each other, had good relationships with each other, were genetically clse (??), etc. 24.238.230.216 15:08, 19 January 2007 (UTC)
Okay. This page says:
Now if we actually go to Caesarion's page we see this date instead:
So which one is right? Obviously someone has not checked their facts. I'm tempted to remove both until a date is actually known. If it is questionable, that is to say, if there is still an ongoing debate of the date, then it should state so clearly in both articles. Thoughts? If no one responds, then I'll remove them in a few days. MagnoliaSouth (talk) 03:06, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
The description of the intrigues of Cleopatra's sisters is contradictory.--DocGov 14:20, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
How so? -Pandora958
i am not knowledgeable in this subject but i don't see a reason to have a link here (in the anthony and cleopatra section) to the donations of alexandria article that just redirects back here. i am removing said link. if this is wrong, please reverse -- and explain why. my best guess is that at one point these were two separate articles. uri budnik 21:46, 1 April 2007 (UTC)
I noticed a strangeness in the Mark Antony and Cleopatra section of the article. It begins:
In 42 BC, Four years later, in 37 BC, Antony visited Alexandria again en route to make war with the Parthians. He renewed his relationship with Cleopatra, and from this point on Alexandria would be his home.
This was, however, the first time Mark Antony is mentioned in the article, so if his relationship is being "renewed" when and how did it begin? Also, the article begins "In 42 BC," then abruptly stops, as if this section originally began discussing 42 BC when the relastionship first began but that section was cut. I couldn't find the old information in revisions, does anyone know what was removed? As it is now the article is confusing in this section. --Atamasama 00:22, 4 May 2007 (UTC)
I am confused by this article's account of Arsinoe's involvement in the civil war, when Cleopatra was briefly ousted by Pothinus & Co. According to what I've read, Arsinoe was helping Pothinus, and after Caesar and Cleopatra crushed the rebellion, she was exiled. This may be wrong, but I definately read this in Margaret George's Memoirs of Cleopatra, and I would trust her extensive research. Furthermore, this is not the only place I have seen this, though I can't think of where else off the top of my head. Somebody should look into this. It is very different than this article's account. -Pandora958
I am deleting the paragraph as it has unnecessary and strange information. Cleopatra was not an “ancient Macedonian name” as it was not “ancient Athenian”, or “ancient Corinthian name”! It is a Greek name. Further more the article already states that she was daughter of Ptolemy XII (Ptolemy XII Neos Dionysos Philopator Philadelphos1 also known as Ptolemy Nothus and Ptolemy Auletes, ). Cleopatra certainly did not have a nickname (philopator) but it was her formal name (to be more precise it was a title). Therefore I am removing that information. If the etymology of her name and title in Greek is needed then a new paragraph should be added which already exist in the page Cleopatra (Seleukosa 17:48, 14 June 2007 (UTC))
If anyone disagrees with the deletion should explain me why. Revert with out the use of the talk page will cause another revert! Regards (Seleukosa 17:48, 14 June 2007 (UTC))
Thanks for your reply Warshy. The name Cleopatra is a Greek name. In every dictionary you will find it listed as a typical Greek name. It is NOT a unique Greek name from the kingdom of Macedon , or unique Athenian, or unique Spartan name. Although "ancient Macedonian" entails that it was from a Greek region it is stated in such a way that it implies that it wasn’t Greek. Further more the name Cleopatra was used especially in the Greek and Hellenistic Royalty and not only in the Greek kingdom of Macedon. Read The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. Bianchi, Robert Steven, et al. Cleopatra’s Egypt: Age of the Ptolemies. Brooklyn, 1988. At the beginning of the article it is clearly stated that she was the daughter of Ptolemy XII (Ptolemy XII Neos Dionysos Philopator Philadelphos1 also known as Ptolemy Nothus and Ptolemy Auletes, ) and I considered it a repeated information. If you want you can add his father name as Ptolemy XII Auletes but as you can see his title is really big. Her title was "philopator" which means "Loves her father" but she also had several other titles such as "θεά Φιλοπατώρ" (Goddess Philopator) after 51BC. After 48BC, associated as senior ruler with her brother Ptolemy XIV her title became “the Father-loving and Sibling-loving Gods”, “Θεοί Φιλοπάτορες και Φιλάδελφοι” In late 37 BC her title became “the younger father-loving and country-loving goddess” : “Θεά Νεωτέρα Φιλοπατόρ και Φιλόπατρις”, proclaimed "queen of kings" at the Donations of Alexandria autumn 34BC. It is not necessary to add all this information about her titles unless a short description is given in the beginning of the article! But the bottom line remains that Cleopatra is a known Greek name, not unique in Macedon and of course the title “Philopator” is also Greek which I also don’t see everywhere mentioned. Furthermore the information about the meaning of the name Cleopatra exists in the Cleopatra (disambiguation) page. A small expalnation can be added in this page also but certanly then Title “Philopator” was not a nickname. Thank you for your time (Seleukosa 19:07, 14 June 2007 (UTC))
Warshy you did not understand my arguments. I did not categorical distinct Greek and ancient Macedonia. On the contrary. The ancient kingdom of macedon was a Greek kingdom! I only said that Cleopatra is a known Greek name and not a unique Macedonian Greek name. (Seleukosa 21:10, 14 June 2007 (UTC))
~Warshy, I think you're missing Seleukosa's point. "Cleopatra" and even "Ptolemy" were Greek names regardless of which city states of ancient Greece used them. So, whether Macedonian or Athenian or Corinthian - the names are still Greek, just like Philipos - hence the language used in all city states. ApplesnPeaches~ —Preceding unsigned comment added by 148.195.135.34 (talk) 03:52, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
In the article it says she died on 30 November 30 BC. Is this right? I always thought she died on 12 August 30 BC. That's what's it says on the 12 August and 30 BC pages. --Philip Stevens 18:30, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
I know we've probably all heard that Cleopatra might have had red hair, but does anyone know of a credible source to give merit or denounce this popular thought? Satiravelvet 09:34, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
I was told that she didn't have red hair, but that Egyptians often dyed their hair red using the Henna. ~ApplesnPeaches ~
Cleopatra was ethnically Macedonian. And there are references that give us a good idea of what she really looked like. For a scholarly article (with references) about Caesar Augustus' Portrait of Cleopatra, visit Graffixguy (talk) 11:52, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
A good article (and a very interesting picture of Cleopatra) based on new information from Roman and 19th century sources gives an idea of her ethnic background and appearance: —Preceding unsigned comment added by Graffixguy (talk • contribs) 04:42, 24 January 2008 (UTC)
Seeing as how Cleopatra Selene II has her own page, I decided to add her link in Cleopatra VII's info box. Satiravelvet 09:53, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
I thought I'd point out that the article talks about Cleopatra dying from snakes in a fig basket, while popular art and media has her applying the snake to her bosom. This should be explained somehow as it makes the article inconsistent. -Rolypolyman 19:51, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
In my reply please read the following
The snakebite death story is only a legend, it should be menetion is unlikly she died by snake bite at all, Cleopatra's Death it believe to caused by Octivan, by some experts.
1. Pr. El-Abbadi., said all the sources on her death at best are 2nd hand sources. The 2 most prominent, written a century after her death, are from Plutarch (wrote about it more then a 100 years later, Plutarch was not born until 75 years after Cleopatra's death.) & Cassius Dio. Bothsay she was imprisoned in her mausoleum on the day of her death, & that she met her end at the hands of a cobra. . .they do differ on how the snake was smuggled in.
- Plutarch: Basket of figs - Cassius: A pitcher.
2. Plutarch also said that he didn't know how she really died. “Nobody knows".
3. Plutarch proposed an alternate suicide method, poison hidden in a hollow comb that she carried in her hair.
4. Cleopatra would have had to feign an unusual appetite for figs in order to justify to Octavian's guards a basket big enough to conceal it. Or pitcher then a big snake.
5. When the guards returned Queen Cleopatra was dead and there was no snake (mysterious). With any suicide there is always the body & the implement of death which in this case was not there, because the died person can removed the implement of death.
6. The snake story story might be borrowed from a myth surrounding Isis. Another, more poetic, is the symbolic power of the cobra as an emblem of pharaonic divinity — an apt metaphor for her death in the coils of international politics. Either way, the snake would have been well up to the job.
7. It's not that a single cobra would not have had enough. "There's a misconception," says Professor Warrell, "that snakes can exhaust the supply of venom with one strike.
Pr. Warrell: a poison expert. The Egyptian Cobra releases venom causing toxins to block transmition of nerve impulses. A progressive paralysis results. beginning with the eyes then the chest, & stomach. The person dies of suffocation. Dr. Warrell confirmed that 3 people could die of a snakebite, but that is highly unlikely because not every bite from the snake carries venom in it. The venom takes a good 2 hours to kill its victim. This would mean that from the time she sent the suicide note to Ocatvian & the time it took for the soldiers to get back to her she should have been found alive, not died.
The three essentials of crime are motive, means and opportunity. In imperial abundance, Octavian had the lot.
- Motive: Mary Anthony, & Cleopatra's children through Mary Anthony, plus maybe most important Cleopatra’s son with Caesar. She was the treat to 'his' empire, she wanted control, she was a masterful controller too meaning: treat to his rule. Ptolemy expert Nicole Douek says, “The child is the biggest threat of all because he’s the direct descendant of Julius Caesar, who had no other children.” Cleopatra & Caesar’s son was later murdered by Octavian [this is a point that we all tend to brush over, but perhaps needs to be examined more thoroughly.]
- The cover up motive: Prevented a bigger chance of rebellion.
- Ability: The men at his disposal it’s very likely that both Plutarch and Cassius Dio got their accounts from Octavian’s memoirs. Therefore he had the ability to influence written accounts. - Opportunity: He had control of the crime scene. The Queen was said by Romans to a only as a seductress, & diva.
It looks like this article was vandalized by a practical joker, as internal inconsistencies alerted me that Cleopatra (said early in the article to have had "four children, one by Caesar (Caesarion) and three by Antony (Cleopatra Selene II, Alexander Helios, and Ptolemy Philadelphus)") was rather unlikely to have had TEN surviving children. And even more unlikely to have had nine of them with Antony -- all of whom "were spared and taken back to Rome" -- in the limited time Cleopatra and Antony had together!
I spent a couple of hours trolling through reputable sources, and not one of them mentions the "nine children" business; they all stick to the known offspring with Antony -- the twins, and Philadelphus. I also note that of the links given in the "Issue" sidebar -- to Caesarion, Alexander Helios, Cleopatra Selene II, Ptolemy Philadelphus, Tryphanea, Berenice, Ptolemy Philometor, Ptolemy Philopater, Antiochus, and Mithridates -- only the first four go to pages on children of Cleopatra. I'm removing the other children as spurious. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.63.72.201 (talk) 06:29, 9 October 2007 (UTC)
And rightly so. Good spotting.Sponsianus 10:50, 12 October 2007 (UTC)
Hi.
The article is closed, but if you find it important, you could incude this data on the sub-title "Films":
The first Portuguese-spoken movie about Cleopatra was Cleópatra Sétima (Cleopatra the Seventh), directed and produced by Julio Bressane. Although the movie was presented, out of competition, in the 64th Venice International Film Festival, it will be only released commercially in 2008. In this version, filmed and produced in Brazil, Cleopatra is played by the Brazilian actress Alessandra Negrini.
Sources:
Portuguese Wikipedia -----> http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cle%C3%B3patra_%28filme%29
Internet movie database --> http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0488515/
Thanks. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 189.24.71.26 (talk) 02:16, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
The article still contains inconsistent information on the number of Cleopatra's children. The introduction says "In all, Cleopatra had four children", which according to the "Nine children?!" section above appears to be correct. However, the section on Cleopatra and Marc Antony says "He and Cleopatra had four more children, including Ptolemy Philadelphus". Joriki (talk) 04:12, 23 December 2007 (UTC)
Hi Joriki! Cleopatra had all in all four known children: Caesarion with Julius Caesar; the twins Alexander (Helios) and Cleopatra (Selene), and finally Ptolemy Philadelphus with Marcus Aurelius. The following page (look under Cleopatra VII) is probably the best online resource for the Ptolemies. This fact is by no means contested, it is well known. Best regards Sponsianus (talk) 00:17, 24 December 2007 (UTC)
what kind of water did cleopatra use to take her bath? did she ever use magnets in her water.... i reallly wonder.... 172.141.198.186 (talk) 17:51, 1 January 2008 (UTC)
Ancient sources like Plutarch mention that she was not actually physically attractive as we tend to think today, but she had a very charming personallity, she was a capturing speaker, very pleasant as a person and a character. I believe all debates on whether she used this or that beauty tip have no ground. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.74.133.97 (talk) 13:16, 31 May 2008 (UTC)
I was looking at the article and noticed that it completely avoids the subject of what happened to her body after she died.--Marhawkman (talk) 00:59, 7 February 2008 (UTC)
Octavian supposedly allowed Cleopatra a traditional burial to appease the Alexandrians. She was said to be interred with Antony, but the location of the tomb (and likely that of many other Ptolemaic monarchs) was lost over time. A popular theory is that the tomb sunk to the bottom of the Alexandrian harbor with the majority of the royal quarters during a series of earthquakes centuries ago, but no one truly knows for certain. Tathunen (talk) 01:09, 4 March 2008 (UTC)
How do you do a refrence? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.106.169.179 (talk) 23:56, 28 February 2008 (UTC)
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.