Read Cleopatra: Last Queen of Egypt Online
Authors: Joyce Tyldesley
Tags: #History, #Ancient, #Egypt, #Biography & Autobiography, #Presidents & Heads of State
co-regency with Cleopatra VII
5
,
97–8
,
101
undistinguished reign 347
death
102
,
108
,
110
,
237
Ptolemy XV Caesar Theos Philopator Philometor (Father-Loving, Mother-Loving God): ‘Caesarion’ (Little Caesar), King of Egypt (44–30)
8
birth of
100
,
109
,
121
and coinage
61
,
118
,
246
n
18
,
250
n
21
paternity issue
100–103
,
108
in Rome
104
not mentioned in Caesar’s will
107
Caesarion becomes Ptolemy XV
108
rules Egypt alongside his mother, Cleopatra VII
5
,
102
,
142–3
,
168–9
,
237
eighteen-day rule alone
198
,
237
betrayed and executed
122
,
198
,
237
Ptolemy Apion
231
Ptolemy Ceraunos
25
,
222
,
225
Ptolemy Eupator ([Born] of a Noble Father)
230
,
231–2
Ptolemy family
considered peripheral beings
3
foreigners in Egypt
3
self-preservation
219
survival of the ruthless as a cardinal rule
218–19
reforms by
15
appear traditionally Egyptian
16
use of the name ‘Cleopatra’
23–4
serial polygamy
27
fond of a good joke
156
Ptolemy Memphites (of Memphis)
231
,
232
Ptolemy of Cyprus, King of Cyprus (80–58)
35
,
190
,
234
,
235
Ptolemy of Mauretania
201
,
202
,
238
Ptolemy Philadelphos (Brother/Sister-Loving) (son of Cleopatra VII)
163
,
168
,
169
,
199
,
238
Q
queen consorts (‘king’s great wives’)
26
,
39
,
112
queens (‘king’s wives’)
26
,
69
,
111
queens regnant (‘female kings’)
26
R
Rabirius Postumus, Gaius
34
,
37–8
,
52
,
53
racism, institutional
19–20
Ramesses II ‘the Great’
32
,
39
,
91
,
92
,
121
,
129
,
244
n
20
Ramesses III
189
Raphia, battle of (217)
226
,
227
Rat-tawi (Female Sun of the Two Lands)
118
,
119
Re (sun god)
41
,
43
,
67
,
91
,
111
,
113
,
131
,
132
,
193
Red Sea
181
,
182
Renenutet (goddess of the harvest)
193–4
Rhakhotis (Ra-Kedet)
72
,
76
,
79
Rhea, Queen
25
Rhodes
35
,
158
Rhodon (Caesarion’s tutor)
198
Roman Civil War
48
,
52
,
175
,
236
Roman law
47
,
170
Romans
prevent Alexandria’s fall to the Syrians
229
annexation of Cyprus (58)
235
lunar and Julian calendars
xiv
Cleopatra makes personal alliances with
4
Octavian keen to flatter them
27
Rome
164
,
165
Ptolemy VI flees to (164)
229
Ptolemy VIII’s friendship with
230–31
legal claim to Egypt
11
,
33
,
233–4
disciplined strength of
2
a greedy, ever-expanding military nation
33
constant need for grain
33
Auletes bribes senators
34
‘first triumvirate’
34
,
243–4
n
17
sanctuary of Isis
68
celebrations on Caesar’s return (46)
103–4
Cleopatra VII in
104
,
105–6
second triumvirate
143
,
243–4
n
17
Octavian erodes support for Antony in
158
Egyptian culture invades Rome
203–4
Rome
(BBC television series)
258
n
15
Rosetta Stone
20
,
228
Roxanne (Alexander the Great’s Sogdian (Iranian) wife)
220
royal cults
38
,
133–4
,
224
royal family
15–16
,
24
,
25–6
,
28
,
82
,
133
Rubicon
47
Rullus, Publius Servillius
34
S
sacred rams
135–6
Sadalas of Thrace
177
St Peter’s Square, Vatican City
91
Sais (Sa el-Hagar)
71
,
91
Sakkara desert cemetery
70
,
129
,
130–31
Sakkara step pyramid
102
Salvius
50
,
51
Samos festival of music and drama
174
Samosata (Samsat)
160
Samothrace
225
Samson, Julia:
Nefertiti and Cleopatra
218
San Pietro e Marcellino, Church of, Via Labicana
68
Sardanapalus
197
Scarpus, Lucius Pinarius
181
,
184
scribes
15
,
19
Sekhmet (lion-headed goddess)
113
Selene
172
Seleucid empire
77
,
222
Seleucos (husband of Berenice IV)
36
,
235–6
Seleucos I
222
Seleucos (one of Cleopatra’s servants)
188
Seleucos (unsuccessful defender of Pelusium)
184
Semele
12
Semiramis
208
Senate House, Rome: statue of Victory in
204
Seneca
140
Septimus, Lucius
50
,
51
Serapeum (temple of Serapis)
89
,
90
,
130
Alexandria
168
,
225
Koptos
90
Memphite, Sakkara necropolis
101
,
130–31
,
142
,
161
ibis shrine of Thoth
136
Rome
90
Serapion, governor of Cyprus
143–4
,
149
,
154
,
155