Read Cleopatra the Great Online
Authors: Joann Fletcher
117 âwalnut and rue at the start of the meal counter all poisons'. Galen, in Wilkms and Hill 2006, p.236.
117 âthe only sober man who ever tried to wreck the Constitution'. Suetonius,
Caesar
53, Graves trans., p.32.
117 ânot even his enemies denied that he drank abstemiously', Suetonius, Caesar 53, Graves trans., p.32.
117 âhe often feasted with her until dawn'. Suetonius,
Caesar
52, Graves trans., p.32.
118 âslay our cruel mistress in her very bed . . . take Caesar's life'. Lucan,
Civil War
10.373-375, Duff trans., p.619.
118 âit was possible that the blood of Caesar might be shed over the king's drinking cups and his head fall upon the table'. Lucan,
Civil War
10.421-424, Duff trans., p.621-3.
118 âa busy listening fellow whose excessive timidity made him inquisitive into everything . . . Caesar, upon the first intelligence of it, set a guard upon the hall where the feast was kept and killed Pothinus'. Plutarch,
Caesar
, Dryden trans., p.596.
118 âhe burnt all those ships and the rest that were in the docks'. Caesar,
Civil Wars
III.Ill, Peskett trans., p.357; evidence that Caesar did not destroy
Great Library in Empereur 2002, p.43.
120 âsacred emblems'. Caesar, Alexandrian War 32, in Way trans., p.63.
121 âJulius Caesar made a pillar of brass for the Jews at Alexandria and declared publicly that they were citizens of Alexandria'. Josephus,
Antiq.
xiv.188, in Davis 1951, p.99; also
Cont. Ap
ii.37, in Davis 1951, p.99.
121 âthe elder of the two boys â the late king â being now no more, Caesar assigned the kingdom to the younger one and to Cleopatra, the elder of the two daughters, who had remained his loyal adherent'. Caesar,
Alexandrian War
33, Way trans., p.63.
121 âaccording to Egyptian rites'. Southern 2001, p.123.
121 âfell in love with her, married her and had a son with her'. John of Nikiou, in el-Daly 2005, p.132.
121 Chalcedony intaglio with Caesar's image in Grant 1972, pp.81-2.
Chapter 5
125 âcould have been scarcely more than a day trip'. Hughes-Hallett 1990, p. 19.
125 âare related more particularly in my Egyptian history'. Appian,
Roman History
11.90, White trans., p.393. 125 âthrough the whole country, and back to Memphis where he attended the performance of religious festivities and was on that occasion escorted by his nobles, his wives, and his royal children'. Reymond and Barns 1977, p.13.
125 âascended the Nile with 400 ships, exploring the country in company with Cleopatra and generally enjoying himself with her'. Appian,
Roman History
11
.90, White trans., p.393.
126 âsaloons for dining parties, with berths, and with all the other conveniences of living'. Athenaeus,
Deipnosophists
V.204, Gulick trans., pp.425-7.
126 âbulged as they ascended, and the drums differed, one being black and the other white, placed alternately. Some of their capitals were circular . . . resembling rose blossoms slightly opened . . . calyxes of water-lilies and the fruit of freshly-budded date-palms'. Athenaeus,
Deipnosophists
V
.206
, in Gulick trans., p.431.
126 âimmense and superb vessels with rooms and gardens and fountains, ornamented with marbles and precious metals and rare woods, all shining with gold and purple'.
Antiquity
1927 (b), p.221; see also Carlson 2002.
127 Cleopatra's purple sails in Plutarch
Antony
26-27, Dryden trans., p.757 and Pliny,
Natural History
XIX.V.22, Loeb trans., p.435.
128 âgod's beloved and friend of the King'. Stela BM.EA.147, in Lichtheim 1980 p.61 and Reymond 1981, pp.165-77.
128 âthe Ox Mneuis kept in a sanctuary as a god'. Strabo in Lindsay 1963, p.7.
128 âa display of vain toil with nothing pleasing or picturesque about it'. Strabo in Lindsay 1963, p.7.
129 âpleased with the Pyramids'. Milne 1916 (b), p.p77-78.
129 âevery person who is Greek shall worship the son of Ptah, Imouthes'. Witt 1971, p.156.
129 âlarge and populous, ranks next after Alexandria, and is made up of mixed races like those who have settled together at Alexandria. Lakes stretch before the city and palaces'. Strabo in Lindsay 1963, pp.8-9.
129 Memphis temple where Isis âpassed from among mankind' in Witt 1971, p.101.
130 âthe altars where incense is offered to the sacred Cow of Memphis'. Ovid,
Art of Love
III, Lewis May trans., p.94.
130 âthe bull Apis is kept in a sort of sanctuary, regarded as a god. His forehead and certain other parts of his body are marked with white, but the rest is black, and it is by these marks that they always choose the bull suitable for the succession after the death of the one holding the honour. Before his sanctuary lies a court, in which there is another sanctuary allocated to the bull's mother'. Strabo, in Lindsay 1963, p.8.
130 âthe bull with the beautiful horns . . . standing sideways by him, it licked his robe'. Palatine Anthology 7.7hh in Vasunias 2001, p.299.
130 âpopping and hissing noises'. Pinch 1994, p.164; alliterative texts in Watterson 1979; alchemy furnace described by Zosimus of Panopolis (Akhmim) in Pinch 1994, p.169.
131 âsitting at meal and spending a pleasant time while assisting at festivals of all the gods and goddesses'. BM.886, in Reymond 1981, p.149.
131 âelegant and decorated ... its floor decorated with genuine lapis and genuine turquoise. There was a great deal of furniture in it, which was covered with royal linen, and there were numerous gold cups on the sideboard . . . incense was put on the brazier, and perfume was brought'. Pap. Cairo 30646, trans., Tait in Rowlandson (ed.) 1998, pp.364-5.
131 âa noble resplendent of possessions of every kind. To me belongs a harem of fair maidens'. BM.886, in Reymond 1981, p.149.
131 Taimhotep claimed âI was pregnant by him 3 times but did not bear a male child, only 3 daughters' on stela BM.EA.147, in Lichtheim 1980, pp.59-65, Reymond 1981, pp.165-77.
131 âfluid of conception' and Arab pharmacopoeia in Dunand and Zivie-Coche 2004, p.313.
131 âwho gives a son to him who has none'. Reymond 1981, p.175.
131 Ptolemaic bull statues Louvre N.390 in Louvre 1981, p.XI, Cleveland 1969.118 in Berman 1999, p.466; statue of Ptolemy IX identified by Maehler 1983, p.10.
132 âKnow that Hesat is Isis!'. Pap. Zen. Pestman 50, in Rowlandson (ed.) 1998, p.49.
132 âits development for it alone is planted with olives, of which there are many large trees bearing fine fruit'. Strabo 17.1.35, in Alston 1995, p.17; for Caesar considering scheme for Rome, see Seton-Williams 1978, p.10.
132 âfrom every shivering fit and fever'. Scheidel 2001, p.77.
132 Fayum stela Louvre E.27113 in Rowlandson (ed.) 1998, p.38, Brooklyn 1988, p.189.
132 Hymns in Dunand and Zivie-Coche 2004, p.233; Cleopatra's buildings in Maehler 1983, p.7; crocodile burials in Chaveau 2133, p.108; temple crocodile in Houlihan 1996, p.119.
133 âputting rings made of glass or gold into its ears and bracelets round its front feet'. Herodotus, II. 69, de Selincourt trans., p.156.
133 âmake ready guest-chambers and landing-stages and presents, and to take every care that he should be satisfied'. Pap. Tebtunis 33 in Milne 1916(b), p.78.
133 âfed on grain and bits of meat and wine, which are always offered to it by visiting foreigners . . . we came upon the creature as it lay on the edge of the lake and when the priests went up to it some of them opened its mouth and another put the cake in, then the meat, and poured the honey-mixture down'. Strabo in Lindsay 1963, p.10.
133 Crocodile handlers in Pliny,
Natural History
VIII.38.92-93, trans., pp.67-9; statue BM.GR.1805.7-3.6 in Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, p.339.
133 âWet-nurse of the Crocodile'. Tiradritti 1998, p.14.
134 âa satirical reference to Cleopatra VII of Egypt'. BM.GR.Q.100, Johns 1989, fig.91, p.110.
134 âa large statue of Serapis, 9 cubits high, made of smaragdus'.
Natural History
Pliny XXXVII.76, Loeb trans., p.225.
135 âa mixture of religious buildings in traditional Egyptian style rubbing shoulders with the classically designed public buildings that defined the Greek polis â the bath complex, the gymnasium and the theatre. But on leaving the centre, one would have moved into a large and dirty Egyptian village showing comparatively little change from previous eras'. Mon-tserrat 1996, p.80.
136 Greek graffiti seen in 1824 âat which time they had not been visited by any modern traveller'. Gardner Wilkinson in Davies 1903, p.3; dog cemetery in Kemp 2006, p.22.
137 âonly by loud screaming can one lead one another's way'. Ibn Gubayr in Arnold 1999, p. 164.
137 âTo Theon. Let the relevant persons be told that the temple of Isis built on behalf of our well-being by Kallimachos the military commander south of Ptolemais is to be tax-free and inviolable together with the houses built around it as far as the wall of the city. Let it be done', based on van Minnen 2003, p.43.
137 âremarkable structure of solid stone'. Strabo in Lindsay 1963, p.11.
137 âMemnonion'. Kemp in Rutherford 2003, p.174.
138 âthe gods in Abydos'. Rutherford 2003, p.179.
138 âto my mind, she is too short'. Eady 1983, p.17.
138 Osiris' rites in Herodotus' 11.62, de Selincourt trans., p.153 and in Plutarch, see Witt 1971, p.213, Dunand and Zivie-Coche 2004, p.239 and Gillam 2004, pp.55-9, 104.
139 âolder than her mother'. Witt 1971, p.292, note 4.
139 temple's east wall conceals âsuites of rooms, called crypts, and a staircase within its thickness. The lowest set of crypts is below ground, contained within foundations about 10 metres deep ... in the ground-level and upper crypts are access holes ... all were concealed within the decoration'. Baines and Malek 1980 p.64; âthe only female monarch depicted in the relief decoration at Dendera is Cleopatra VII'. Bianchi 2003, p.14.
139 âthe naos shrine of Hathor resplendent in silver, gold and every kind of precious stone without measure . . . the statue of Isis which is hidden, made of finest gold'. Shore 1979, p.149.
140 âI give you happiness daily, without distress for your majesty . . . drunkenness upon drunkenness without end'. Poo 1995, p.143.
140 ânigro tibicine'. Juvenal XV.49 in Maehler 2003, p.212.
140 âPharaoh comes to dance and comes to sing, Mistress, see his dancing, see the skipping! He offers the wine jug to you, Mistress, see his dancing, see the skipping! His heart is pure, no evil in his body, Mistress, see his dancing, see the skipping! O Golden One, how fine is the song, like the song of Horus himself, which Ra's son sings as the finest singer. He is Horus, the musician! He hates to see sorrow in your soul, he hates the bright goddess to be sad! Oh beautiful One, Great Cow, Great Magician, Glorious Lady, Gold of the gods, he comes to dance, comes to sing with his sistrum [sacred rattle] of gold and his menat [ritual necklace] of malachite, his feet rush toward the Mistress of Music as he dances for her and she loves all he does!' After Lichtheim 1980, pp.107-9.
141 âI hope that you are in good health, and without cease, for you, I worship close to the hair at Koptos'. Pap. Michigan VIII.502, in Nachtergael 1981, p.593.
141 Female performers in Smith and Hall 1984, p.15; gazelle as âIsis' plaything'. Witt 1971, p.33.
141 Cleopatra's limestone statue UC.14521 in Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, p.171.
141 âLady of the Two Lands, Cleopatra Philopator, beloved of Min of Koptos, King's Daughter, King's Wife'. Ashton 2003(b), pp.25-6, with barque shrine in Arnold 1999, p.221 and Ashton 2003(b), pl.l, p.25.
142 âCome, Golden Goddess ... it is good for the heart to dance! Shine on our feast at the hour of retiring, and enjoy the dance at night. Come! The procession takes place at the site of drunkenness, drunks play tambourines for you in the cool night, and those they awaken bless you'. Based on Drioton in Manniche 1991, p.61.
142 âFemale Sun of the Two Lands'. Louvre 1981, p.325.
142 âlord of Medamud, Thebes, Tod and Hermonthis'. Mond and Myers 1934, II, pp.25, 46-49.
143 âdeliberately made by one of the men standing all around and near the base'. Strabo XVII.1.46 in Lindsay 1963, p.12; Gardiner 1961
p.92.
143 âconsidered to be Memnon and a talking stone'. Manetho in Gardiner 1961 p.98; âMemnon's legs . . . recall the visitors' books that are to be found in many tourist resorts'. Milne 1916(b), p.80.
144 âtomb of Osymandyas'. Diodorus 1.47-49, Oldfather trans., pp.167-75. 144 âmarvelously devised, a spectacle worth seeing'. Strabo XVII.1.46 in Lindsay 1963, p.12; Gardiner 1961,
p.92.
144 âthose who have not seen this place have never seen anything: blessed are they who visit this place'. Milne 1916(b), p.80.
144 Menkare's son buried in sarcophagus of Ankhnesneferibre. James and Davis 1983, p.54.
145 âmagnificent'. Macrobius,
Saturnalia
1.21 in Mond and Myers 1934, II,p.27.
145 âKing of Upper and Lower Egypt'. Lepsius in Brooklyn 1988, p.52.
146 âFemale Horns'. Tait 2003, p.4.
147 âwas there because Cleopatra wanted her to be there'. Ray 2003, p.11.
146 âluxuriant decoration represented an excellent example of the baroque style of [Ptolemaic] architecture'. Arnold 1999, p.224; layout duplicating that at Dendera in Arnold 1999, p.346; Cleopatra's Hermonthis mammisi âa principal shrine in its own right'. Ray 203, p.10.
146 âthe play of light and shadows at the capitals, and the effect of the huge, window-like openings that created beautiful connections between interior and exterior spaces must have been stunning'. Arnold 1999, p.224.
146 Birthing scenes in Brooklyn 1988, p.35; eighteenth-century âbull' reference in Mond and Myers 1934 II, p.49.