Read Cleopatra the Great Online
Authors: Joann Fletcher
197 âCleopatra look'. Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, pp.143-44, 208-209.
198 âa beautiful image of Cleopatra by the side of the goddess'. Appian,
Roman History
11
.102, White trans., p.417; also Cassius Dio 51.22.3 in Scott-Kilvert trans., p.83.
198 âpolite' (based on âhad even politely adorned his new temple of Venus with a statue of her') in Grant 1969, p.217.
198 âopen acknowledgement of marriage between a descendant of a prestigious dynasty and the daughter of a god'. Walker and Higgs (eds.) 2001, p.277.
198 âVatican Head' in Vatican Museum 38511 in Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, No.196, p.218; Brooklyn 1988, No.76, pp.184-6; Kleiner 2005, p.152, fig.9.8 etc.
198 âa lotus crown or uraeus, or even the remains of a large knotted lock of hair'. Higgs in Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, p.218; âtop-knot' in Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, no.337, p.320.
198 For âblemish' as child's finger see Bianchi 2003, p.19.
199 âslightly more flattering portrayal'. Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, p.220 referring to Berlin Staatliche Museen Preussischer Kulturbesitz Anti-kenmuseum 1976.10, in Brooklyn 1988 No.77, p.187, Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, No.198, pp.220-1, Hamer 1993, pi. 1.2, p.4 etc.
199 âperhaps the finest and most beautiful portrait sculpture'. Maehler in Smith and Hall 1984, p.96.
199 âspeaks for itself... it is infinitely more beautiful than the unflattering coin portrait, and it does convey an image of the great queen's personality'. Maehler 1983, p.8.
199 âgreat physical beauty'. Bowman 1986, p.25; Johansen 2003, p.77.
199 âwhilst it does not flatter her, it bears a close relationship to the portraits of Alexander the Great'. Southern 2001, p.121.
199 Capitoline Head in Capitoline Museum Rome Inv.ll54/S in Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, pp.144-5, 217; same image on rings, see Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, p.217.
200 For Iseum Campense dedicated to Julius Caesar see Cassius Dio XLVII.15.4 in Maehler 2003, p.205; 1987 discovery of priest's statue in Walker and Higgs (eds.,) p.329.
200 âtemples, altars and divine images and a priest of his own cult'. Suetonius, Julius Caesar 76, in Graves trans., p.41.
200 âto the Unvanquished God'. Cassius Dio XLIII.45, in Goudchaux 2001, p.134.
200 Plans âto constrain the Tiber to tolerate Nile's threats' in Propertius III.11, trans., Shepherd 1985 in Maehler 2003, pp.209-10; canal to drain marshes in Seton-Williams 1978, p.10, Grant 1972, pp.89-90.
200 âas crowded, probably, as modern Bombay or Calcutta'. Storey 1997, p.976, referring to census of 69
BC
which gave city's population at 900,000.
201 It was said she âspread her disgusting gauze on Tarpeia's rocks'. Propertius III.ll, trans., Shepherd 1985 in Maehler 2003, pp.209-10; scale as eastern tradition in Grant 1968, p.196.
204 âa son being subsequently born to himself. Suetonius,
Caesar
83 in Graves trans., p.46, see also Chaveau 2002, p.32.
204 âa formidable guest, yet no regrets! For everything went very pleasantly indeed . . . On the 19th he stayed with Philippus until one o'clock and let no one in-I believe he was doing accounts with Balbus. Then he went for a walk on the shore. After two he had a bath . . . He had an oil-massage and then sat down to dinner. . . His entourage were very lavishly provided for in three other rooms. Even the lower-ranking ex-slaves and the slaves lacked for nothing; the more important ex-slaves I entertained in style. In other words, we were human beings together. Still, he was not the sort of guest to whom you would say, “do please come again on your way back”. Once is enough!'. Cicero in Grant trans., p.89.
204 Clues to second pregnancy based on Cicero's comments in
Letters to Atticus
XIV.20, 2, Grant 1972 p.95, combined with provision for âa son being subsequently born to himself. Suetonius, Caesar 83 in Graves trans., p.46, also Chaveau 2002, p.32.
204 âonly a king can conquer the Parthians'. Suetonius,
Caesar
80, Graves trans., p.43.
205 âParens Patriae . . . Father of the Fatherland'. Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, p.224.
205 âLong live the King!'. Suetonius,
Caesar
79, Graves trans., p.43. 205 âit is likely that Cleopatra made her contribution, even if she was not present'. Goudchaux 2001, p.135.
205 âyour colleague sat on the rostra, wearing his purple toga, on his golden chair, his garland on his head. Up you come, approaching the chair . . . you display a diadem. Groans all over the Forum! Where did the diadem come from? You hadn't found it in the gutter. No, you'd brought it with you, a planned, premeditated crime. You made to place the diadem on Caesar's head amid the lamentations of the people â he kept refusing it, and the people applaud(ed.) You had been urging Caesar to make himself king, you wanted him your master rather than your colleague'. Cicero,
Philippics
2.XXXIV.85-86 in Heskel 2001, p.137; he also asked âwhere did this diadem come from? ... It was a premeditated crime in advance'. Cicero, Philippics 2.XXXI.85 in Goudchaux 2001, p.135.
206 âgot up, took off his mantle and shouted that he was ready to have his throat slit if someone wanted to do it'. Plutarch,
Antony
12 in Goudchaux 2001, p.135.
206 âa tendency to nightmares'. Suetonius,
Caesar
45, in Graves trans., p.29.
206 âno doubt'. Grant 1972, p.93.
Chapter 8
207 âBrutus was elected consul when he sent the kings away, Caesar sent his consuls packing and Caesar is our king today'. Suetonius,
Caesar
80, Graves trans., p.44.
297 âIf only you were alive now!'. Suetonius,
Caesar
80, Graves trans., p.44. 208 âno longer refuses to be called a tyrant, in fact he practically demands it, and that is exactly what he is'. Cicero,
Letters to Atticus
, in Grant 1968, p.148.
208 âeither through the agencies of his enemies, or of himself. Cicero, in Grant 1968, p.150.
208 âIt is more important for Rome than for myself that I should survive. I have long been sated with power and glory; but should anything happen to me, Rome will enjoy no peace. A new civil war will break out under far worse conditions than the last'. Suetonius,
Caesar
86, Grant trans., p.48.
209 âthe best sort of death . . . âlet it come swiftly and unexpectedly'. Suetonius,
Caesar
87, Graves trans., p.48.
209 âthe Ides of March have come' . . . âAy, they have come, but they have not yet gone'. Suetonius,
Caesar
81, Graves trans., p.45.
209 âThis is violence!'. Suetonius,
Caesar
82, Graves trans., p.45.
210 âyou too my son?'. Suetonius,
Caesar
82, Graves trans., p.46.
210 âour heroes most splendidly and gloriously achieved everything that was in their power'. Cicero,
Letter to Atticus
, in Graves trans., p.91.
211 âarmed neutrality, whilst Antonius carried on the government along Caesarian lines'. Southern 2001, p.151.
211 âa son being subsequently born to himself. Suetonius,
Caesar
83, Graves trans., p.46 and Chaveaux 2002, p.32.
212 âmodelled on the temple of Venus Genetrix'. Springborg 1990, p.204; for effigy turned by mechanical device see Toynbee 1996, p.58.
212 âdid I save these men that they might murder me?'. Suetonius,
Caesar
84, Graves trans., p.47.
212 âthe torches which charred the very body of Caesar'. Cicero in Grave's trans., p.141.
212 âdivine forms, perhaps the Twin Brethren . . . javelin at hand and sword at thigh to set light to the pyre' Suetonius,
Caesar
84, Graves trans., p.47.
213 âI myself carried the man away, leaving only his image behind: what fell by the sword was Caesar's shade'. Ovid
Calendar
3.697-704 in Springborg 1990, p.205.
213 âwe must give place to fortune; I think we must leave Italy and go to Rhodes or somewhere else. If the best happens we shall return to Rome. If ordinary fortune, we shall live in exile, if the worst, we shall employ the last resort'. Earl 1968, p.19-20.
214 âI am hoping it is true about the queen and
that
Caesar'. Cicero,
Letters to Atticus
XIV.20, 2 in Grant 1972, p.95; Caesar's non-Roman âchildren' in Lucan,
Civil War
10.76 in Duff trans., p.595.
214 âI see nothing to object to in the flight of the queen'. Cicero,
Letters to Atticus
XIV.8.1 in Grant 1972 p.95.
214 âricinium' in Sebesta 2001, p.46; Homer's description of Demeter's mourning attire in Llewellyn-Jones 2003, p.306.
215 Cleopatra's murder of brother in Porphyry FGH.260 and Josephus
Contra Apion
11.58, both in Grant 1972, p.98; Josephus claimed she poisoned him, previous Ptolemy poisoning courtier in Diodorus XXVIII. 14, Walton trans., p.241.
215 âIsis lived with her brother [and husband] Osiris, and when he died she vowed she would never accept the partnership of another man. She avenged her husband's murder and continued thereafter to rule entirely according to the laws. In sum, she was responsible for the most and greatest benefactions to all mankind'. Diodorus 1.27.1-2, in Rowlandson (ed.) 1998, p.50.
215 âI have acted as a man although I was a woman in order to make Osiris' name survive on earth'. Pap. Louvre 3079 I, col.110 in Benard and Moon (eds.) 2000, p.228.
215 âshe has made the power of women equal to that of men'. Witt 1971, p.110.
215 âin her role as supreme magician slaying Osiris' enemies'. Etienne 2003, p.98; snake bracelets in D'Auria et al. 1988, p. 198; Ptolemies' images on jewellery in Clark 1935; ring with Caesar's portrait BM.GR.1873.10-20.4 m Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, p.223.
216 Cleopatra's Needles in Grimm 2003, p.48, Empereur 1998, pp.111-23 (now in London and New York).
216 âthe like of which had never been seen before'. John of Nikiou in el-Daly 2005, p.132.
216 âthere is elsewhere no precinct like this temple, situated on an elevation facing the harbours renowned for their excellent moorage; it is huge and conspicuous, decorated on an unparalleled scale with dedicated offerings, surrounded by a girdle of pictures and statues in silver and gold, forming a precinct of enormous breadth, embellished with porticoes, libraries, chambers, groves, gateways, broad walks and courts and everything adorned with the beauty that the most lavish expenditure could provide'. Philo,
Legatio ad Gaium
XXII.151, in MacLeod (ed.) 2002, p.42.
216 â. . . when climbing the second staircase, below the right-hand portico, next to the temple of Venus, in which stood a marble statue of the goddess . . .', in Grimm 2003, p.48.
217 âthe image of the god Julius'. Suetonius,
Augustus
17, in Graves trans., p.59; schist statue Berlin Staatliche Museen, Antikensammlung R.9 in Walker and Higgs (eds.,) 2001, p.222.
217 âCleopatra's Baths'. El-Daly 2005, p.137, with Cleopatreion in Holbl 2001, p.310.
217 âon the orders of the female king and the male king'. Thompson 2003, p.33, stating in note 26 that the decree could refer to Alexandria or Leontopolis (Tell el-Yahudiya).
217 Lions' entertainment in Aelian,
De Natura Animalium
XII, 6-7 in el-Weshahy 2002, p.1223; stela Copenhagen Museum A.756 dated to âthe late Ptolemaic Period â more specifically the reign of Ptolemy XV and Cleopatra VII'. El-Weshahy 2002, p. 1230.
218 âUniter of the Two Lands'. Ray 2003, p.9; for Cleopatra's relationship with dead Caesar and arrangement of royal images see Bingen 2007, p.54-55.
218 âlive, Osiris, live! May the listless one rise up â I am Isis! . . . Horus comes at your call Osiris, you will be placed upon his arms, you will be safe in your power'. Richards and Wilfong 1994, p.15.
218 Granite stela Turin Museum 1764 in Porter and Moss 1989, p.714, and Holbl 2001, p.240.
218 Caesar as Amun-Ra impregnating Cleopatra in Goudchaux 2001 p.133; stages of Hermonthis' contruction in Arnold 1999, pp.223-4.
219 Figure protected by granite falcons identified as Caesarion by Goudchaux 2001, p.139.
219 âcarries offmostly children up to age of 10'. Celsus in Jackson 1988, p.103.
219 âbody lies in the sand, but his soul has gone to its own land'. Dunand and Zivie-Coche 2004, p.330.
219 âIsis, Great Mage, heal me and release me from all things bad and evil and belonging to Seth, from the demonic fatal illnesses, as you saved and freed your son Horus'. Ebers Papyrus, based on Witt 1971, p.187.
220 Tax decree in Thompson 2003, p.33, Bingen 2007, pp.141-54, Chaveau 2002, p.36.
220 Dioscurides Phakas in Galen XIX.63, in Grant 1972, p.181; stela in Foreman 1999, p.75.
220 âmost explicit laments over death'. Lichtheim 1980 pp.59-60.
220 âdo not weary of drinking, eating, getting drunk and making love â make holiday and follow your heart day and night!'. BM.EA. 147 after Reymond 1981, p.177; Lichtheim 1980 pp.59-60.
220 âperhaps the finest examples of private relief ever made in the Ptolemaic period'. Brooklyn 1988, p.231; âit is indeed strange that in the days of the last Ptolemies and the last Cleopatra there should have been produced native Egyptian sculpture in a quantity and of a uniformly high level of quality such as had not been known for nearly one hundred years'. Bothmer 1960, p.171.
220 Black statue head Brooklyn 58.30 in Brooklyn 1988, p.138; man with curls BM.EA.55253 in Walker and Higgs (eds) 2001, p.246; Tazza Farnese bowl Naples Museum 27611 in Dwyer 1992; bronze figurine of Greek-style Horus Cleveland 1972.6 in Berman 1999, p.474.
221 âhad a very good and noble appearance; his beard was well grown, his forehead large, and his nose aquiline, giving him altogether a bold, masculine look that reminded people of the faces of Hercules in paintings and sculptures'. Plutarch,
Antony
, Dryden trans., p.749.