How Did Cleopatra Work? - podcast episode cover

How Did Cleopatra Work?

May 15, 20238 min
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Episode description

Many of our ideas about Cleopatra are based in contemporary propaganda and later pop culture, from Shakespeare to cinema. Learn the truth behind some of these myths in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://history.howstuffworks.com/historical-figures/cleopatra.htm

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Transcript

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Welcome to Brainstuff, a production of iHeartRadio. Hey, Brainstuff. Lauren Vogelbaum here for being one of the most famous women in history. The real Cleopatra, who lived from the years sixty nine to thirty BCE, is shrouded in mystery. She ruled Egypt for twenty two of those years, commanded riches unrivaled in the ancient world, and bore children to two of the most powerful men in Rome. Yet the stories

of her passed down over the centuries. Cleopatra as the cunning, wanton s doctress were mostly propaganda written by her enemies before. The article of this episode is based on How Stuff Works. Spoke with Prudence Jones, a history professor at Montclair State University and author of Cleopatra a source Book. So today let's do some mythbusting. First off, Cleopatra was not Egyptian.

She was the last in a long line of Macedonian Greek kings and queens who ruled Egypt starting with the conquest of Alexander the Great in three thirty two BCE. After Alexander's death, his general Ptolemy the First was installed as the King of Egypt, which he ruled as a Greek from the Hellenistic capital of Alexandria. Cleopatra, born over two hundred fifty years later, was a daughter of Ptolemy

the seventh. The identity of Cleopatra's mother is unknown, though it's thought to have been Cleopatra the Fifth, who was Ptolemy the seventh wife and also his sister or half sister, as was common among Egyptian royalty at the time. Although Cleopatra was not ethnically Egyptian, she made explicit overtures to Egyptian religion and culture, such as identifying herself with the goddess Isith. She was also the first queen in the centuries long dynasty to bother to learn how to speak Egyptian.

Jones said, the rest weren't very motivated. Indeed, Cleopatra wowed with brains and charm, not just beauty. The Roman enemies of Egypt sought to denigrate Cleopatra by painting her as a harleck queen who bewitched great men like Julius Caesar

and Mark Antony with her physical beauty alone. But even the Roman historian Plutarch, writing a century after Cleopatra's death, reported that there was much more to Cleopatra than her looks, he said, to converse with her, had an irresistible charm, and her presence, combined with the persuasiveness of her discourse, and the character which was somehow diffused about her behavior

towards others, had something stimulating about it. There was a sweetness also in the tones of her voice and her tongue. Like an instrument of many strings. She could readily turn to whatever language she pleased, so that she very seldom had need an interpreter. In addition to speaking Greek and Egyptian, Cleopatra was fluent in at least six other languages. A highly educated woman, she published two known texts, one on the care of the body and the other on weights

and measures for medicine and trade. Compared with the military mind of Antony, who was Jones said, not known for being the sharpest tack in the box, Cleopatra was famous for her intellect. Along those lines, her love affair with Caesar was a strategic alliance. Cleopatra was not the lascivious fury described by some Roman poets, ruled only by her promiscuous passions. She had only two romantic partners in her short thirty nine year life, and both relationships were political

as well as personal. According to Jones, when Cleopatra took the Egyptian throne at eighteen, she inherited a kingdom in the line. Rome was the ascendant power in the Mediterranean, and Egypt's independence was under threat, and to make matters worse, her younger brother and co ruler and husband It's complicated, was trying to push her out. When Julius Caesar came to Egypt in pursuit of his rival Pompey, Cleopatra saw

opportunity to win a powerful Roman ally. Accuding to Plutarch's famous account, a middle aged Caesar first laid eyes on Cleopatra when she smuggled himself into his quarters and tumbled out of a carpet or, more likely a basket of laundry. The young Cleopatra won Caesar's affections, took back the throne, and sealed the alliance with the birth of a son, whom she not so subtly named Cesarean, meaning Little Caesar.

She now had family ties to Rome. Cleopatra's later relationship with Mark Antony, who was second in command to Caesar, was immortalized by Shakespeare in the play Antony and Cleopatra as one of the most legendary and tragic love affairs in history, but it too, primarily served a political purpose. Egypt may have enjoyed great wealth and resources, but after Caesar's assassination, Cleopatra knew that her kingdom was still at

the whim of Rome, the reigning superpower. Jones explained. Cleopatra was well aware then in order for Egypt to remain independent at all, it needed a powerful protector. Caesar's death had left a power vacuum in Rome, and two prominent men, Octavian being Caesar's chosen heir and nephew, and Antony, the ambitious politician in general, were fighting a civil war to fill it. Octavian had the financial backing of the Senate,

but Antony desperately needed money to pay his troops. Once again, Cleopatra saw an inn she was the richest woman in the world. In exchange for her her financial support, Antony became Egypt's ally and defender against Roman encroachment, and he

and Cleopatra, who eventually married, had three more heirs. This brings us to one last myth, though, the double suicide of Antony and Cleopatra, as recorded by Plutarch, provided a suitably tragic ending to Shakespeare's play, but although it was based on true events, it probably didn't go down exactly as Shakespeare wrote it. In the play, Anthony, A, falsely believing Cleopatra to be dead after a failed sea battle against Octavian A, falls on his own sword and eventually

dies in her arms from the wound. Cleopatra, not willing to be paraded in the streets of Rome as a prisoner of war, has a poisonous snake smuggled into her corners. In the final scene of the play, she hugs the snake to her breast. Plutarch's version is a bit different, but even he admitted that there were various accounts of Cleopatra's death and that quote the truth of the matter no one knows, for it was also said that she carried about poison in a hollow comb and kept the

comb hidden in her hair. Modern scholars say that poison would have been a much simpler and faster way to go, but that Cleopatra likely included the more dramatic snake story in her suicide note. After Cleopatra's death, Egypt became a province of the Roman Empire, and the rest, as they say, is history. Today's episode is based on the article five things Everyone gets wrong about Cleopatra on how Stuffworks dot Com,

written by Dave Ruse. Brain Stuff is production of iHeartRadio in partnership with how Stuffworks dot Com and is produced by Tyler Klang. Four more podcasts from my heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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