Authors: Joyce Tyldesley
16. Isis and Dionysos as snakes. From the British Museum © the Trustees of the British Museum.
17. The ‘Alabaster Tomb’ of Alexandria © RPL.
18. Serapis. From the Vatican Museum © RPL.
19. Osiris. From the Manchester Museum © RPL.
21. Isis as mother. From the Staatliche Museum, Berlin © RPL.
22. Amaryllis. From the National Museum, Athens © RPL.
23. Isis carrying the sistrum. From the Capitoline Museum, Rome © RPL.
24. Cleopatra and Caesarion. From the Dendera Temple © RPL.
25. Mark Antony. From Kingston Lacy, The Bankes Collection © NTPL / Paul Mulcahy.
26. Octavian: the Emperor Augustus. From the National Museum, Athens © RPL.
Page 120 – Armant scene recorded by Lepsius (Denkmäler IV, 60a and 59b).
Page 123 – ‘Cleopatra’. From A.B. Edwards,
A Thousand Miles up the Nile
(1877).
Family Tree adapted from Walker S. and Higgs P., eds (2001),
Cleopatra of Egypt: From History to Myth
, British Museum Publications, London.
Cleopatra’s World adapted from Walker S. and Higgs P., eds (2001),
Cleopatra of Egypt: From History to Myth
, British Museum Publications, London.
Cleopatra’s Egypt adapted from Höbl G. (2001),
A History of the Ptolemaic Empire
. Translated by T. Saavedra, Routledge, London and New York.
Cleopatra’s Alexandria adapted from various sources.
Alexander the Great – Alexandros | |
Ptolemy XII – Ptolemy living forever, beloved of Ptah and Isis | |
Cleopatra VII – Cleopatra the Father-loving goddess | |
Ptolemy Caesar (Caesarion) – Caesar living forever, beloved of Ptah and Isis | |
Octavian – Autocrator (‘ruler’) |
I
would like to express my gratitude to John Ray, who patiently read through the first draft of
Cleopatra
and offered helpful advice. Any mistakes are, of course, my own. I would also like to thank Judith Corbelli and Steven Snape for their encouragement, advice and enthusiasm. At Profile, Peter Carson believed in this book, and Bohdan Buciak, Penny Daniel, Anna-Marie Fitzgerald, Lesley Levene and Nicola Taplin helped it to become a reality. In 2006 the Society of Authors generously awarded me a grant from the Author’s Foundation, which allowed me to travel to Egypt in search of Cleopatra. I will always be grateful for their support.
My father, William Randolph Tyldesley, always wanted me to write about Cleopatra; sadly he died when this book was nearing completion. I wish that he could have read it.
A
Abusir el-Melek cemetery, Faiyum
161
Achaea
144
Achelos, General
36
Acoreus, Priest of Isis
100
Acropolis, Athens
174
battle of
176–82
,
197
,
200
,
205
,
208
,
242
n
7
,
255
n
9
Adea (wife of Philip III Arrhidaeos)
220
Adlington, William
125
Adonia celebration
85
Adonis
85
Aegae (Vergina)
73
Aesopus
153
Africa (modern Tunisia)
144
,
200
Afrocentrism
29
Agathoclea (Ptolemy II’s mistress)
85
,
226
,
227
Agathocles (brother of Agathoclea)
227
Agathocles (husband of Lysandra)
224–5
Agathoi Daemones (‘The Good Spirits’)
194
Agesilaus, King of Sparta
209
Agrippa, Marcus Vipsanius
176
,
177
,
179
,
181
Ahenobarbus, Gnaeus Domitius
173
,
177
Ahhotep (queen consort)
241
n
2
Ahmose II
18
Ahmose-Nefertari (queen consort)
241
n
2
Akhenaten
71
Akhetaten (Amarna)
71
Akhmim
244
n
21
Al-Masudi
212
Alcestis
189
Alexander
(film)
216
Alexander Helios (Cleopatra VII’s twin son)
33
,
157
,
159
,
162–3
,
168
,
169
,
199
,
238