Cleopatra II
Cleopatra II (c. 185–116 BC) was a Ptolemaic queen of Egypt, the daughter of Ptolemy V Epiphanes and Cleopatra I Syra, who married her elder brother Ptolemy VI Philometor around 175 BC and, after his death, her younger brother Ptolemy VIII Physcon (Euergetes II), reigning jointly with them, her sons, and eventually her daughter Cleopatra III amid intensifying dynastic conflicts.[1][2] Her unions produced several heirs, including with Ptolemy VI the short-lived Ptolemy Eupator, Cleopatra Thea (who married into the Seleucid dynasty), Cleopatra III, and Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator, while with Ptolemy VIII she bore Ptolemy of Cyprus (Memphites), whose execution by his father marked a nadir in familial violence.[1][3] As co-ruler from the 170s BC, Cleopatra II navigated the Ptolemaic kingdom's territorial losses and internal strife, including the Sixth Syrian War, where Ptolemy VI's death in 145 BC left her as regent for their young son Ptolemy VII until Ptolemy VIII seized power and forced her remarriage.[2] The subsequent years saw escalating tensions, culminating in a civil war around 132–130 BC when Ptolemy VIII allied with Cleopatra III against Cleopatra II, who fled Egypt, reportedly allying with Seleucid forces before reconciling, though not without the loss of her son Memphites, whom Ptolemy VIII had murdered to eliminate rivalry.[3] Her enduring influence persisted into the 110s BC, as she co-ruled with Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III until her death, symbolizing the Ptolemaic adherence to sibling marriage for dynastic purity amid the regime's erosion under Roman encroachment.[1][4]Origins and Early Life
Birth, Parentage, and Family Context
Cleopatra II was born circa 185 BC as the daughter of Ptolemy V Epiphanes, who ruled Egypt from 204 to 180 BC, and Cleopatra I Syra, a Seleucid princess and daughter of Antiochus III the Great.[5][6] Her parents' marriage, arranged around 193 BC, aimed to secure peace between the Ptolemaic and Seleucid empires following the Fifth Syrian War (202–195 BC), during which Ptolemy V's forces had reclaimed Coele-Syria but faced ongoing internal revolts in Upper Egypt.[7] As the only daughter among three children, Cleopatra II was the middle sibling, positioned between her elder brother Ptolemy VI Philometor (born c. 186 BC) and younger brother Ptolemy VIII Physcon (born c. 182 BC).[5][8] The Ptolemaic dynasty, founded by Ptolemy I Soter after Alexander the Great's death in 323 BC, emphasized endogamous marriages within the family to preserve the perceived divine purity of the royal line, drawing on both Macedonian traditions and Egyptian pharaonic precedents where sibling unions symbolized cosmic harmony.[6] This practice, evident in Cleopatra II's later unions, reinforced dynastic legitimacy amid Hellenistic rivalries and native Egyptian resistance, as the Ptolemies positioned themselves as both Greek kings and pharaohs adopting local cults like that of Isis. Her birth coincided with Ptolemy V's efforts to stabilize the kingdom, including the 196 BC Rosetta Decree that promulgated tax relief and priestly honors in trilingual inscriptions to quell unrest and affirm his rule as both Hellenistic basileus and Egyptian god-king.[9] Cleopatra I's role as a foreign consort introduced Seleucid diplomatic ties, but her early death in 176 BC—possibly from illness—left the young heirs under regency, foreshadowing the factional intrigues that would define Cleopatra II's ascent amid power struggles between court Greeks, military elites, and provincial forces.[7]First Marriage and Co-Regency with Ptolemy VI
Marriage, Joint Rule, and External Conflicts (175–145 BC)
Cleopatra II, daughter of Ptolemy V Epiphanes and Cleopatra I Syra, married her elder brother Ptolemy VI Philometor around March 175 BC, shortly after their mother's death in late 176 BC, which ended Cleopatra I's regency.[10][1] This union, typical of Ptolemaic incestuous sibling marriages to preserve dynastic purity, elevated Cleopatra II to queen consort and positioned her as a key figure in the joint rule that followed Ptolemy VI's sole nominal kingship since 180 BC.[11] The couple's early co-regency emphasized continuity with prior Ptolemaic traditions, including temple dedications and administrative decrees issued in their names, though real power initially rested with court advisors amid Ptolemy VI's youth.[10] The primary external conflict during this period erupted in the Sixth Syrian War (170–168 BC), triggered by Ptolemaic regents Eulaeus and Lenaeus declaring war on Seleucid king Antiochus IV Epiphanes over disputed territories like Coele-Syria.[12] Antiochus invaded Egypt in 170 BC, capturing Ptolemy VI and advancing to Memphis, where he briefly installed the king as a puppet ruler.[13] In Alexandria, Cleopatra II and her younger brother Ptolemy VIII Physcon were proclaimed co-rulers to rally resistance, marking her active involvement in governance during crisis; she helped mobilize defenses and maintain legitimacy against the Seleucid threat.[12] Roman intervention culminated in the Day of Eleusis in autumn 168 BC, when legate Gaius Popillius Laenas compelled Antiochus to withdraw by drawing a circle around him and demanding immediate compliance with Senate orders.[14] Post-war, Ptolemy VI was restored but under a tripartite arrangement with Cleopatra II and Ptolemy VIII as co-rulers from 168 to 164 BC, reflecting Roman influence to stabilize the dynasty and counter Seleucid revanchism.[11] Internal tensions led to Ptolemy VIII's exile in 164 BC after an assassination attempt on Ptolemy VI, restoring exclusive joint rule to Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II until the king's death in 145 BC during a campaign against Alexander Balas in Syria.[11] This period saw relative stability, with focus on internal reforms like debt amnesties and temple patronage, though border skirmishes with Seleucids persisted; Cleopatra II bore children including Ptolemy Eupator (ca. 166 BC), Cleopatra Thea (ca. 164 BC), and possibly others, securing succession.[1] Her role evolved from consort to influential partner, evident in joint cult worship as theoi philometores (mother-loving gods).[10]Transition After Ptolemy VI's Death
Immediate Aftermath and Marriage to Ptolemy VIII
Following the death of her husband Ptolemy VI in July 145 BC from head injuries sustained after being thrown from his horse during military operations near Antioch against Seleucid forces, Cleopatra II assumed regency in Egypt alongside their young son, Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator, whom she had elevated as co-ruler earlier that year.[15] The Ptolemaic court, facing instability from ongoing Syrian conflicts and internal factionalism, promptly summoned Cleopatra II's brother Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II from Cyrene, where he had maintained a power base after previous exiles, to return and stabilize the regime through marriage to her.[2] Ptolemy VIII arrived in Egypt and married Cleopatra II by mid-August 145 BC, as evidenced by the earliest surviving inscriptions attesting to their joint cult titles as Theoi Euergetai, marking the formal union and his ascension as co-ruler with her.[5] This sibling marriage, consistent with Ptolemaic incestuous traditions to preserve dynastic purity, effectively sidelined Ptolemy VII, who was murdered shortly thereafter under disputed circumstances—ancient accounts variously attribute the killing to Ptolemaic ministers, Cleopatra II herself to secure Ptolemy VIII's support, or Ptolemy VIII directly upon the boy's arrival in Cyrene, though modern assessments highlight the unreliability of propagandistic sources like Pausanias and Justin.[2] The union produced at least one son, Ptolemy Memphites, born around 144 BC, reinforcing Cleopatra II's position but foreshadowing future tensions.[1]Civil Wars and Sole Rule
Rebellion Against Ptolemy VIII (131 BC)
The rebellion of Cleopatra II against her brother-husband Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II arose from intensifying dynastic rivalries, particularly Ptolemy VIII's favoritism toward his younger wife Cleopatra III and their sons, which threatened the succession rights of Cleopatra II's son Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator (also known as Memphites).[16] Key indicators included the establishment of eponymous priesthoods for Ptolemy IX in 135/4 BC and Ptolemy X in 134/3 BC, signaling Ptolemy VIII's intent to elevate his line over Memphites, as well as the creation of the hieros polos priesthood for Cleopatra III before September 133 BC.[16] These moves, documented in Egyptian temple inscriptions and dating formulae, exacerbated Cleopatra II's fears of marginalization despite the tripartite rule formalized after Ptolemy VI's death in 145 BC.[2] Tensions culminated in a formal separation between 29 June and 9 November 132 BC, after which simmering unrest in Alexandria—fueled by factions loyal to the memory of Ptolemy VI and opposed to Ptolemy VIII's policies—erupted into open revolt by mid-131 BC.[16] In July-September 131 BC, popular support enabled Cleopatra II to expel Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III from Alexandria, with accounts of an attempted arson on Ptolemy VIII's palace underscoring the violence.[2] Cleopatra II swiftly consolidated power, receiving recognition as sole ruler (basilissa) in the Herakleopolite nome and portions of Upper Egypt by September-November 131 BC, as evidenced by contemporary papyri such as those adjusting dating formulae to omit Ptolemy VIII.[16] Ptolemy VIII, facing widespread opposition, fled Alexandria toward the end of 131 BC and retreated to Cyprus by early 130 BC, where he regrouped with mercenary support while maintaining nominal claims through propaganda portraying Cleopatra II as a usurper.[1] Numismatic evidence supports this timeline, showing a gap in Alexandrian coinage from regnal year 40 (131/0 BC) to year 43 (128/127 BC), reflecting disrupted royal minting under Ptolemy VIII's control.[1] Cleopatra II adopted the epithet Philometor Soteira during her independent phase, issuing decrees and maintaining administrative continuity in controlled territories, though her hold remained precarious amid Ptolemy VIII's preparations for counteroffensives.[2] Classical sources like Justin and papyrological records from sites such as Tebtunis confirm the rebellion's success in ousting Ptolemy VIII temporarily but highlight underlying factionalism, including Jewish communities' alignment with Cleopatra II.[2]Independent Reign and Challenges (132/1–127 BC)
In 132/131 BC, Cleopatra II initiated a rebellion against her brother and husband Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II, driven by dynastic tensions including the perceived threat to her son Ptolemy Memphites' succession posed by the eponymous priesthoods established for Ptolemy IX and Ptolemy X in 135/4 and 134/3 BC, respectively, and the elevation of Cleopatra III through new priesthoods before September 133 BC.[16] [17] The revolt erupted between June and November 132 BC, culminating in the expulsion of Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III from Alexandria between July and September 131 BC, after which Cleopatra II established sole rule over the city, adopting the epithet Philometor Soteira.[16] [2] Her authority extended to parts of the Delta and was recognized in areas like the Herakleopolite nome and Upper Egypt by September–November 131 BC, as evidenced by documents such as PSI XIV 1402 from Herakleopolis.[16] Cleopatra II's independent reign faced immediate fragmentation, with Ptolemy VIII retaining control over regions including the Thebaïd and recapturing portions of the chora from December 131 BC onward through military campaigns.[2] [16] To counter this, she allied with Seleucid king Demetrius II Nicator, who launched an invasion of Egypt in support, but Ptolemy VIII undermined the alliance by backing the rival claimant Alexander Zebina, leading to Demetrius's capture in 129 BC.[17] [2] Internal challenges included mercenary mutinies and local unrest, such as conflicts in Hermonthis documented in a letter from January 15, 130 BC, where Ptolemy VIII's loyal troops targeted areas held by Cleopatra II's supporters.[2] A pivotal atrocity occurred in 130/129 BC when Ptolemy VIII, exiled to Cyprus, enticed Ptolemy Memphites—whom Cleopatra II had associated as co-ruler—to join him under false pretenses of reconciliation, only to murder the youth after April–May 130 BC and dispatch his dismembered body to Alexandria as a terror tactic.[16] [17] [18] Ptolemy VIII returned to Egypt before spring 128 BC, steadily eroding Cleopatra II's holdings through conquests, and recaptured Alexandria between August and September 127 BC, forcing her flight to Syria where she sought refuge with her daughter Cleopatra Thea and Demetrius II.[16] [2] [18] Throughout, loyalties among Egyptian cities shifted without clear ethnic divides, reflecting the civil war's reliance on local power dynamics rather than unified factions.[16]Reconciliation and Later Co-Regency
Return of Ptolemy VIII and Tripartite Rule (124–116 BC)
In 127 BC, Ptolemy VIII reasserted control over Alexandria after Cleopatra II's flight to the Seleucid court, consolidating his authority with Cleopatra III while Cleopatra II remained in exile amid ongoing hostilities from the civil war that had begun in 132/131 BC.[16][17] By this point, Ptolemy VIII had secured much of Egypt's territory, including the south and Memphis, through military campaigns and alliances, including support from Roman traders, leaving Cleopatra II's forces confined to Cyprus and limited Levantine footholds.[2] A formal reconciliation occurred in spring 124 BC, likely between May and June, when Cleopatra II returned from exile to Alexandria, ending the dynastic conflict and establishing a tripartite co-rule among Ptolemy VIII, Cleopatra II, and Cleopatra III—the last such arrangement in Ptolemaic history.[17][16] This accord was publicly proclaimed, with Cleopatra II resuming her titles as "queen Cleopatra the Sister" alongside Cleopatra III as "queen Cleopatra the Wife," though Ptolemy VIII retained dominant influence, evidenced by his prior purges of Cleopatra II's supporters during the war.[2] The tripartite regime, spanning 124 to 116 BC, focused on stabilizing the kingdom through administrative reforms and amnesty measures, including a key decree issued jointly by the three rulers before March 28, 118 BC, which granted clemency to rebels, confirmed land allocations from the civil war era, and aimed to reintegrate factions, reflecting Ptolemy VIII's pragmatic efforts to avert further fragmentation amid economic strains and external threats like Seleucid incursions.[2] Despite the outward unity, underlying tensions persisted, as Cleopatra II's restored position was subordinate, with Ptolemy VIII favoring Cleopatra III and their sons for succession, sidelining Cleopatra II's surviving heirs.[17] Ptolemy VIII's death on June 11 or 28, 116 BC—dated to Payni 11 in his regnal year 54—concluded the tripartite rule, triggering immediate succession disputes between the queens and their respective progeny, as Ptolemy VIII's will elevated Cleopatra III and Ptolemy IX over Cleopatra II's influence.[2][20] This period marked a fragile détente, underscoring the dynasty's reliance on familial alliances to maintain Hellenistic control over Egypt's native institutions, though it failed to fully resolve the power imbalances that had fueled the prior rebellion.[16]Death and Immediate Succession
Final Years, Demise, and Burial
Following the death of Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II in June 116 BC, Cleopatra II maintained her position in a brief tripartite co-regency with her daughter Cleopatra III and Ptolemy IX Soter II, the latter being the son of Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III.[21][22] This arrangement marked the culmination of Cleopatra II's over five-decade involvement in Ptolemaic governance, during which she had navigated multiple marriages, civil conflicts, and power shifts within the dynasty.[22] Cleopatra II disappears from historical records after October 116 BC, with her death occurring in 115 BC at approximately 70 years of age.[23][22] No contemporary accounts specify the cause of her demise, and scholarly consensus infers natural causes given her advanced age and the absence of reports of violence or intrigue in this period, contrasting with earlier dynastic upheavals.[2] Upon her passing, Cleopatra III and Ptolemy IX assumed sole co-rule until 107 BC.[22] The location and details of Cleopatra II's burial are undocumented in surviving sources. Ptolemaic monarchs were generally interred in a royal necropolis near Alexandria, but no archaeological evidence or textual reference confirms her tomb, distinguishing her from better-attested figures like Ptolemy VIII.[2] A 1934 discovery of a Ptolemaic queen's tomb has been speculatively linked to Cleopatra II or III, but lacks definitive attribution.[24]Family and Issue
Marriages and Offspring
Cleopatra II, daughter of Ptolemy V Epiphanes and Cleopatra I Syra, first married her elder brother Ptolemy VI Philometor in or shortly before March 175 BC, in accordance with Ptolemaic tradition of sibling unions to preserve dynastic purity and consolidate power.[1] [10] This marriage produced at least three attested children: Ptolemy Eupator (born c. 166 BC, died c. 152 BC after a brief co-regency); Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator (fl. 145 BC, who succeeded briefly after his father's death); Cleopatra III (born c. 160 BC); and Cleopatra Thea (born c. 164 BC).[25] [2] Following Ptolemy VI's death in summer 145 BC during conflict in Syria, Cleopatra II married her younger brother Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II in late 145 or early 144 BC to secure her position amid dynastic instability, though this union later fueled civil strife.[1] [5] With Ptolemy VIII, she bore one known son, Ptolemy Memphites (born between late 144 and mid-142 BC), who was designated crown prince c. 142 BC but executed by Ptolemy VIII around 130 BC during reconciliation with Cleopatra III.[26] No further offspring from this marriage are reliably attested in surviving sources.[1]Descendants' Roles in the Dynasty
Cleopatra II's daughter Cleopatra III (c. 161–101 BC), born to Ptolemy VI, emerged as a pivotal figure in sustaining the Ptolemaic dynasty amid recurrent crises. Following her marriage to Ptolemy VIII around 142/141 BC, she co-ruled Egypt with him until his death in 116 BC, wielding significant influence in administration and foreign policy during the tripartite regency that included her mother.[17] After Ptolemy VIII's demise, Cleopatra III installed her son Ptolemy IX Soter II as co-ruler (116–107 BC), effectively acting as regent while sidelining her daughter Cleopatra IV to marry Ptolemy IX herself, thereby consolidating maternal control over succession.[27] She later supported Ptolemy X Alexander I against Ptolemy IX (107–101 BC), maintaining dynastic stability until her assassination by Ptolemy X, after which her lineage through Ptolemy IX produced Ptolemy XII Auletes and ultimately Cleopatra VII, extending Ptolemaic rule to its conclusion.[28] Her son Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator briefly succeeded Ptolemy VI in late 145 BC under Cleopatra II's regency but was assassinated by Ptolemy VIII within months, preventing any substantive role and allowing Ptolemy VIII's seizure of power.[2] Another son, Ptolemy Eupator, had been nominally associated in rule around 152 BC but died young without impacting governance.[5] From her union with Ptolemy VIII, son Ptolemy Memphites (b. c. 144 BC) was proclaimed king by Cleopatra II in Memphis during the 131–130 BC civil war, representing a direct challenge to Ptolemy VIII's authority, but he was captured and executed by his father c. 130/129 BC, with his dismembered body sent to Cleopatra II as retribution.[2] Daughter Cleopatra IV married her half-brother Ptolemy IX c. 119/118 BC and briefly served as queen upon his 116 BC accession, but was repudiated in favor of Cleopatra III and exiled to marry Seleucid king Antiochus IX, where she met her death in 112 BC amid Syrian conflicts, limiting her Ptolemaic influence to a short, contested queenship.[29] Her other daughter, Tryphaena, focused on Seleucid alliances through marriage to Antiochus VIII, exerting indirect diplomatic leverage rather than direct rule in Egypt.[30]Titles, Epithets, and Religious Role
Royal and Divine Titles
Cleopatra II employed a series of Greek royal epithets that evolved with her political status and co-regencies. As co-ruler with her brother Ptolemy VI Philometor from approximately 175 BC until his death in 145 BC, she shared the title Theoi Philometores ("Gods Philometores," denoting reverence for their mother Cleopatra I), which emphasized familial piety and divine legitimacy within the Ptolemaic tradition of sibling marriage and deification.[10] Following her marriage to Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II in 145 BC, she adopted the epithet Theoi Euergetai ("Benefactor Gods") alongside him, a title invoking Ptolemy III's legacy of benevolence and used in official decrees to legitimize their joint rule despite underlying tensions.[10] During her rebellion against Ptolemy VIII and brief independent reign from 132/1 to 124 BC, Cleopatra II proclaimed herself Cleopatra Thea Philometor Soteira ("Goddess, Mother-Loving Savior"), linking her authority to her late brother's Philometor title and Ptolemy I's Soter epithet, as evidenced in contemporary inscriptions where she initiated a new regnal count to assert sovereignty.[2] [10] In Egyptian temple inscriptions, Cleopatra II's titles adapted pharaonic conventions to affirm her role in indigenous religious contexts, often pairing her with kings as dual sovereigns. She appeared as one of hql.wj n blq.t ("the two sovereigns of Egypt") alongside Ptolemy VIII in the Temple of Tod, and as sn.t^sn ("sister") and hm.t n htr hp c nh ("wife of the living Apis's twin-brother") in Deir el-Medina reliefs, integrating Ptolemaic rulers into Horus mythology.[10] Her name was enclosed in cartouches, a practice reserved for pharaohs, signifying her co-equal status in Egyptian eyes.[2] Divine titles underscored Cleopatra II's identification with Egyptian goddesses, particularly in temple iconography where Ptolemaic queens embodied divine femininity to secure priestly support. She was depicted offering to Isis on Philae's Great Pylon with Ptolemy VI, associating her queenship with the goddess's protective and maternal attributes, a motif common to Lagid rulers who promoted Isis's cult for cultural syncretism.[10] As Thea ("Goddess"), her epithet reflected living deification, akin to predecessors like Arsinoe II, though primarily through cultic roles rather than explicit self-proclamation as Isis during her lifetime; posthumous worship extended this, with temples maintaining her divine imagery even after reconciliation with Ptolemy VIII.[10] These titles, blending Greek and Egyptian elements, served to bridge Hellenistic and native elites amid dynastic instability.[2]| Period | Key Title/Epithet | Context and Significance |
|---|---|---|
| With Ptolemy VI (c. 175–145 BC) | Theoi Philometores | Co-deification emphasizing maternal piety; used in Greek decrees and temples like Philae.[10] |
| With Ptolemy VIII (145–131 BC, 124–116 BC) | Theoi Euergetai | Joint benefactor gods; invoked stability and Ptolemaic precedent in official titulature.[10] |
| Independent rule (132/1–124 BC) | Cleopatra Thea Philometor Soteira | Sole sovereign assertion; combined filial loyalty and salvation motifs for legitimacy.[2] [10] |
| Egyptian temples | hql.wj n blq.t (two sovereigns); associations with Hathor/Isis | Pharaonic integration; ensured loyalty from native priesthood via divine iconography.[10] |
Cult Worship and Iconography
Cleopatra II was incorporated into the Ptolemaic dynastic cult during her lifetime, worshipped as part of divine pairs with her consorts, including the Theoi Philometores alongside Ptolemy VI (175–170 BC and 163–145 BC) and the Theoi Euergetai with Ptolemy VIII (145/4–132 BC).[10] During her sole rule from 132/1 to 124 BC, she was venerated specifically as Thea Philometor Soteira, evoking Ptolemy VI Philometor and Ptolemy I Soter.[10] Eponymous priesthoods dedicated to her are attested in papyri such as P. Bad. II 2 from this period.[10] Posthumously, following her death around 115 BC (or possibly 108 BC), Cleopatra II received no veneration as a temple-sharing goddess; her priesthoods in the dynastic cult ceased to be referenced, and her name was systematically suppressed by Cleopatra III.[10] This lack of enduring cult contrasts with earlier Ptolemaic queens like Arsinoe II, whose worship persisted in Egyptian temples.[10] In iconography, Cleopatra II appears extensively in temple reliefs, typically in a subordinate position behind the king, performing ritual offerings to deities such as Isis, Horus, Hathor, and Amun-Ra.[10] Notable examples include the Great Pylon at Philae, where she offers ointment to Isis with Ptolemy VI, and the Hypostyle Hall there, depicting her offering wine to Isis with Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III; similar scenes occur at Deir el-Medina and Esna.[10] Her figures employ standard Ptolemaic queen attire, including the double crown, varied wigs, and jewelry, blending Egyptian pharaonic traditions with Hellenistic elements.[10] [31] Certain statues link her to Isis through iconographic features like corkscrew locks framing the face, Isis-style dress, and mature, authoritative facial traits signifying power and longevity in rule, as seen in a late second-century BC basalt statue (height 97.8 cm) possibly portraying her in the Brooklyn Museum.[31] The triple uraeus motif in some representations underscores dynastic loyalty and continuity.[31] While Ptolemaic queens broadly assimilated to Isis by the late second century BC, direct identification for Cleopatra II remains interpretive rather than explicit in inscriptions.[31] [10]