CLEOPATRA’S RELATIONSHIPS WITH JULIUS CAESAR AND MARK ANTONY
Cleopatra has never appeared on the list of most popular
names for babies. Neither has the world known another Cleopatra. There are
actually several pharaohs who have adapted the name, but no one came close to
Cleopatra VII. She has surpassed the fame of any Egyptian pharaoh. She has
always been depicted in different light, in so many media. However Cleopatra
remains as a mother not only to her own but to her people as well. She is a
woman who had relationships with two great men, but upheld timeless femininity.
She had the power to be every man’s aspiration. Cleopatra is the embodiment of
love and ambition all at the same time. Her relationship with them may have the
greatest contribution as to the way every one looks at these men today.
There is much account of how ‘beautiful’ Cleopatra was. She
was described as ‘a woman of surpassing beauty’ by Cassius Dio (as cited in
Grout, 2009). On top of the beauty, she is often dubbed as having a ‘charming
voice’. Descriptions of her statue are also among the highest praises. Albeit
the physical descriptions, it is often said that she is more of a diplomat than
anything else. She is also of Macedonian decent, which they said, bore her of
high intellectual power. She is skilled in nine languages and mathematicians
(Gupta, 2009).
Cleopatra was given such responsibility at a young age of
18. She chose to rule almost alone. She had reforms for Egypt which was solely
her doing, rather than consulting her much younger co-ruler/ husband / brother.
In the battle of power, of who should rule, she was beaten with the help of the
ministers of her younger brother (Grochowski, 2005). In 48, BCE, she was thrown
out of power, which leads to her ambition to return to power.
Julius Caesar, on the other hand, is a son to the humble
family of Aurelia and to Gaius Julius Caesar in Rome. Their family is not
wealthy nor is it prominent when he was born in 100 or 102 BCE. By the age 18,
he already had two wives, both from prominent families, Cossutia and Cornelia,
respectively. He also joined the military which then earned him with the oak
leaves or the civic crown. He had an impressive career and later, he returned
home to be an orator. After two other wives, Pompeia, whom he divorce because
of scandal with other men; and Calpurnia, he achieved consulship (McManus,
2001). He had an illustrious career.
Cleopatra
and Julius Caesar: Their Life Intertwined
The Cleopatra and Julius Caesar connection was formed when
Julius Caesar fled to Egypt in pursuit of his enemy Pompey (McManus, 2001).
Pompey has already been executed by the Egyptians. Julius Caesar, however, is
not threatened by the same fate for he carried a much greater army force.
Julius Caesar is smitten by the woman delivered through a
carpet; it is smuggled through Alexandria and is presented as a gift for the
Roman leader (Grochowski, 2005). Cleopatra is then about 21 or 22 years old.
Julius Caesar immediately recognized the potential of being lovers and allies.
The relationship could have been for love among any other.
However, there are also political agenda behind the union. They are both
leaders of influential and powerful nations. They have people under them,
armies that could fight battles and win them. Both Rome and Egypt needs
intellectual leaders.
Specifically, for Cleopatra’s side, she saw how a Caesar’s
fleet could easily return her to power which he eventually did. Julius Caesar
killed Cleopatra’s brother and husband, Ptolemy XIII when his army drove them
away only to drown in the Nile. This was during the Alexandrian War. Julius
Caesar made sure that Cleopatra is firm in her position as the leader of Egypt.
He even left three legions to protect Cleopatra’s reign of power (McManus,
2001). He made sure that any insurgencies could be dismissed by his powerful
army.
For Julius Caesar, the union will unite two great lands,
Egypt and Rome. He has an ultimate dream that his children would someday rule
this land. Julius Caesar could have also seen Alexandria as a strategic
location for his battles and as time pass by, Egypt could also form a powerful
army to help him in his conquests.
Cleopatra, though said to still be in love Julius Caesar,
married her younger brother, Ptolemy XIV, to return her rule over Egypt.
However, she was also married to Julius Caesar because Egypt allows polygamy.
Cleopatra and Julius Caesar spent time in Alexandria. The Roman leader,
however, is called for to lead his army to battles. He emerged victorious but
returned to Rome instead.
Julius Caesar and Cleopatra also had a son, Caesarion.
Julius Caesar sent for his wife and son to be brought to Rome, with the great
surprise of the Roman people. Out of respect for Julius Caesar, the people did
not really give much attention to the fact that Julius Caesar married a foreign
woman albeit having a Roman wife (McManus, 2001). The son was later executed
for the fear that he can claim the land that is rightfully his father’s.
The title has earned him the people’s support but he also
received the Senate’s unworthy action. Since Julius Caesar has made any changes
without consulting the Senate, he became an unpopular person for them. Before
he is to leave for yet another conquest, he met with the Senate. There he met
his end as he is stabbed to his death by all sixty Senate people, lead by
Brutus and Cassius.
Cleopatra and son, Caesarion left Rome, where a civil war
broke. They returned to Egypt, there, Cleopatra allegedly poisoned her brother
/ husband / co-regent. Cleopatra then announced her son with Julius Caesar as a
co-ruler and re-acquired rule of Egypt. This is when her rule was entirely
secured locally, unlike the two previous co-regents.
Cleopatra
and Mark Antony: The Charm and the Power
Mark Anthony was born in 83 B.C. Unlike Julius Caesar, he
was from a prominent family since birth. His grandfather was a known public
speaker while his father was a military man. He is well-educated, polishing
skills like public speaking and objective questioning. He is known for both his
positive and negative traits which were eminent from his youth. At the course
of his career, he kept close to Julius Caesar.
Mark Antony became an ally of Julius Caesar. He took care of
Julius Caesar’s local rebellion in Gaul. He also became second in command
during Julius Caesar’s defeat of Pompey. It was also Julius Caesar who
appointed him as a consul. It is this status that spared his life after the
assassination of Julius Caesar. He then rose to power and hunted those who have
assassinated Julius Caesar.
Mark Antony also became part of the second Triumvirate. If
not for Octavian, who claimed as an adopted son and the rightful successor of
Julius Caesar’s political position, he might have been the sole leader for
Rome. He was the one who was ‘in-charge’ of the Eastern provinces, which
includes Cleopatra’s beloved land of Egypt. Cleopatra and Mark Antony met in
Tarsus initially for an inquest of her alleged involvement of Julius Caesar’s
assassination (Gupta, 2009).
Cleopatra and Mark Antony are both connected to Julius
Caesar. She is a former wife, and he is a loyal ally and friend. Mark Antony
found amusement with Cleopatra’s grandeur. Cleopatra, on the other hand, might
have found a sense of stability with him since he is becoming one of the most
powerful in Rome. She found in him the opportunity to restore the old glory of
her Ptolemaic decent. Mark Antony possessed characteristics different from that
of Julius Caesar but he is of the same political stature.
The first meeting after Julius Caesar’s death proved a
luxuriant one. There are scented flowers in Cleopatra’s barge, where she
dressed like the Roman goddess, Venus, when they met in 41 BCE. The first
supper impressed Mark Antony that he wanted to surpass such splendid
preparation, but he miserably failed. With his great humor, he managed to keep
a good nature about it. After this, there were accounts which states that they
spent holidays together (cited in Cleopatra…, 2006). Cleopatra is able to charm
Mark Antony by being at his side all the time.
Mark Antony married Cleopatra. Cleopatra is actually already
the fourth wife to Mark Antony. Previous wives include Fadia, Antonia Hybrida
Minor and Fulvia Flacca Bambula, respectively. Mark Antony then married Octavia
Minor after having children with Cleopatra. He did this to claim a stronger
hold of power in Rome. During his flight to plot a war against Parthia, he was
going to need the help of Egyptian army forces, not to mention money. This is
when he arranged for a second meeting with Cleopatra.
The initial meeting between Cleopatra and Mark Antony bore
them with twins, Alexander Helios and Cleopatra Selene while the second meeting
brought them their third child, Ptolemy Philadelphos (Stritof, n.d.). These
children are well provided for by their father, Mark Antony. They are given part
of the land of Rome, including Cyprus, Crete and Syria, through their mother
(Lewis, 2006). This distribution, lead to an even wider gap between Octavian
and Mark Antony.
The second Triumvirate is down to two, and then as Octavian
wished to be the sole ruler of the Roman land, he declared war to the queen of
Egypt. The battle between the two leading armies of Rome came to an end with
Mark Antony on the losing end. He then fled to Alexandria with Cleopatra. As
the forces closed in, he committed suicide. Cleopatra also committed suicide.
Cleopatra:
The Legacy
Cleopatra the Philopater, Cleopatra VII or simply Cleopatra
has made a legacy for herself. She, whom has captured the hearts of two great
men, has left the name to equal beauty, seduction, love and femininity all in
one. There are legacies that no other woman in the world has achieved.
Cleopatra left legacies that have made the past great, the present wondering
and the future still searching.
Cleopatra was a person who later considered the living
representation of divine mother Isis. She was their living goddess
(Egyptology.com, 2008). Even during her brief stay in Rome, albeit the love for
Julius Caesar, she was firm on her goddess stature and decent. In the years
after, her goddess status has not faded. She became an immortal pharaoh of
Egypt.
There are different accounts of Cleopatra, some are good and
some are bad. The difference lies on whose perception they take. The truth on
Cleopatra’s life may have been corrupted with the advents of Roma writings,
Shakespearean plays and even contemporary films. While Egyptians took on their
queen as a powerful leader, the Romans dwell on Cleopatra’s personal life. The
Romans have a shady account of her. They looked at her for her relationships
with their leaders (Tyldesley, 2008).
As mentioned, at an early age, Cleopatra single-handedly led
her people. She has made very intelligent reforms in their lives. Though at the
verge of a falling Egypt, she had saved her people from famine. Cleopatra was
also able to make some economic reforms. This was all on top of a chauvinistic
view that a woman cannot lead a land without the guidance of a man, though in
this case a child (Grochowski, 2005).
Cleopatra may also have been a great guru of women. She
knows her worth as a woman; her femininity is of the right amount. Boldly, if
men have their swords and strengths, she showed that woman have charms and
wits. Cleopatra was not afraid to seize what is presented (Grochowski, 2005).
She may have done so with Egypt as her inspiration or because she wanted to be
a mother and sees that the Roman men are her equal and deserve to bore her a
child, or children.
Perhaps Cleopatra’s greatest legacy to the world is her love story. There is no way to find out about really feelings, then until now. But the world is endowed with one of the greatest love story that can not be undone. Julius Caesar’s and Mark Antony’s biographies would never be complete without shedding light to Cleopatra. And to take and even bolder state she may have made these men be the men they became then until tomorrow.
Perhaps Cleopatra’s greatest legacy to the world is her love story. There is no way to find out about really feelings, then until now. But the world is endowed with one of the greatest love story that can not be undone. Julius Caesar’s and Mark Antony’s biographies would never be complete without shedding light to Cleopatra. And to take and even bolder state she may have made these men be the men they became then until tomorrow.
Therefore, Cleopatra may have been the leader, the mother
and the lover the world is yet to encounter again. She was a leader to Egypt
and to say that she started at a really young age. She has bridged them through
the tough times, famine, local civil wars and economic instability. She has
also made a come back even after he brother has dethroned her. She has made
sacrifices for Egypt.
The queen is also a mother. If things might have been
different, her children may have been rulers of her land. If history has been
kinder to her children, their future may have been secured by vast lands and
contented people. If only one battle has turned out differently, Cleopatra may
have been alive. There might have been a different view about Cleopatra both
from Egypt and other parts of the world.
Cleopatra is a lover. She has surprised, impressed and loved
men the way she knows. She tolerated leaving her beloved land to be with her
man. She may also have stomached the way she was treated during her stay at a
foreign land. She knows how to pique at her men’s fantasies. She also knows how
to join her man in their own fancies. Consequently, Cleopatra has gathered
positive and negative evaluations for being a lover.
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