Cleopatra V Selene (140/135-69 BC)

Hieroglyphic name:
Hieroglyphic name of Cleopatra V
Cleopatra V
Cleopatra V Selene (140/135-69 BC) was the daughter of King Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III. About 116 BC, she married her brother, Ptolemy IX, afterwards he was special by his mother to dissociate his first wife and their sister, Cleopatra IV. She stayed in Egypt when her conserve was discharged in 107 BC, and in 103 BC she united her cousin,  Antiochus  VIII  Grypus,  ruler  of  Syria,  son  of  her  aunt Cleopatra Thea,  and  early  husband  of  her  sister,  Cleopatra VI Tryphaena. Antiochus VIII Grypus was killed in 96 BC. Cleopatra Selene then married 2 further rulers of Syria, Antiochus IX Cyzicenus  (d.  95  BC),  cousin  of  her  husband  but  as well  his  maternal half brother finished Cleopatra Thea and former husband of her other sister,  Cleopatra  IV,  and  in the end  her  stepson, Antiochus  X  Eusebes (killed around 89 BC). She plain had two sons by her first husband, whose fate is uncertain, and two sons by her last husband, who aimed to rule in Syria. Cleopatra Selene was seized during an invasion of Syria by Tigranes, king of Armenia, and gone in Seleucia-on-the-Tigris  in  69  BC.  Because  the  last  Cleopatra  V Tryphaena and Cleopatra VI Tryphaena are now involved as identical, Cleopatra Selene is quoted in more recent scholarship as Cleopatra V Selene.



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Cleopatra IV (d. 113 BC)

Hieroglyphic name:
Hieroglyphic name of Cleopatra IV
Cleopatra IV
Cleopatra IV (d. 113 BC) was the daughter of King Ptolemy VIII and Queen Cleopatra III. Associate of her brother, Ptolemy IX, who was forced to divorce  her  by  their  mother  some  116  BC.  Cleopatra  IV fled  to Cyprus and then Syria, where she united the Seleucid king Antiochus IX Cyzicenus. She was in Antioch in 113 BC when it came to his touch, Antiochus VIII Grypus, whose married woman, her sister Cleopatra VI Tryphaena, set her execution.



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Cleopatra III (158-101 BC)

Hieroglyphic name:  
Hieroglyphic name of Cleopatra III
Cleopatra III
Cleopatra III  (158-101 BC) was the daughter of King Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II. She gone the second check of her uncle, Ptolemy VIII, about 141 BC, which eventually led to a civil war between her mother,  Cleopatra II,  who  was  the  first  associate, and  her husband. Peace was eventually repaired in 124 BC. Cleopatra bore her husband 5  children,  including Ptolemy IXPtolemy X, Cleopatra IV, Cleopatra VI Tryphaena, and Cleopatra V Selene. Upon Ptolemy VIII's death in 116 BC, she was given the superb of which son would predominate with her. She idolized her younger son, Ptolemy X, but was extra by public squeeze to take her elder son, Ptolemy IX, who was finally kicked out in favor of his younger brother in 107 BC. This gone to civil war between the competition kings in Cyprus and Syria. Cleopatra  III  died  in  101  BC,  allegedly  executed  by  her  unhappy  son, Ptolemy X.



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Cleopatra II (185-116 BC)

Hieroglyphic name:  
Hieroglyphic name of Cleopatra II
Hieroglyphic name
of Cleopatra II
Cleopatra II (185-116 BC) was the daughter  of  Ptolemy V and Cleopatra I and wife of Ptolemy VI and Ptolemy VIII. She was married to her brother, Ptolemy VI, in April 176 BC and held joint ruler of Egypt in 170 BC in the look of the threat of encroachment by the Seleucid king Antiochus IV. When her husband was enchanted by the enemy, she and her smaller brother, Ptolemy VIII, gone in Alexandria. Antiochus IV was special to break Egypt under Roman pressing, and the common rule of the three siblings was fixed. In 164 BC, civil war broke between the brothers, and Ptolemy VIII was routed out to Cyrene. Cleopatra II bore four children to Ptolemy VI, taking Ptolemy Eupator, Ptolemy VII, Cleopatra Thea, and Cleopatra III. Her married man was killed in 145 BC, and she briefly acted as potent for her son, Ptolemy VII, until power was captured by her brother, Ptolemy VIII, who married her and murdered her son. Cleopatra bore her new husband one son, Ptolemy Memphites, but he soon precious her daughter Cleopatra III. Civil war broke out between the mates in 132 BC during which Ptolemy VIII murdered his son, Memphites, before regaining control in 130 BC. Peace was finally repaired between the mates in 124 BC, when Cleopatra II was established as older queen. She is last read in 116 BC having survived her second married man.



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Cleopatra I (215-176 bc)

Hieroglyphic name:
Hieroglyphic name of Cleopatra I
Cleopatra I
Cleopatra I (215-176 bc) was the wife of King Ptolemy V and daughter of Antiochus III, rule of the Seleucid Empire, and Laodice of Pontus. She  was  engaged  to  Ptolemy  V in  196  BC  and  marital  him  in 194-193 BC as part of a peace settlement between Egypt and the Seleucid  Empire.  She  had  three  children,  admitting  Cleopatra  II, Ptolemy VI, and Ptolemy VIII. Upon the dying of her husband in 180 BC, she acted as regent until her own end between April and July 176 BC.



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Ptolemy XV Caesarion (44-30)

Hieroglyphic name:
Hieroglyphic name of Ptolemy XV
Ptolemy XV
Ptolemy XV Caesarion was the son of Cleopatra VII and Julius Caesar, Ptolemy XV got  his reign in  44  B.C.E. Although he was  only  a child, he was set up to the throne to conserve him. Ptolemy XIV, who had been coruler with Cleopatra VII, had been slain to make room for him.

Named  Caesarion,  his  throne  name  stood for  Heir  of the Living God, the Chosen One of Ptah, Living the Rule of Re, the Living Image of Amun. He was described with his  mother  on  the  wall  of  the  temple  of  Dendereh as being extended to the gods. The Roman Senate in 42 B.C.E. shopped Ptolemy XV's peak to the throne. He discovered  the  doomed  battle  of Actium and  the  death of Cleopatra VII and Marc Antony and then was dead by the Romans, reportedly a death set up by Augustus (Octavian) at the urgency of Aeries Didymos, Ptolemy XV's former tutor.



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Ptolemy XIV (47-44)

Ptolemy XIV
Ptolemy XIV (47-44) was the son of Ptolemy III and Berenice II. He married his sister, Arsinoe III. He chased an dirty policy in Asia in an set about to gain control of Palestine-Syria but presented a major rising in the southern where native rules Harwennefer and Ankhwennefer were professed. His chief minister was Sosibios, who arranged a serial publications of murders of members of the royal family to tone up his save power. The king appears to have died in late 205 BC, but his dying was initially obscure by his court. He was followed by his son, King Ptolemy V.


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Ptolemy XIII (51-47)

Hieroglyphic Name:
Hieroglyphic name of Ptolemy XIII
Ptolemy XIII
The son of Ptolemy XII Neos Dionysus and  perhaps Cleopatra (6) Tryphaina, Ptolemy XIII had to portion royal powers  with  his  sister,  beginning  their  joint  reign  in  51 B.C.E. His court advisers, however, fostered his dreams, and  he  forced  Cleopatra VII to  flee  from  Alexandria. Pompey was  named  his  defender  as  a  issue.  The  war between Pompey and Julius Caesar, however, broke this  keeping.  When  Pompey,  fleeing  from  Caesar, put down in  Egypt,  he  was  slain  by  Ptolemy  XIII's  brokers, going for to have the victorious Caesar as an ally.

He  was  drawn  to  join  his  army  in  the  desert  near Alexandria,  still,  when  Caesar  ruled  in  favor  of Cleopatra VII's claims, joined in time by Arsinoe (4), his sister.  Arsinoe  complicated  matters  by  murdering Achillas, the  military  frequent  who  might  have  directed Egypts  forces  with  skill.  Ptolemy  XIII  also  faced  additional  armies  when  an  ally  of  Caesar  gone far  with  fresh troops. He died by swimming after an attempt to still-hunt Caesar broken. A shrine at Kom Ombo renders him in various acts of worship. He also built in Philae.



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