Tag: Cleopatra VII

Unique Crown suggests Arsinoë II ruled as King of Lower Egypt

A relief depicting Queen Arsinoe II at the Philae-temple in Aswan. - Photograph by Maria NilssonA unique queens crown with ancient symbols combined with a new method of studying status in Egyptian reliefs forms the basis for a re-interpretation of historical developments in Egypt in the period following the death of Alexander the Great.

In the thesis ‘The Crown of Arsino II’, Maria Nilsson shows that Cleopatra VII was not the only Ptolemaic female pharaoh Queen Arsino II came first, 200 years earlier. Nilsson argues that Arsino (316-270 BC) should be included in the official pharaonic king list as Ptolemy II’s co-regent; her royal authority should be considered equivalent to Hatshepsut, Tawosret and Amenirdis II, as one of the most important royal women in Egyptian history.

Researchers largely agree on Queen Arsino IIs importance from the day that she was deified. The queen was put on a level with the ancient goddesses Isis and Hathor, and was still respected and honoured 200 years after her death when her better-known descendant Cleopatra wore the same crown. But the reasons behind Arsinos huge influence have been explained in many different ways.

Maria Nilsson, from the University of Gotenburg in Sweden, has studied her historical importance by interpreting the Macedonian queen’s personal crown and its ancient symbols. The crown, which has never been found but is depicted on statues and Egyptian reliefs, was created with the help of the Egyptian priesthood to symbolise the qualities of the queen. In her thesis ‘The crown of Arsino II. The creation and development of an imagery of authority’ (available online here), Nilsson questions the traditional royal line which excludes female regents, and defies some researchers attempts to minimise Arsinos importance while she was still alive.

My conclusion instead is that Arsino was a female pharaoh and high priestess who was equal to and ruled jointly with her brother and husband, and that she was deified during her actual lifetime, says Nilsson. It was this combination of religion and politics that was behind her long-lived influence.

As early as Predynastic times, ancient Egyptian rulers depicted themselves, in line with their gods, wearing different crowns. Six main forms are documented from at least the early dynastic period, and still regularly depicted although elaborated upon in the Ptolemaic and Roman periods; the khepresh (or blue crown), the white crown, the red crown, the double crown, the double feather plume and the atef (or ostrich feather) crown. So far archaeologists have not found any physical royal crowns, and Egyptologists have to make do with studying depictions of the various crowns on tomb paintings and reliefs.

The crown became an ideal tool for communicating individuality and status when all the other elements were fundamentally locked in artistic tradition and strictly regulated

Until the Ptolemaic period, the double crown was the most important and powerful royal crown, rarely receiving any pictorial additions. However, Arsino II’s crown was based on the composition of different pictorial elements; the red crown, ram horns, the double feather plume and the cow horns with solar disc. By wearing a traditional crown, the Ptolemaic queen would have associated herself with the previous pharaonic ruling couples, as well as the divine world of Egypt, but the new composition of elements can be seen as an expression of a more individualistic symbolic approach.

The crown became an ideal tool for communicating individuality and status when all the other elements were fundamentally locked in artistic tradition and strictly regulated, writes Nilsson.

According to Nilsson, the crown was created for the living queen, and reflects the main three aspects of Arsino’s positions her royal position as King of Lower Egypt, high priestess and God’s wife of Amun, and her status of goddess, both during and after her lifetime as thea Philadelphos can be clearly identified in the crown’s iconography. It indicates that she was proclaimed female pharaoh during her lifetime, and that she was regarded the female founder of the Ptolemaic Dynasty.

Arsino’s crown can be found in at least 27 variations, and was later worn by Ptolemaic queens Cleopatra III and VII. However, it was not only Cleopatra who wanted to re-use Arsinos important and symbolic crown. Male descendants all named Ptolemy used her crown as a template when creating a new crown which they gave to the goddess Hathor to honour the domestic priesthood and so win its support when Egypt was gripped by civil war.

Evidently, this crown was accepted throughout the ages as an individual attribute of Hathor of Dendera, while the crown of Arsino, in its original form, disappeared with Cleopatra VII, writes Nilsson. The most important conclusion that comes out of this study of the later Hathoric crown is that the Ptolemies found an Egyptian divine couple that could complement their claimed Greek divine ancestry, that Hathor of Dendera and Horus of Edfu signified and personified the male and female side of the Ptolemaic dynasty at the time of the crowns’ introduction.

Nilsson’s thesis is structured around the crown and includes its wider context in the reliefs (with a most fascinating chapter about size and position, relative scaling and the ‘crown line’ (p 343-392), demonstrating that Arsino ‘s crown placed the queen as the most important figure in a majority of scenes) and paves the way for future studies of Egyptian crowns as symbols of power and status for instance the difference between crowns worn by Egyptian woman in their roles as queens and those worn by priestesses.

The creation of Queen Arsinos crown was just the beginning, she says.

Did Cleopatra Prefer Poison to Suicide by Snake?

Still from ZDF Kleopatras Tod Alexandria, 30BC. When Cleopatra, the last Queen of Egypt, is forced to surrender to Octavian, she decides she’d rather die than fall in enemy hands. She locks herself in the temple, and manages to deceive her Roman captors: by inducing an Egyptian cobra to bite her on the arm, she kills herself. A quiet and painless death. Or so the story goes. 2,000 years after the famous suicide, German historian Christoph Schaefer is challenging this ‘suicide-by-snake’ theory, claiming the Queen used a mixture of hemlock, wolfsbane and opium to poison herself.

Ruling out Death by Snake

After studying historical texts and consulting with toxicologists, Christoph Schaefer came to the conclusion that an asp bite believed to be that of an Egyptian cobra could not have caused a slow and painless death. The viper’s venom would have paralysed Cleopatra’s body, whilefully conscious,causing agonizing pains. An particularly awkward, excruciating death, unsuitable for a queen and incompatible with the quiet and pain-free death described by the ancient Roman historians.

But didn’t Shakespeare fantasise.. err.. introduce she caressed the venomous snake to her breast? Professor Dietrich Mebs, toxicologist from Frankfurt University: This would be highly impractical, because this particular area has a large amount of fat tissue, slowing down the progress of the poison in the body. It takes it the longer until the effect of the snake venom occurs.

snake bite symptomsSchaefer points out that even if the queen was willing to face the pain, death-by-snake is quite unpredictable: although the Egyptian cobra’s venom is a potent neurotoxin, and just a few milligrams are enough to kill an adult human, the bite itself is not always lethal.

When defending itself, a snake is capable of biting without injecting venom into its victim. The so-called ‘dry bite’, allowing the serpent to avoid wasting venom on a creature too large for it to eat, would be,although obnoxious, far from lethal. Would the queen take this risk?

Then How Did Queen Cleopatra Die?

Then how did Cleopatra commit suicide, assuming she wasn’t murdered by Octavian’s men and death-by-snake is no option? Four-hundred years beforeEgypt’s queen heard about her lover’s death, the philosopher Socrates was sentenced (for corrupting the youth and impiety, if you’re curious) to execution by drinking a potion containing hemlock, one of nature’s most powerful toxins. That the Egyptians had an extensive knowledge of plant medicine is well documented in ancient Egypt’s most famous medical papyrus. The’Ebers Papyrus‘ reveals that Queen Cleopatra’s physicians must have known about plant toxins, describing amongst others aconite and mandrake.

Drug Overdose:Hemlock, Opium and Aconite

Professor Mebs suggests that Cleopatra took a poisonous cocktail to escape her hopeless situation. The main ingredient of this concoction would have been hemlock (which paralyses the nervous system until you die from respiratory failure), which the queen would have combined with a pinch of aconite (or monkshood), just to be on the safe side, and opium. The opium, a powerful painkiller that with a large enough dose would have put Egypt’s last queen into a gentle sleep, rendering her oblivious to her death by suffocation. All’s well that ends well?

The researchers will present their full findings on Adventure Science, screened by German TV channel ZDF today at 10.15pm. The full documentary ‘Kleopatras Tod’ is available on the network’s website here. (It also contains some nice underwater footage from the excavations by Goddio, subject of the current exhibition ‘Cleopatra: the search for the Last Queen of Egypt‘.)

The Myth of a Serpent

But then why did the myth of suicide-by-snake become history?What does the snake symbolize? The documentarysuggeststhe Egyptian queen staged it all, a case of deliberate misinformation. After all, Cleopatra was constantly identified with snakes throughout her life: the snake was the emblem of the royal house of Egypt, as well as associated with the goddess Isis. A snake swallowing its own tail is a symbol of immortality, yet because of its poison is is also an omen of death. Quite appropriate a symbolic way to die, then?

Adding a sexual side to the Queen’s ‘brave’ suicide scene (and escape from capture) must have benefit Octavian as well: Cleopatra, the promiscuous queen, Egypt’s sex kitten, defeated by Octavian, restorer of Roman virtue. Contemporous historians must have decided Cleopatra was a serpent, of sinful nature, destroying two great Roman men, hypnotizing, poisoning and smothering them?

Nowadays, Cleopatra putting the viper to her breast just mainly makes for good TV and high viewing ratings. So, what’s your guess for the upcoming Cleopatra film? Will we see Angelina Jolie die by a toxic potion, by the hand of a vicious Roman or by snake? And if by snake (my guess), arm or breast? !

Angelina Jolie Cleopatra in Film of Stacy’s Schiff’s Biography of Egyptian Queen

Angelina Jolie cast as Cleopatra for new biopic slash blockbusterAngelina Jolie will play Cleopatra, the last queen of Egypt, in a film adapted from Stacy Schiff’s upcoming book ‘Cleopatra: A Life’. It’s hardly likely to subdue those arguing Cleopatra was little more than ‘Egypt’s sex kitten’ (opposed by myself, Nele and Rosemary Joyce in her blog and book ‘Ancient Bodies’, I must say), but it’s exciting news nonetheless.

The book won’t be published until autumn 2010, but producer Scott Rudin has already purchased film rights, saying the movie ‘is being developed for and with Jolie’. Author Schiff has even hinted at Brad Pitt playing Roman general Mark Antony, reminding us of the 1963’s Cleopatra starring (brief) Hollywood sweethearts Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.

Although I’m curious for the end result, I believe Jolie is miscast in this role. She does great goddesses (Beowulf) and mythical figures (Alexander), but Cleopatra was a real figure, ruling in Graeco-Roman times. Angelina Jolie is even a closer match to the Nefertiti Bust than Cleopatra VII, Ptolemaic Queen!

Maybe with sexy Jolie in the lead (or especially with Jolie in the lead) it won’t all be about Cleopatra’s two love affairs. Maybe the ruler of Egypt will get as much credit for ‘ruling’ as Caesar and Mark Anthony? Maybe they’ll realise there is no need to recreate the 1963 hype of having a celebrity couple as Cleopatra and Mark Anthony (Mrs and Mr Smith should be a warning)? Maybe Asterix and Obelix will get a cameo role? Maybe the film will indeed dispel the Cleopatramovie myths that focusedon glamour and Cleopatra’s skills as seductress?

Regardless of the narrative’s balance, the movie should encourage people to read up on ancient Egypt. But definitely, independent of how Egypt’s queen is portrayed, ‘Cleopatra(2011)’ promises to be just like Troy and Alexander a major blockbuster. Sadly blockbusters can only really be blockbusters when they contain enough disaster and/or violence and eroticism, right?

If you had no budget limitations, and people could be raised from the dead (without looking like zombies), who would you cast as Cleopatra, Mark Anthony and Julius Caesar?

On a happier note, Henry Cavill (The Tudor’s Charles Brandon) as Theseus in Tarsem Singh’s ‘Immortals’ (originally titled ‘War of the Gods’) now has an official release date, November 11th 2011. Director Tarsem Siggh (The Cell) describes Immortals as ‘Caravaggio meets Fight Club’ (rather than historically correct) and even Stephen Dorff returns to the screen as Stavros, helping Theseus to free Greece from the dark threat of the Titans. Except for post-shooting rendering to 3D, surely nothing can go wrong with this one?

They’ve found an opening! Egyptologists reach end of tunnel in Seti I tomb

Question who can completely fill up a cavernous 1,500 seat domed hall on a Saturday night in Toronto?

Answer Dr. Zahi Hawass

I dont get to introduce rock stars, said Art Gallery of Ontario CEO Matthew Teitelbaum.

Well tonight he did.

Forget the critical New Yorker article, the mixed reviews of the new Tut exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario, or the fact that local Toronto media largely stayed away from this lecture.

The worlds most well-known Egyptologist completely filled Convocation Hall, with people who had all paid a small admission fee (no more than $18) to hear him speak.

There was a line snaking up Kings College Circle (the street outside the hall) an hour before it even started.

Now, before I get into what Dr. Hawass said, I should say this Ive been cursed.

My tape recorder has never failed me. Ive recorded hundreds of interviews/lectures on it, with never a serious problem. But tonight it failed, I didnt know until after the lecture, and Im still not certain why.

In fact it stopped just moments after Dr. Hawass started to speak very strange.

Seti I from the KV17 tomb. Click to see a slideshow of images from the Tomb of Seti I. Image Copyright - Sandro Vannini.

Hawass once mused about curses now Im beginning to as well (Watch the video about King Tut’s curse).

So relying on my scribbled notes and my recollection Ill drop these news notes:

End of the Tunnel

The biggest piece of discovery news is that researchers appear to have come to the end of the tunnel in the tomb of Seti I. This tomb was discovered in the 19th century, but work clearing the tunnel hasnt taken place until recently (partly because its difficult to do without collapsing the entire tomb).

Dr. Hawass showed a picture of the debris filled tunnel, with a sliver of an opening. Theyve found that there is a stone staircase leading down to it. Near the opening they found a hieroglyphic inscription, its nothing fancy – it looks like it had been scribbled on the wall. Unfortunately I dont have a translation.

Thats what the situation wasas ofThursday. This means that soon we should know where the tunnel leads. Hawass pointed out that only a small number of artefacts were found in the tomb of Seti I. This has led to speculation that the tunnel leads to the real burial chamber of the king. Could we be on the threshold of a big royal tomb find? We just might.

HD Video: Join Zahi Hawass Inside the Mysterious Tunnel in the Tomb of Seti I

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The search for the tomb of Cleopatra and Mark Antony

Work continues on the site of Taposiris Magna, which may hold the burial of Cleopatra VII and Mark Antony. No Cleopatra burial yet, but they have recently uncovered a statue of Isis. Thats in addition to 22 coins that have Cleopatras image and a bust that also appear to show the fated ruler. (See the video interview with Kathleen Martinez here.)

Finding the tomb of Cleopatra may be a long-shot. Scholars have argued that Emperor Augustus would never have allowed the couple to be buried in such a prominent place. After all Augustus was in the process of ending pharaonic rule and turning Egypt into a Roman province. In any case we can certainly expect to hear of more Ptolemaic discoveries from this site.

HDVideo: Search for the Tomb of Cleopatra (Featuring Dr. Kathleen Martinez)


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Upuaut-2 ventured 60m into the southern Queen’s Chamber passageway, before it encountered a barrier – a limestone “door” with two copper handles. Image credit - Michael Studt.

Robot work at the Khufu Pyramid

Not really a lot of news here. Its already been reported that more robotic work will be done in these shafts at some point in the near-future.

The Pyramid of Khufu contains two shafts that used to be considered air shafts that played a role in pyramid ventilation. However investigations have shown that there are no openings on the exterior of the pyramid so that couldnt be what they are for. Robots have gone up previously only to find the shafts blockedby copper handled doors.

Dr. Zahi Hawass is as upbeat as ever that this work will lead to a major discovery. A chamber is still hidden inside the pyramid, he said.

Zahi Hawass and George W. Bush

Dr. Hawass and Laura Bush (the wife of former President George W. Bush) have a good relationship. He took her for a tour of the Great Pyramids once. We learned that the former president is a fan of Dr. Hawasss documentaries and apparently, in his post-presidential life, watches them on Texas television. So Dr. Hawass gave him one of his explorer hats. That hat does not fit Mr. Bush he was told.

But dont worry, Hawass gave him books and videos, rest assured Bush will be learning more about Ancient Egypt in his retirement. Personally I kind of wish he had taken to reading about the Middle East when he was in office.

By the way President Obama (visiting the pyramids in this video) got one of Dr. Hawasss hats as well. Hawass showed a picture of the president wearing it and yes it fits!