Cleopatra VII was not the seductress portrayed in Hollywood, but a brilliant Greek-speaking political mastermind who ruled Egypt as a client queen of Rome, speaking nine languages, executing her siblings to secure her throne, and strategically using her relationships with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony to protect her empire, ultimately choosing suicide as her final political victory over Octavian rather than being paraded as a Roman prisoner.
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5 Brutal Truths of CleopatraAdded:
Forget everything you think you know about Cleopatra. Forget the Hollywood movies, the gold milk baths, and the image of a woman who only used her beauty to get what she wanted.
History is written by the [music] victors, and the men who defeated Cleopatra wanted you to remember her as a temptress.
But the truth is far more dangerous.
>> [music] >> She was a queen who spoke nine languages. She was a mathematician, a naval commander, >> [music] >> and a cold-blooded politician who executed her own siblings to keep [music] her throne. She lived in a world of poison, daggers, and civil war.
She didn't just love Julius Caesar and [music] Mark Antony.
She used them as shields to protect her ancient empire from the hungry jaws of Rome.
Today on 5-Point [music] Historian, we are uncovering the five brutal truths of Cleopatra.
We are looking at the woman behind the myth, the last and perhaps [music] greatest pharaoh of Egypt. Are you ready to meet the real queen of the Nile?
Let's draw the curtain.
One, the Greek stranger, the blood of Macedonia. The first brutal truth that shocks [music] most people is this.
Cleopatra was not Egyptian. She didn't have a drop of Egyptian blood in her veins. She was Greek. Her family, the Ptolemies, >> [music] >> were descendants of Ptolemy the first Soter, one of Alexander the Great's [music] most powerful generals.
For 300 years, this Greek family ruled Egypt as foreigners.
They sat on the throne in Alexandria, a city of Greek culture, and they refused [music] to even learn the Egyptian language.
A different kind of ruler.
But Cleopatra [music] was different. She was a genius from a young age. While her ancestors ignored the [music] people they ruled, Cleopatra was the first and only Ptolemaic ruler to learn the Egyptian language. [music] She didn't stop there. She learned the languages of the Ethiopians, the Hebrews, the Arabs, and [music] many more.
She understood that language is power.
The stolen throne. [music] When her father died, he left the throne to Cleopatra [music] and her 10-year-old brother, Ptolemy the 13th.
In the Ptolemaic world, you didn't share [music] power. You fought for it. Her brother's advisers kicked her out of the palace and sent her into the [music] desert. But Cleopatra wasn't a victim.
She was a predator waiting for her moment. She knew that Rome was the only power [music] that could put her back on the throne. She didn't need a miracle.
She needed a Roman general, and luckily for her, Julius Caesar was [music] just arriving in Alexandria.
Two, the rug and the general, >> [music] >> a strategic alliance.
We all know the famous story. Cleopatra [music] smuggles herself into the palace inside a rolled-up rug to meet Julius [music] Caesar.
Hollywood tells us this was a romantic moment. But let's look at the brutal truth. This was a high-stakes [music] military gamble. If Caesar didn't like her, he would have handed her over to her brother to [music] be executed. The intellectual seduction. Caesar was 52 years old. Cleopatra was 21. Caesar [music] had seen the most beautiful women in the world, but he had never met a woman like Cleopatra. She didn't [music] impress him with just her face.
She impressed him with her brain.
She talked to him [music] about history, law, and the stars.
She offered him the wealth of Egypt [music] to fund his wars in Rome, the price of power.
The result? [music] Caesar fell for her strategy. He fought a war against her brother, >> [music] >> Ptolemy the 13th.
During the battle, the great library of Alexandria was burned, and Cleopatra's brother drowned in the Nile while trying [music] to escape.
Cleopatra was now the undisputed queen of Egypt, but she wasn't free. She was now [music] a client queen of Rome. She gave Caesar a son, Caesarion, not out of love, but to [music] ensure that her bloodline would one day rule both Rome and Egypt. She was playing a game of global chess, and for a while, she was winning. Three, the family ashes, poison and politics.
To stay on top in the ancient world, you couldn't have a soft heart. The third brutal truth about Cleopatra is that she was a cold-blooded survivor. In the Ptolemaic family, family reunions usually ended in funerals.
Removing the rivals.
Cleopatra had two brothers and [music] two sisters. By the time she was firmly in power, all of them were dead.
Her brother, Ptolemy the 13th, died in the war with Caesar. Her younger brother, [music] Ptolemy the 14th, mysteriously died shortly after Caesar's assassination.
Many historians believe Cleopatra [music] poisoned him to make room for her son on the throne. The death of Arsinoe.
But the most brutal act was the execution of her sister, Arsinoe.
[music] Arsinoe had tried to take the throne from Cleopatra and was living in exile in a [music] temple in Ephesus, Cleopatra convinced her new lover, Mark Antony, to send soldiers to the temple, a holy place where violence [music] was forbidden, and murder Arsinoe on the steps.
Cleopatra didn't [music] care about holy ground or sisterly love. She cared about stability.
She knew that as long as another Ptolemy lived, >> [music] >> her life was in danger.
She chose to be a killer rather than a victim.
This is the part of the story the movies often skip [music] because it's hard to make a romantic hero out of a woman who executes her siblings. But in the world of 30 BC, this was the only way to survive.
Four, the Roman propaganda, creating the monster.
>> [music] >> If Cleopatra was so smart and powerful, why do we remember her as just a >> [music] >> beautiful seductress?
The answer lies in the fourth brutal truth.
She was the victim of the greatest propaganda campaign in history. [music] The enemy of Octavian. After Julius Caesar was murdered, Rome was split between Mark Antony >> [music] >> and Caesar's heir, Octavian, later known as Augustus.
Antony chose to live in Egypt with Cleopatra. Octavian knew [music] he couldn't easily defeat Antony in a fair fight, so he attacked the woman beside him.
Octavian [music] told the Roman people that Cleopatra was a foreign witch who had used magic and [music] sex to brainwash Mark Antony.
The oriental threat.
The Roman propaganda [music] machine painted Cleopatra as a symbol of everything Rome hated. She was an Eastern [music] queen, she was wealthy, she was independent, and she was immoral.
Octavian told the Roman Senate that Cleopatra wanted to move the capital of the world from Rome to Alexandria. He turned a political civil war into a war [music] for Roman values. This image of Cleopatra as a manipulative siren was written into the history books by [music] Octavian's historians.
For 2,000 years, we have been looking at Cleopatra [music] through the eyes of the man who hated her most.
She wasn't an exotic [music] dancer. She was a head of state. But the Romans couldn't handle a woman with that much power.
Five, the strategic suicide, the final move.
The year is 30 BC. The forces of Octavian have crushed Mark Antony and Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium.
Antony [music] is dead. Cleopatra is trapped in her palace in Alexandria.
This is the moment where the story usually gets very emotional >> [music] >> with the famous snake, the asp, biting her chest. But even her death was [music] a calculated political move.
Avoiding the triumph.
Octavian wanted to capture [music] Cleopatra alive. Why?
Because he wanted to lead her through the streets [music] of Rome in chains during his triumph parade. He wanted to humiliate her to show the world that the great Egyptian [music] queen was now a Roman slave.
Cleopatra knew this. She also knew [music] that if she died as a queen, her dignity would remain intact.
The choice of the cobra.
The brutal truth is that [music] her suicide was her final victory over Octavian. By killing herself, she denied him his greatest trophy. [music] Whether she used a snake or a poison needle, as some historians [music] suggest, she chose the timing and the method of her departure. [music] She dressed in her royal robes, sat on her golden throne, >> [music] >> and died as a pharaoh, not a prisoner.
With her death, the 3,000-year history of the pharaohs ended.
Egypt became a mere province of Rome, a [music] breadbasket to feed the Roman masses.
Cleopatra was the last person who stood in the way of the Roman Empire's total [music] control of the Mediterranean.
Cleopatra was a woman trapped between two worlds and two eras. [music] She was a Greek ruling an Egyptian land, a woman ruling in a world of men, and a defender of an old empire against the rise of a [music] new superpower.
She wasn't a goddess, and she wasn't a saint.
She was a brilliant, dangerous, and [music] incredibly capable leader who did everything in her power to keep her country free.
We remember her beauty because that is what the Roman [music] poets wrote about.
But we should remember her mind. She was a queen who could discuss [music] mathematics in the morning and lead a fleet of warships in the afternoon.
She was a survivor who fought until the very last second.
Cleopatra's story is a reminder that power is a dangerous [music] game, and in that game, she was one of the greatest players to ever live.
Do you think Cleopatra was a victim of history or a cold-blooded ruler who got what she deserved?
And if she had defeated [music] Octavian, how different would our world look today?
Let me know in the comments below.
Don't forget [music] to like and subscribe to 5-Point Historian. Stay curious. Stay [music] historical. I'll see you in the next one.
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