Cleopatra IV explained

Cleopatra IV
Succession:Queen of Egypt
Reign:116–115 BC
Reign-Type:Reign
Coronation:116 BC
Predecessor:Ptolemy VIII
Cleopatra III
Successor:Ptolemy IX
Cleopatra III
Regent:Ptolemy IX
Cleopatra III
Reg-Type:Co-rulers
Moretext1:(Queen Consort of Syria)
Reign1:114–112 BC (in opposition to queen consort Tryphaena)
Reign-Type1:Tenure
Coronation1:114 BC
Cor-Type1:Coronation
Dynasty:Ptolemaic
Father:Ptolemy VIII Physcon
Mother:Cleopatra III of Egypt
Birth Date:c. 138 – 135 BC
Death Date:112 BC (aged 22–26)

Cleopatra IV (Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Κλεοπάτρα) was Queen of Egypt briefly from 116 to 115 BC, jointly with her husband Ptolemy IX Lathyros. She later became queen consort of the Seleucid king of Syria as the wife of Antiochus IX Cyzicenus.[1]

Biography

Queen of Egypt

Cleopatra IV was the daughter of Ptolemy VIII Physcon and Cleopatra III of Egypt. She was born between 138 and 135 BC. She was the sister of Ptolemy IX, Ptolemy X, Cleopatra Selene I and Tryphaena.

Cleopatra IV married her brother Ptolemy IX when he was still a prince in c. 119/118 BC. Cleopatra IV may be the mother of Ptolemy XII Auletes and Ptolemy of Cyprus, although an unnamed concubine could be the mother of these two men as well.[2]

In c. 115 BC Cleopatra III forced Cleopatra IV and Ptolemy IX to divorce. She replaced Cleopatra IV with her sister Cleopatra Selene.[3]

Queen of Syria and death

After her forced divorce, Cleopatra IV fled Egypt and went to Cyprus, where she married Antiochus IX Cyzicenus and brought him the army of his half brother Seleucid King Antiochus VIII Grypus of Syria, which she had convinced to follow her. Grypus fought Cyzicenus and eventually chased him to Antioch. Grypus was married to Cleopatra IV's sister Tryphaena. Tryphaena decided that Cleopatra IV should die and over the protests of her husband summoned some soldiers and had Cleopatra IV murdered in the sanctuary of Daphne in Antioch.[1] [4]

In his comprehensive website about Ptolemaic genealogy, Christopher Bennett also notes the possibility that Cleopatra IV, from her brief marriage to Antiochus IX Cyzicenus, may have been the mother of the later Seleucid monarch, Antiochus X Eusebes ("the Pious").[5] Antiochus X would go on to marry Cleopatra IV's younger sister, Cleopatra Selene, thus making him the spouse of a woman who was his stepmother (Selene married both of her sisters' widowers, Grypus and Cyzicenus, before marrying Eusebes) and perhaps his maternal aunt.

See also

References

  1. Aidan Dodson, Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, 2004
  2. http://www.tyndalehouse.com/Egypt/ptolemies/cleopatra_iv_fr.htm Cleopatra IV
  3. [Justin (historian)|Justin]
  4. Justin 39, 3, 3-11.
  5. Chris Bennett: Arsinoe IV

External links