THE DIVINE HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST |
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CLEOPATRA, QUEEN OF EGYPTPART
I.
CLEOPATRA
AND CAESAR
CHAPTER III.
THE
BIRTH AND EARLY YEARS OF CLEOPATRA.
Cleopatra was the
last of the regnant Ptolemaic sovereigns of Egypt, and was the seventh Egyptian
Queen of her name, in her person all the rights and
privileges of that extraordinary line of Pharaohs being vested. The
Ptolemaic Dynasty was founded in the first years of the third century
before Christ by Ptolemy, the son of Lagus, one
of the Macedonian generals of Alexander the Great, who, on his master’s
death, seized the province of Egypt, and, a few years later, made himself
King of that country, establishing himself at the newly-founded city
of Alexandria on the sea-coast. For two and a half centuries the dynasty
presided over the destinies of Egypt, at first with solicitous care, and
later with startling nonchalance, until, with the death of the
great Cleopatra and her son Ptolemy XVI (Caesarion), the royal line
came to an end.
For the right
understanding of Cleopatra’s character it must be clearly recognised that the Ptolemies were in no way Egyptians. They were Macedonians, as I have
already said, in whose veins flowed not one drop of Egyptian blood. Their
capital city of Alexandria was, in the main, a Mediterranean colony set
down upon the sea-coast of Egypt, but having no connection with the
Delta and the Nile Valley other than the purely commercial and official
relationship which of necessity existed between the maritime seat of Government
and the provinces. The city was Greek in character; the temples and
public buildings were constructed in the Greek manner; the art of the
period was Greek; the life of the upper classes was lived according to
Greek habits; the dress of the court and of the aristocracy was
Greek; the language spoken by them was Greek, pronounced, it it is
said, with the broad Macedonian accent. It is probable that no one of the
Ptolemies ever wore Egyptian costume, except possibly for ceremonial
purposes; and, in passing, it may be remarked that the modern conventional
representation of the great Cleopatra walking about her palace clothed in
splendid Egyptian robes and wearing the vulture-headdress of the ancient
queens has no justification. It is true that she is said to
have attired herself on certain occasions in a dress designed to
simulate that which was supposed by the priests of the time to have been
worn by the mother-deity Isis; but contemporaneous representations of Isis
generally show her clad in the Greek and not the Egyptian manner. And
if she ever wore the ancient dress of the Egyptian queens, it must have
been only at great religious festivals or on occasions where conformity
to obsolete habits was required by the ritual.
The relationship of
the royal house to the people was very similar to that existing at the present
day between the Khedivial dynasty and the provincial natives of Egypt. The
modern Khedivial princes are Albanians, who cannot record in their genealogy
a single Egyptian ancestor. They live in the European manner, and
dress according to the dictates of Paris and London. Similarly the
Ptolemies retained their Macedonian nationality, and Plutarch tells us
that not one of them even troubled to learn the Egyptian language. On the
other hand the Egyptians, constrained by the force of
circumstances, accepted the dynasty as the legal successor of the
ancient Pharaonic line, and assigned to the Ptolemies all the titles
and dignities of their great Pharaohs.
These Greek
sovereigns, Cleopatra no less than her predecessors, were given the titles
which had been so proudly borne by Rameses the Great and the mighty Thutmosis the Third, a thousand years and more
before their day. They were named, “Living Image of the God Amon,” “Child
of the Sun,” and “Chosen of Ptah,” just as the great Memnon and the
conquering Sesostris had been named when Egypt
was the first power in the world. In the temples throughout the land, with
the exception of those of importance at Alexandria, these Macedonian
monarchs were pictorially represented in the guise of the ancient
Pharaohs, crowned with the tall crowns of Upper and Lower Egypt, the horns
and feathers of Amon upon their heads, and the royal serpent at their foreheads.
There they were seen worshipping the old gods of Egypt, prostrating themselves
in the presence of the cow Hathor, bowing before the crocodile Sobk, burning incense at the shrine of the cat
Bast, and performing all the magical ceremonies hallowed by the usage
of four thousand years. They were shown enthroned with the gods, embraced
by Isis, saluted by Osiris, and kissed by Mout, the
Mother of Heaven. Yet it is doubtful whether in actual fact any
Ptolemy at any time identified himself in this manner with
the traditional character of a Pharaoh.
Very occasionally
one of these Greek sovereigns left his city of Alexandria to visit Egypt
proper, and to travel up the Nile. At certain cities he honoured the local temple with a visit and performed
in a perfunctory manner the prescribed ceremonies, just as a
modern sovereign lays a foundation-stone or launches a battleship. But
there is nothing to show that any member of the royal house regarded
himself as an Egyptian in the traditional sense of the word. They were
careful as a rule to placate the priesthood, and to allow them a free
use of their funds in the building and decoration of the temples; and
Egyptian national life was fostered to a very considerable extent. But in
Alexandria one might hardly have believed oneself to be in the land
of the Pharaohs, and the court was almost entirely European in
character.
The Ptolemies as a
family were extraordinarily callous in their estimate of the value of human
life, and the history of the dynasty is marked throughout its
whole length by a series of villainous murders. In this respect they
showed their non-Egyptian blood; for the people of the Nile were, and now
are, a kindly, pleasant folk, not predisposed to the arts of the assassin
and not by any means regardless of the rights of their fellow-men. It
may be of interest to record here some of the murders for which the
Ptolemies are responsible. Ptolemy III, according to Justin, was murdered
by his son Ptolemy IV, who also seems to have planned at one time
and another the murders of his brother Magas, his uncle Lysimachus, his
mother Berenice, and his wife Arsinoe. Ptolemy V is described as a cruel
and violent monarch, who seems to have indulged the habit of murdering
those who offended him. Ptolemy VII is said by Polybius to have had
the Egyptian vice of riotousness, although on the whole averse to shedding
blood. Ptolemy VIII murdered his young nephew, the heir to the
throne, and married the dead boy’s mother, the widowed
queen Cleopatra II, who shortly afterwards presented him with a baby,
Memphites, whose paternal parentage is doubtful. Ptolemy later, according
to some accounts, murdered this child and sent his body in pieces to the
mother. He then married his niece, Cleopatra III; and she, on
being left a widow, appears to have murdered Cleopatra II. This
Cleopatra III bore a son who later ascended the throne as Ptolemy XI, whom
she afterwards attempted to murder, but the tables being turned she was
murdered by him. Ptolemy X was driven from the throne by his mother,
who installed Ptolemy XI in his place, and was promptly murdered by the
new king for her pains. Ptolemy XII, having married his stepmother,
murdered her, and himself was murdered shortly afterwards. Ptolemy
XIII, the father of the great Cleopatra, murdered his daughter Berenice
and also several other persons.
The women of this family were even more violent than the men. Mahaffy describes their characteristics in the following words: Great power and wealth, which makes an alliance with them imply the command of large resources in men and money; mutual hatred; disregard of all ties of family and affection; the dearest object fratricide—such pictures of depravity as make any reasonable man pause and ask whether human nature had deserted these women and the Hyrcanian tiger of the poet taken its place. In many other ways also this murderous family of kings
possessed an unenviable reputation. The first three Ptolemies were endowed
with many sterling qualities, and were conspicuous for their talents; but the
remaining monarchs of the dynasty were, for the most part, degenerate
and debauched. They were, however, patrons of the arts and sciences,
and indeed they did more for them than did almost any other royal house in
the world. Ptolemaic Alexandria was to some extent the birthplace of the
sciences of anatomy, geometry, conic sections, hydrostatics, geography,
and astronomy, while its position in the artistic world was most important. The splendour and luxury of the palace was
far-famed, and the sovereign lived in a chronic condition
of repletion which surpassed that of any other court. When Scipio
Africanus visited Egypt he found our Cleopatra’s great-grandfather,
Ptolemy IX, who was nicknamed Physkon, “the
Bloated,” fat, puffing, and thoroughly over-fed. As Scipio walked to the
palace with the King, who, in too transparent robes, breathed heavily
by his side, he whispered to a friend that Alexandria had derived at least
one benefit from his visit—it had seen its sovereign taking a walk. Ptolemy
X, Cleopatra’s grandfather, obtained the nickname “Lathyros,”
owing, it is said, to the resemblance of his nose to a vetch or some such
flowery and leguminous plant: a fact which certainly suggests that
the King was not a man of temperate habits. Ptolemy XI was so bloated by
gluttony and vice that he seldom walked without crutches, though, under
the influence of wine, he was able to skip about the room freely enough
with his drunken comrades. Ptolemy XIII, Cleopatra’s father, had such an
objection to temperance that once he threatened to put the
philosopher Demetrius to death for not being intoxicated at one of
his feasts; and the unfortunate man was obliged the next day publicly to
drink himself silly in order to save his life. Such glimpses as these show
us the Ptolemies at their worst, and we are constrained to ask how it
is possible that Cleopatra, who brought the line to a termination, could
have failed to be a thoroughly bad woman. Yet, as will presently become
apparent, there is no great reason to suppose that her sins
were either many or scarlet.
Cleopatra’s father,
Ptolemy XIII, who went by the nickname of Auletes, “the Piper,” was a degenerate little
man, who passes across Egypt’s political stage in a condition of almost
continuous inebriety. We watch his drunken antics as he directs the
Bacchic orgies in the palace; we see him stupidly plotting
and scheming to hold his tottering throne; we hear him playing the
livelong hours away upon his flute; and we feel that his deeds would be
hardly worth recording were it not for the fact that in his reign is
seen the critical development of the political relationship between
Rome and Egypt, which, towards the end of the Ptolemaic dynasty, came to
have such a complicated bearing upon the history of both countries.
After the battle of Pydna (BC 167) Rome had
obtained almost absolute control of the Hellenistic world, and she
soon began to lay her hands on all the commerce of the eastern
Mediterranean. Towards the close of the Ptolemaic period the great
Republic turned eager eyes towards Egypt, watching for an opportunity to
seize that wealthy land for her own enrichment.
Reference to the
genealogy at the end of this volume will show the reader that the main line of
the Lagidae came to an end on the assassination
(after a reign of nineteen days) of Ptolemy XII (Alexander II), who
had been raised to the throne by Roman help. The only legitimate
child of Ptolemy X (Soter II) was Berenice III, the
cousin of Ptolemy XII, who had been married to him, the union, however,
producing no heir to the throne. Ptolemy X had two sons, the
half-brothers of Berenice III, but they were both illegitimate,
the name and status of their mother being now unknown. It is possible
that they were the children of Cleopatra IV, who was divorced from their father
at his accession; or it is possible that the lady was not of royal
blood. On the death of Ptolemy XII one of these two young men
proclaimed himself Pharaoh of Egypt, being known to us as Ptolemy XIII,
and the other announced himself as King of Cyprus, also under the name of
Ptolemy. The people of Alexandria at once accepted Ptolemy XIII as
their king, for, whether illegitimate or not, he was the eldest male
descendant of the line, and their refusal to accept his rule would have
brought the dynasty to a close, thereby insuring an immediate Roman
occupation. Cicero speaks of the new monarch as nec regio genere ortus, which implies that whoever his mother might
be, she was not a reigning queen at the time of his birth; but
the Alexandrian populace were in no mood to raise scruples in regard
to his origin, when it was apparent that he alone stood between their
liberty and the stern domination of Rome.
No sooner had he
ascended the throne, however, with the title of Ptolemy (XIII) Neos Dionysos, than the discovery was made that Ptolemy XII,
under his name of Alexander, had in his will appointed the
Roman Republic his heir, thus voluntarily bringing his dynasty to a
close. Such a course of action was not novel. It had already been followed
in the case of Pergamum, Cyrene, and Bithynia, and it seems likely that
Ptolemy XII had taken this step in order to obtain the financial or
moral support of the Romans in regard to his accession, or for some equally
urgent reason. The Senate acknowledged the authenticity of the will,
which, of course, the party of Ptolemy XIII had denied. It had been
suggested that the testator was not Ptolemy XII at all, but another
Alexander, Ptolemy XI (Alexander I), or an obscure person sometimes
referred to as Alexander III. There is little question, however,
that the will was genuine enough; but there is considerable doubt as
to whether it was legally valid. In the first place, it was probably
written before Ptolemy XII succeeded to the kingdom; and, in the second place,
such a will would only be valid were there no heir to the throne; but
the people of Alexandria had accepted Ptolemy XIII as the rightful heir.
At all events the Senate, while seizing, by virtue of the document,
as much of the private fortune of the testator as they could lay
hands on, took no steps to dethrone the two new kings, either of Egypt or
Cyprus, though, on the other hand, they did not officially recognise them.
In this attitude
they were influenced also by the fact that a large party in Rome did not wish
to see the Republic further involved in Oriental affairs, nor
did they feel at the moment inclined to place in the hands of any one
man such power as would accrue to the official who should be appointed as
Governor of the new province. Egypt was regarded as a very wealthy
and important country, second only to Rome in the extent of its
power. It held the keys to the rich lands of the south, and to Arabia and
India it seemed to be one of the main gateways. The revenues of the palace
of Alexandria were quite equal to the public income of Rome at this
time; and, indeed, even at a later date, after Pompey had so greatly
augmented the yearly sum in the Treasury, the wealth of the Egyptian Court
was not far short of this increased total. Alexandria had succeeded
Athens as the seat of culture and learning, and it was now regarded as the
second city of the world. It was therefore felt that the armies and the
generals sent over the sea to this distant land might well run
the risk of being absorbed into the life of the country which they
were holding, and might as it were inevitably set up an Eastern Empire
which would be a menace, and even a terror, to Rome.
The new King of
Egypt, whom we may now call by his nickname Auletes, was much disturbed by the
existence of this will, and throughout his reign he was constantly making
efforts to buy off the expected interference of Rome. He was an unhappy
and unfortunate man. All he asked was to be allowed to enjoy the royal
wealth in drunken peace, and not to be bothered by the haunting fear
that he might be turned out of his kingdom. He was a keen enjoyer of good living,
and there was nothing that pleased him so much as the participation in one
of the orgies of Dionysos. He played the pipes
with some proficiency, and, when he was sober, it would seem that he
spent many a contented hour piping pleasantly in the sun. Yet his reign
was continuously overshadowed by this knowledge that the Romans might at any
moment dethrone him; and one pictures him often giving vent to an
evening melancholy by blowing from his little flute one of those wailing
dirges of his native land, which flutter upon the ears like the notes of a
night-bird, and drift at last upon a half-tone into silence.
In the fifth year
of his reign, that is to say in BC 75, his kinswoman, Selene, sent her two sons
to Rome with the object of obtaining the thrones of Egypt, Cyprus,
and Syria; and Auletes must have watched with anxiety their attempts
to oust him. He knew that they were giving bribes right and left to the
Senators, in order to effect their purpose, and he was aware that in this
manner alone the heart of the Roman Republic could be touched; yet
for the time being he avoided these methods of expending his country’s revenue,
and, after a while, he had the satisfaction of hearing that Selene had
abandoned her efforts to obtain recognition. In the thirteenth
year of his reign Pompey sent a fleet under Lentulus Marcellinus to clear the Egyptian coast of pirates, and when Lentulus was made consul he caused the Ptolemaic
eagle and thunderbolt to be displayed upon his coins to mark the fact
that he had exercised an act of sovereignty in connection with that
country. Three years later another Roman fleet was sent to Alexandria to
impose the will of the Senate in regard to certain disputed questions;
and once more Auletes must have suffered from the terrors of imminent
dethronement.
In BC 65 he was
again disturbed from his bibulous ease by the news that the Romans were
thinking of sending Crassus or Julius Caesar to annex his
kingdom; but the scheme came to naught, and for a time Auletes was
left in peace. In BC 63 Pompey annexed Syria to the Roman dominions, and
thereupon Auletes sent him a large present of money and military supplies
in order to purchase his friendship. At the same time he invited him
to come to Egypt upon a friendly visit, but Pompey, while accepting the
King’s money, did not think it necessary to make use of his hospitality.
At last, in BC 59,
Auletes decided to go himself to Rome, in the hope of obtaining, through the
good offices of Pompey, or of Caesar, who was Consul in that
year, the official recognition by the Senate of his right to
the Egyptian throne. Being so degenerate and so worthless a
personage, there was no likelihood that the Romans would confirm him in
his kingdom unless they were well paid to do so, and he therefore took
with him all the money he could lay his hands upon. In Rome,
as Mommsen says, “men had forgotten what honesty was. A person who
refused a bribe was regarded not as an upright man, but as a personal
foe.” Auletes, therefore, when he had arrived, gave huge bribes to
various Senators in order to obtain their support, and he appears to
have been most systematically fleeced by the acute magnates of Rome. When
for the moment his Egyptian resources were exhausted, he borrowed
a large sum from the great financier, Rabirius Postumus, who persuaded some of his friends also to
lend the King money. These men formed a kind of syndicate to
finance Auletes, on the understanding that if he were confirmed in
his heritage, they should each receive in return a sum vastly greater than
that which they had put in.
The visit of
Auletes to Rome was made in the nick of time. The Pirate and the Third
Mithridatic wars had left the Republic in pressing need of money,
and there was much talk in regard to the advantages of an immediate
annexation of Egypt. Crassus, the tribune Rullus,
and Julius Caesar had shown themselves anxious to “take the country
without delay”; and the unfortunate King of Egypt thus found himself in a
most desperate position. At last, however, a bribe of 6000 talents
(about a million and a half sterling) induced the nearly
bankrupt Caesar to give Auletes the desired recognition, and the disgraceful
transaction came to a temporary conclusion with Caesar’s violent forcing
of his “Julian Law concerning the King of Egypt” through the
Senate, whereby Ptolemy was named the “ally and friend of the Roman
people.”
In the next year, BC
58, the Romans, still in need of money, prepared to annex Cyprus, over which
Ptolemy, the brother of Auletes, was reigning. The annexation had
been proposed by Publius Clodius, a
scoundrelly politician, who bore a grudge against the Cyprian Ptolemy
owing to the fact that once when Clodius was
captured by pirates Ptolemy had only offered two talents for his ransom.
Ptolemy would not now buy off the invaders as his brother had done, and in
consequence Cato landed on the island and converted it into part
of the Roman province of Cilicia. Ptolemy, with a certain royal
dignity, at once poisoned himself, preferring to die than to suffer the
humiliation of banishment from the throne which he had usurped. His
treasure of 7000 talents (some £1,700,000) fell into the hands of
Cato, who having, no doubt, helped himself to a portion of the booty,
handed the remainder over to the benign Senate.
No sooner had
Auletes obtained the support of Rome, however, than his own people of
Alexandria, incensed by the increase of taxation necessary for paying off his
debts, and angry also at the King’s refusal to seize Cyprus from the
Romans, rose in rebellion and drove him out of Egypt. While the wretched
man was on his way to Rome, he put in at Rhodes, where he had heard
that Cato was staying, in order to obtain some help from
this celebrated Senator; and, having had few personal dealings with
Romans, he sent a royal invitation or command to Cato to come to him. The
Senator, however, who that day was suffering from a bilious attack, and
had just swallowed a dose of medicine, was in no mind to wait upon
drunken kings. He therefore sent a message to Auletes stating that if he
wished to see him he had better come to his lodgings in the town; and the
King of Egypt was thus obliged to humble himself and to find his
way to the Senator’s house. Cato did not even rise from his seat when
Auletes was ushered in; but straightway bidding the King be seated, gave
him a severe lecture on the folly of going to Rome to plead his cause.
All Egypt turned into silver, he declared, would hardly satisfy the
greed of the Romans whom he would have to bribe, and he strongly urged him
to return to Egypt and to make his peace with his subjects.
The Senator’s bilious attack, however, seems to have cut short the
interview, and Auletes, unconvinced, set sail for Italy.
Meanwhile the
King’s daughter, Berenice IV, had seized the Egyptian throne, and was reigning
serenely in her father’s place. This princess and her sister, Cleopatra VI,
who died soon afterwards, were the only two children of Auletes’ first
marriage—namely, with Cleopatra V. There were four young children in the
Palace nurseries who were born of a second marriage, but who their mother
was, or whether she was at this time alive or dead, history does not
record. Of these four children, two afterwards succeeded to the throne as
Ptolemy XIV and Ptolemy XV, a third was the unfortunate
Princess Arsinoe, and the fourth was the great Cleopatra VII,
the heroine of the present volume, at this time about eleven years of
age, having been born in the winter of BC 69-68.
Auletes having fled
to Rome, approached the Senate in the manner of one who had been unjustly
evicted from an estate which he had purchased from them. Again
he bribed the leading statesmen, and again borrowed money on all
sides, though now it is probable that his Roman creditors were less
sanguine than on the previous occasion. Caesar was absent in Gaul at this time,
and therefore was not able to be bribed. Pompey, curiously enough, does
not appear to have accepted the King’s money, though he offered him the
hospitality of his villa in the Alban district, a fact which suggests that
the idea of restoring Auletes to his throne had made a strong appeal
to the imagination of this impressionable Roman. He had already made
himself a kind of patron of the Egyptian Court, and there can be little
doubt that he hoped to obtain from Auletes, in return for his favours, the freedom to make use of the wealth and
resources of that monarch’s enormously valuable dominion.
The people of
Alexandria, who were eagerly desirous that Auletes should not be reinstated,
now sent an embassy of a hundred persons to Rome to lay before the
Senate their case against the King; but the banished monarch, driven by
despair to any lengths, hired assassins and caused the embassy to be attacked
near Puteoli, the modern Pozzuoli, many of them
being slain. Those who survived were heavily bribed, and thus the
crime was hushed up. The leader of the deputation, the philosopher
Dion, escaped on this occasion, but was poisoned by Auletes as soon as he
arrived in Rome; and thereupon the desperate King was able to breathe
once more in peace. All might now have gone well with his cause, and
a Roman army might have been placed at his disposal had not some political
opponent discovered in the Sibylline Books an oracle which stated that if
the King of Egypt were to come begging for help he should be aided
with friendship but not with arms. Thereat, in despair, the unfortunate
Auletes quitted Rome, and took up his residence at Ephesus, leaving in the
capital an agent named Ammonios to keep him in
touch with events.
Three years later,
in January BC 55, the King’s interests were still being discussed, and Pompey
was trying, in a desultory manner, to assist him back to his throne;
but so great were the fears of the Senate at placing the task in the hands
of any one man, that no decision could be arrived at. It was suggested
that Lentulus Spinther,
the Governor of Cilicia, should evade the Sibylline decree by leaving
Auletes at Ptolemais (Acre) and going himself to Egypt at the head of
an army; but the King no doubt saw in this an attempt by the wily
Romans simply to seize his country, and he appears to have opposed the
plan with understandable vehemence. It was then proposed that Lentulus should take no army, but should trust to the
might of the Roman name for his purpose, thereby following the advice of
the prophetic Books.
At last, however,
Auletes offered the huge bribe of 10,000 talents (nearly two and a half
millions sterling) for the repurchase of his kingdom; and, as a
consequence, the Governor of Syria, Aulus Gabinius, himself a bankrupt in sore need of money, arranged to invade
Egypt and to place Auletes upon the throne in spite of the Sibylline
warnings. Gabinius, being so deeply in debt, and knowing that a large
portion of the promised sum would pass to him, was extremely eager to
undertake the war, though it is said that he feared the possibility
of disaster. He therefore pushed forward the arrangements for the campaign
with all despatch, and soon was prepared to set
out across the desert to Egypt.
Meanwhile the
Alexandrians had married Berenice IV to Archelaus, the High Priest of Komana in Cappadocia, an ambitious man of great
influence and authority, a protege of Pompey the Great, who had been
raised to the High Priesthood by him in BC 64, and who at
once attempted, but without success, to obtain through him the
support of Rome. Gabinius was not long in declaring war against Archelaus,
under the pretext that he was encouraging piracy along the North
African coast, and also that he was building a fleet which might be
regarded as a menace to Rome; and soon his army was marching across the
desert from Gaza to Pelusium. The cavalry, which
was sent in advance of the main army, was commanded by Marcus Antonius, at
this time a smart young soldier whose future lay all golden
before him. The frontier fortress of Pelusium fell to his brilliant generalship, and soon the Roman legions were
marching on Alexandria. The palace soldiery now joined the invaders,
Archelaus was killed, and the city fell.
Auletes was at once
restored to his throne, and Berenice IV was put to death. A large number
of Roman infantry and Celtic and German cavalry, of whom we shall hear
again, were left in the city to preserve order, and it would seem that for
a short time Anthony remained in Alexandria. The young Princess
Cleopatra was now a girl of some fourteen years of age, and already she
is said to have attracted the Roman cavalry leader by her youthful beauty
and charm. At the east end of the Mediterranean a girl of fourteen years
is already mature, and has long arrived at what is called a marriageable
age. There is probably little importance to be attached to this meeting,
but it is not without interest as an earnest of future events.
The Romans now
began to demand payment of the various sums promised to them by Auletes. Rabirius Postumus appears to
have been one of the largest creditors, and the only way in which the King
could pay him back was by making him Chancellor of the Exchequer, so that
all taxes might pass through his hands. Rabirius also represented the interests of the importunate Julius Caesar, and
probably those of Gabinius. The situation was thus not unlike that which was
found in Egypt in the seventies, when a European Commission
was appointed to handle all public funds in order that the ruler’s
private debts might be paid off. In the case of Auletes, however, it was
the leading Romans who were his creditors, and hence we find the shadow of
the great Republic hanging over the Alexandrian court, and Rome is
seen to be inextricably mixed up with Egyptian affairs. Roman money had
been lent and had to be regained; Roman officials handled all the taxes; a
Roman army occupied the city, and the King reigned by permission of
the Roman Senate to whom his kingdom had been bequeathed.
In BC 54 the
Alexandrians made an attempt to shake off the incubus, and drove Rabirius out of Egypt. Roman attention was at once
fixed upon Alexandria, and it is probable that the country would have been
annexed at once had not the appalling Parthian catastrophe in
the following year, when Crassus was defeated and killed, diverted
their minds to other channels. Auletes, however, did not live long to enjoy his
dearly-bought immunity; for in the summer of BC 51 he passed
away, leaving behind him the four children born to him of his second
marriage with the unknown lady who was now probably dead. The famous
Cleopatra, the seventh of the name, was the eldest of this family, being,
at her father’s death, about eighteen years of age. Her sister
Arsinoe, whom she heartily disliked, was a few years younger. The
third child was a boy of ten or eleven years of age, afterwards known as
Ptolemy XIV; and lastly, there was the child who later became Ptolemy XV,
now a boy of seven or eight. Auletes, warned by his own
bitter experiences, had taken the precaution to write an
explicit will in which he stated clearly his wishes in regard to the
succession. One copy of the will was kept at Alexandria, and a second
copy, duly attested and sealed, was placed in the hands of Pompey at Rome,
who had befriended the King when he was in that city, with the request
that it should be deposited in the aerarium. In this will Auletes decreed
that his eldest surviving daughter and eldest surviving son should reign
jointly; and he called upon the Roman people in the name of all
their gods and in view of all their treaties made with him, to see
that the terms of his testament were carried out. He further asked the Roman
people to act as guardian to the new King, as though fearing that the boy
might be suppressed, or even put out of the way by his
co-regnant sister. At the same time he carefully urged them to make
no change in the succession, and his words have been thought to suggest
that he feared lest Cleopatra, in like manner, might be removed in favour of Arsinoe. In a court such as that of the
Ptolemies the fact that two sons and two daughters were living at the
palace at the King’s death boded ill for the prospects of peace; and
it would seem that Auletes’ knowledge that Cleopatra and Arsinoe were
not on the best of terms gave rise in his mind to the greatest apprehension.
Being aware of the domestic history of his family, and knowing that his
own hands were stained with the blood of his daughter Berenice, whom he
had murdered on his return from exile, he must have been fully alive to
the possibilities of internecine warfare amongst his surviving children; and,
being in his old age sick of bloodshed and desiring only a bibulous peace
for himself and his descendants, he took every means in his power to
secure for them that pleasant inertia which had been denied so often to
himself.
His wish that his
eighteen-year-old daughter should reign with his ten-year-old son involved, as
a matter of course, the marriage of the sister and brother, for the Ptolomies had conformed to ancient Egyptian customs
to the extent of perpetrating when necessary a royal marriage between a
brother and sister in this manner. The custom was of very ancient
establishment in Egypt, and was based originally on the law of female
succession, which made the monarch’s eldest daughter the heiress of
the kingdom. The son who had been selected by his father to succeed to the
throne, or who aspired to the sovereignty either by right or by might, obtained
his legal warrant to the kingdom by marriage with this heiress. When
such an heiress did not exist, or when the male claimant to the throne had
no serious rivals, this rule often seems to have been set aside; but
there are few instances of its disuse when circumstances demanded a
solidification of the royal claim to the throne.
When, therefore,
according to the terms of the will of Auletes, his eldest daughter and eldest
son succeeded jointly to the throne as Cleopatra VII and Ptolemy XIV,
their formal marriage was contemplated as a matter of course. There is no
evidence of this marriage, and one may suppose that it was postponed
by Cleopatra’s desire, on the grounds of the extreme youth of the
King. Marriages at the age of eleven or twelve years were not uncommon in
ancient Egypt, but they were not altogether acceptable to Greek minds;
and the Queen could not have found much difficulty in making this her
justification for holding the power in her own hands. The young Ptolemy
XIV was placed in the care of the eunuch Potheino’s,
a man who appears to have been typical of that class of palace
intriguers with whom the historian becomes tediously familiar. The
royal tutor, Theodotos, an objectionable
Greek rhetorician, also exercised considerable influence in
the court, and a third intimate of the King was an unscrupulous soldier of
Egyptian nationality named Achillas, who
commanded the troops in the palace. These three men very soon obtained
considerable power, and, acting in the name of their young
master, they managed to take a large portion of the government into their
own hands. Cleopatra, meanwhile, seems to have suffered something of an
eclipse. She was still only a young girl, and her advisers appear to
have been men of less strength of purpose than those surrounding her
brother’s person. The King being still a minor, the bulk of the formal
business of the State was performed by the Queen; but it would seem
that the real rulers of the country were Potheinos and his friends.
Some two or three
years after the death of Auletes, Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus, the proconsular Governor of Syria, sent his two sons to
Alexandria to order the Roman troops stationed in that city to join his
army in his contemplated campaign against the Parthians. These
Alexandrian troops constituted the Army of Occupation, which had been left in
Egypt by Gabinius in BC 55 as a protection to Auletes. They were
for the most part, as has been said, Gallic and German cavalry, rough
men whose rude habits and bulky forms must have caused them to be the
wonder and terror of the city. These Gabiniani milites had by this time settled down in their
new home, and had taken wives to themselves from the Greek and Egyptian
families of Alexandria. In spite of the presence amongst them of a
considerable body of Roman infantry veterans who had fought under Pompey,
the discipline of the army was already much relaxed; and when the Governor
of Syria’s orders were received there was an immediate mutiny, the
two unfortunate sons of Bibulus being promptly murdered by the angry and
probably drunken soldiers. When the affair was reported to the
palace, Cleopatra issued orders for the immediate arrest of the murderers;
and the army, realising that their position as mutinous
troops was untenable, handed over the ringleaders apparently without
further trouble. The prisoners were then sent by the Queen in chains
to Bibulus; but he, being possessed of the best spirit of the old
Roman aristocracy, sent back these murderers of his two sons to her with
the message that the right of inflicting punishment in such cases belonged
only to the Senate. History does not tell us what was the ultimate
fate of these men, and the incident is not of great importance except in
so far as it shows the first recorded act of Cleopatra’s reign as being
one of tactful deliberation and fair dealing with her Roman neighbours.
Shortly after this,
in the year BC 49, Pompey sent his son, Cnaeus Pompeius, to Egypt to procure ships and men in preparation for the civil
war which now seemed inevitable; and the Gabinian troops, feeling that a war against Julius Caesar offered more favourable possibilities than a campaign against the
ferocious Parthians, cheerfully responded to the call. Fifty warships and
a force of 500 men left Alexandria with Cnaeus, and
eventually attached themselves to the command of Bibulus, who was now
Pompey’s admiral in the Adriatic. It is said that Cnaeus Pompeius was much attracted by Cleopatra’s beauty and charm, and that he
managed to place himself upon terms of intimacy with her; but there
is absolutely nothing to justify the suggestion that there was any sort of
serious intrigue. I am of opinion that the stories of this nature which
passed into circulation were due to the fact that the possibility of a marriage
between Cleopatra and the young Roman had been contemplated by Alexandrian
politicians. The great Pompey was master of the Roman world, and a
union with his son, on the analogy of that between Berenice and the High
Priest of Komana, was greatly to be desired. The
proposal, however, does not seem to have obtained much support, and the
matter was presently dropped.
In the following
year, BC 48, when Cleopatra was twenty-one years of age and her co-regnant
brother fourteen, important events occurred in Alexandria of which
history has left us no direct record. It would appear that the brother and
sister quarrelled, and that the palace divided
itself into two opposing parties. The young Ptolemy, backed by the eunuch Potheinos, the rhetorician Theodotos,
and the soldier Achillas, set himself up as sole
sovereign of Egypt; and Cleopatra was obliged to fly for her life into
Syria. We have no knowledge of these momentous events: the
struggle in the palace, the days in which the young queen walked in
deadly peril, the adventurous escape, and the flight from Egypt. We know
only that when the curtain is raised once more upon the royal drama,
the young Ptolemy is King of Egypt, and, with his army, is stationed
on the eastern frontier to prevent the incursion of his exiled sister, who
has raised an expeditionary force in Syria and is marching back to her
native land to seize again the throne which she had lost. There is
something which appeals very greatly to the imagination in the thought of
this spirited young Queen’s rapid return to the perilous scenes from
which she had so recently escaped; and the historian feels at once that he
is dealing with a powerful character in this woman who could so
speedily raise an army of mercenaries, and could dare to march back
in battle array across the desert towards the land which had cast her out.
CHAPTER IV.
THE
DEATH OF POMPEY AND THE ARRIVAL OF CAESAR IN EGYPT.
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