THE DIVINE HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST |
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CLEOPATRA, QUEEN OF EGYPTCLEOPATRA
THE GREAT
Whatever view we
may take of the moral character of Cleopatra—and we have a wide choice of
writers whom we may follow if we please, from the time of Josephus, who
held her to be a monster, to that of the modem Adolf Stahr,
who boldly defends her virtue—we are bound to see in her a very commanding
figure; indeed, the most commanding female figure of
antiquity. History has recognised this by
bestowing on her an epithet which it most rarely accords to
women sovereigns and calling her “Cleopatra the Great.” If in part the
title serves to distinguish her from the five previous bearers of her name
in the family of the Lagidae, it also records a
judgment on her importance in the world. Still, as in the case of men
rulers there are numerous reasons, some on close examination curiously
inadequate, why greatness has been thrust upon certain people,
so, too, with women there is no fixed standard by which claims to the
name of “The Great” are adjudicated. It is not, therefore, entirely
superfluous to ask whether the last Queen of Egypt is or is not entitled
to be called great.
It must be admitted
that Cleopatra is a peculiarly difficult subject for a just
verdict, because of the nature of the evidence concerning her life.
The witnesses are plentiful, but there is not one amongst them who can be
described as a good witness. None of them came to her case with an
unbiassed mind or even resolved to mention any facts in her favour, which might mitigate the general harshness of
their account of her. Julius Caesar is all but silent about
her, having his mouth closed for a reason to himself very sufficient.
Of the later Latin writers, the historians are all (with the exception of
Suetonius, if we can call him an historian) so concerned to glorify
Augustus, and through him his successors, that it is out of the question
for them to see any merit in the consort of Antony. It is the
same, or rather worse, with the poets, to whom to see the personages of
history in plain black and white and in no intermediate shades was almost a condition
of continuing to exist as poets. Even that stranded Republican, Lucan, had no fair word
for Cleopatra, the corrupter of Antony. Moreover, to all of these writers,
as Romans, she was an Egyptian, the stranger for whom the Roman
half-brick was never wanting.
As for the Greeks,
we never find in them any sympathy inspired by the Macedonian descent of Cassius
is as much under the spell of the Caesarian tradition as any of his Latin
contemporaries. Appian, a poor and undiscriminating historian, has
little of value to say about Cleopatra. Plutarch, more impartial than others
between the two great parties which destroyed the Republic in their
struggle, readily sacrifices her in his attempt to be just toward Antony.
There remains
Josephus, who perhaps hated Cleopatra as sincerely as any of the Roman
poets pretended to hate her. Now it is a noteworthy fact that, of the
four Lagidae who have come down to posterity as
the most criminal of their family, Ptolemy IV Philopator,
Ptolemy IX Physkon, Ptolemy XIII Auletes, and
Cleopatra VI, the two first-named and Cleopatra are all known to
have been anti-Jewish, Philopator and Physkon consistently so and Cleopatra at least
occasionally. Whatever else we may think about Josephus, we -must admit
him to have been a patriotic Jew, and we cannot therefore blame him for
taking into account in his judgment of the Lagidae their behaviour toward his countrymen. When
there comes, however, a necessity for estimating the probability of
unsupported statements of Josephus concerning one of these
anti-Jewish Macedonian rulers of Egypt, we must obviously be sceptical. And unfortunately the general character of
Josephus’s history is such as to leave us without any confidence in what
he says, unless we know from other sources that he is telling the truth.
To repeat what has been said in an earlier chapter, no one has a right to
condemn the worst of queens, even as bad a woman as the partisans of
Octavian represented Cleopatra to be, on the statements of a writer who
could make a hero of Herod the Great and display such inability as
does Josephus to look on any character or event without the narrowest raceprejudice.
While, then, there
is not a single witness in Cleopatra’s favour, there
are very clear reasons why all, Romans, Greeks, and Jews alike,
should have been biassed against her. It is
still possible that she was a great woman, and not merely a great
monster such as the old writers, for political or personal reasons, united
to make her out to be. The only evidence which can be adduced, however,
must be sought among the testimonies of her enemies, and it is very
natural that the task of defending her has attracted very few, and
has then proved beyond their powers. To build a defence out of the speeches of the prosecutor and the statements of those whom he
calls in his support is too difficult for the intellect of a Quixote.
At the best he can save a few rags—mostly, perhaps, of Coan silk in Cleopatra’s case— wherewith to veil his
client from the censorious gaze of the jury.
Cleopatra was the
final product of a very corrupt and extremely wealthy royal family ruling over
the richest country in the ancient world, a country doomed from before her
birth to fall a prey to the insatiable hunger of the one
great military nation remaining in that world. From early years she
was brought in contact with some of the most unscrupulous representatives
of the conquering race, and shown that, if she was to play any part
in her ancestral kingdom’s history, she must play it in company with them.
From her father’s example in Egypt she saw how a man of her house
could preserve a throne in dealing with such people, from her uncle’s
example in Cyprus how a throne could be lost by a man. She was a
woman, and, while profiting by her father’s and uncle’s examples, must
allow for the modifying effect of sex in handling the situation. Had she
not been a Lagid princess, she might have declined the task and left it to
her brother Ptolemy, four years her junior, when he should attain his
majority. But the descendant of other ambitious Cleopatras and the sister
of the fourth Berenike could not stand aside
from the affairs of State. She was prepared to face the family
difficulties, and, so far from wishing to shelter herself behind her
brother, she tried to prevent him from exerting the influence
which was legally his. In the brief first period of her co-regency
with Ptolemy XIV, she was soon placed in the position of having to decide
how to treat one of those Romans whose presence in Alexandria boded so
little good to Egypt. She received Cnaeus Pompeius
the younger as an ambassador come to ask a favour of
her queenship, and also, if report did not wrong her, as a lover.
Her attitude to Cnaeus Pompeius was typical of her conduct toward the
Romans throughout her life. Whatever else these dreaded
foreigners might be, they were at least emphatically men. To meet
their aggressive virility Cleopatra used the only possible defence: her own femininity. She never neglected the
parental weapon of bribery, combined by her as by Auletes himself with
an occasional assassination, when it seemed safe to employ the
assassin’s aid; but it was on her sex that she relied when she desired to
effect a great stroke.
As a woman she was
decidedly well equipped to fight against even such trained conquerors
of women as the Roman public men of her day. She united good looks
with natural intelligence and a versatile education. Something has already
been said in the Third Chapter of this book with reference to these
points, but we may now return to them again.
As regards her
beauty, there is no general agreement among ancient authors, we have
seen, and Dion Cassius’s description of her as most exceedingly beautiful of women is discounted by Plutarch’s far
more guarded and sober phrases.
We have, to check
what the old writers say, a fair number of well-authenticated representations
of Cleopatra, if the many statues of her which existed in her
lifetime have altogether vanished. There is a well-known bust executed in
fine limestone, purchased by the British Museum in 1879, which so
resembles the head on the coins as to be almost certainly assignable to
Cleopatra. The strongly aquiline nose is a remarkable feature in the
bust, as on the coins, of which there are more than a dozen whose
genuineness is not disputed. Further, there are the Egyptian sculptures
of Cleopatra at Dendera, and there were those at Erment,
some fortunately portrayed for us in the volumes of Lepsius,
though the originals are gone.
The Egyptian
sculptures we must dismiss as valueless, however interesting. Cleopatra at
Dendera is almost identical in features, wig, and headdress (except for
Cleopatra’s surmounting horns and solar disk) with the painting at Deir
El-Bahari of Queen Ahmes,
mother of the great Hatshepsut. So, whether or not the
Dendera representation shows that Cleopatra ever, on State occasions,
put on the elaborately plaited wig of the older Egyptian queens, it
certainly does not give us any guide as to Cleopatra’s features. We
only see a conventional type of head perpetuated by the influence of the
Egyptian priestly sculptors. As for the Erment pictures, it is evident that there is no attempt at portraiture in
them. Cleopatra is barely distinguishable except by costume from Isis,
Nephthys, Hathor, or the other goddesses present at the divine birth.
We come to the coins, and here we should feel more satisfied if there were a greater uniformity between the various profiles. We may perhaps abandon the features shown on the silver coin struck at Askalon in B.c. 50, as they are too like the features on the Askalon coins of Ptolemy Auletes (themselves dissimilar from those on the other coins of Auletes) and of Ptolemy XIV, and we may therefore be dealing again with a conventional type. Even if we leave out the Askalon Cleopatra, however, we are obliged to admit that the designers of her coins saw Cleopatra in very different lights, and that some of them must have been very poor artists, almost caricaturists indeed. Neglecting the worst productions, and comparing some of the best coins and the British Museum bust, we may arrive at some sort of idea how the charmer of Caesar and of Antony looked, though we have no clue to her colouring or the shade of her hair. It can hardly be necessary to point out again that there is no warrant for speaking of her as a “gipsy”; quite possibly she was fair-haired like her ancestor Ptolemy Philadelphos, according to the seventeenth Idyll of Theocritus. All that we can feel certain about is that she had not a short nose. As M. Henry Houssaye amusingly says, “ Pascal’s remark is well known : ‘Had Cleopatra’s nose been shorter, the whole face of the globe might have been changed.’ Pascal was not a numismatist. Otherwise he would have written : ‘Had Cleopatra’s nose been longer!’. An examination of
the nearest approaches which we have to likenesses of Cleopatra makes us
decidedly inclined to accept Plutarch’s statement about her beauty being “not altogether beyond comparison, nor such that no one could look
upon her without being struck by it.” That she made the best of it we
can readily believe, and legend credits her with the invention of baths
which rivalled in effect the fountain of youth, and the use of many
wonderful unguents, for the compounding of which Egypt was famous in
antiquity—such as that mentioned by Pliny, which, cost £16 a pound, was
imperceptible to the person anointed with it, but excited desire in
others. The episode of her struggles with Herod over the Jericho
gardens, and with the Nabathaean Arabs for
similar treasures which she coveted from them, is the best testimony which
we have to her love of all that pleases the organ of smell.
Cleopatra’s merely
sensual appeal, however, was clearly excelled by the charm which lay
in her general manner, “ the peculiar character which was evident in
all that she said or did,” as Plutarch writes. Her sweet-toned voice
was employed not only to captivate by its sound, but . to also reveal
the quick intelligence and the widely educated mind. We are compelled
to take for granted her verbal powers, for the few actual examples of
her wit which have been preserved do not appear, to the modern reader
at least, at all brilliant. The memoir-writer who treasures up the
sayings of notable people with whom he comes in contact was indeed rare in
the ancient world, and was wont to devote his attention to the philosophers
rather than to the wits. We must be content, therefore, with
the knowledge that Julius Caesar and Antony were both fascinated with
her ability to amuse them as well as make love to them and surround
them with luxury, and must not ask to be shown a picture of
Cleopatra, as it were, in action. We know enough, however, from this very fact
of her conquest of Caesar and Antony, not to mention any lesser folk, to
see that it was her wonderful adaptability which gave Cleopatra her
victories. If her tongue was like a many-stringed instrument, capable of
being turned to any language that she pleased, still more was this the
case with her mind. She failed, as we have seen, to make a favourable impression upon Ahenobarbus and on other
Roman senators who joined Antony at Ephesus early in the year 32; but from
the beginning her attitude toward them was one of defiance. She did
not desire their presence in Antony’s camp, and wished for nothing
better than to drive them away again to Rome.
It is Cleopatra’s
genius for cajolery, coupled with the readiness attributed to her by
the admirers of her two chief enemies, Octavian and Herod, to accept
any man as a lover, that gained for her in history the unenviable
reputation of a crowned courtesan. The charge is impossible to rebut
for the reason already given, that the only testimonies which we have are
those of the witnesses for the prosecution. We can only say, by way
of comment on the accusation, that she can certainly be proved to have had
two lovers, one of whom was credited with the intention of ‘ making
her his wife, while the other actually did so after a fashion—or,
according to some, with full legal ceremonies as early as 36 BC. With regard to a third lover, Cnaeus Pompeius, Plutarch seems to accept the intrigue; but if it ever existed
it must have been of very brief duration, as the young man only visited
Alexandria to fetch military support for his father. As for Dellius, what is more likely than that this unpleasant
personage himself spread the tale after he had deserted Antony? Concerning
Josephus’s account of Cleopatra’s unsuccessful attempt on the virtue
(!) of Herod, nothing need be added to what has already been said.
On the most favourable construction, Cleopatra’s story, viewed from one
point only, amounts to this. When she was seventeen or eighteen she took
as her husband, in accordance with the terms of her father’s will and
the Egyptian royal custom, her eleven-year-old brother Ptolemy XIV,
with whom she was to share the throne. A quarrel broke out between her
and her brother’s advisers, and three years later she fled for her life.
There appeared upon the scene Julius Caesar, the greatest man of
the greatest nation of the day. He was fifty-four years of age, and
had a reputation for gallantry in all senses of the word. Cleopatra
contrived an interview with him, and at once won him to her cause,
while surrendering to him her person. Caesar succeeded in establishing her
on the throne, after a battle in which her husband was killed. He
allowed her charms to detain him in Egypt far longer than was good for his
reputation, but ultimately left after giving her as a nominal second
husband her remaining brother Ptolemy XV, who was only ten or eleven. When
he had completed his campaigns, he summoned her to him at Rome,
whither she came with Ptolemy and with Caesarion, the son whom she bore
to Caesar after he had left her in Egypt. It was reported that the
Dictator was actually about -to make her his wife when he was assassinated,
leaving her to escape back to Egypt. In the meantime Ptolemy XV
disappeared, we know not how, and left Cleopatra doubly widowed.
There is a gap in
the story now until Antony appears in the East after avenging
Caesar’s murder at Philippi. The Triumvir, at the age of forty-two,
had an even more notorious reputation . than the man to whose position he
had in part succeeded. When he called Cleopatra to him there was but
one result to be expected. Cleopatra yielded again, as she had yielded to
Caesar, at the price of securing her kingdom. From this time onward,
although their connection was broken off for a period of more than three
years, she set herself to mould Antony to her
will, and to increase that realm which, at the beginning of her
reign, she appeared likely not merely to fail to keep intact, but even to
lose altogether. There are reasons for thinking that she tried topersuade Antony to sever his connection with Rome
entirely so that he might become King of a greater Egypt, with her as his
heiress-wife. Antony could not bring himself to renounce
his birthright as a Roman citizen, and therefore obviously could not
accept the kingship of Egypt. He continued to attempt to combine two
incompatible careers, those of a Roman Imperator , and of an Oriental
monarch without a crown.
He made Cleopatra
his wife, however, as far as he could, in view of the fact that he had
another wife at Rome, and at last went so far as to repudiate Octavia
for her sake. Cleopatra had apparently attained her object. Then came Actium
and the invasion of Egypt, and with the suicides of Antony and Cleopatra
the story comes to an end.
The Queen of Egypt,
it will be readily admitted, was no earlier Catherine the Great, unless we
go beyond the plain outlines of this story and accept her enemies’
attribution to her of many other lovers, most of whose names they have
not troubled to record—recognising that for
their purpose the anonymous charge is the safest. But if we adhere to
statements which can be proved, we find Cleopatra allying herself with two
men who seemed to her to have the destinies of the world in their
control. Both of her great intrigues ’ were fraught with profound
political results for Egypt. We do not, therefore, see her guided by sensual
motives, but rather using her senses as the instruments of her brain.
It remains to ask
whether her heart was at all touched in the two affairs which her clever
head turned to such purpose. With regard to her connection with the
Dictator Caesar it is very difficult to pronounce. Cleopatra met Caesar
when she was twenty-one and he was thirty-three years older. Her very
life was at stake unless she could win him to her. She made a daring
attempt ' and succeeded so far as to obtain an influence over him
which no other woman had managed to gain, thereby unwittingly contributing
to his fall. What effect he produced upon her we have no means of
judging ; for there is not a single sentence of evidence upon the subject,
as might have been expected, all the early writers being careless or
ignorant of any feelings which she might possess. After his death she endeavoured to help the Caesarian cause, as she was
quite justified in pointing out to Antony. Moreover, she remained
attached to their son Caesarion, though we are unable to analyse what kind of regard for the father entered
into the mother’s love for the child. Cleopatra cannot but have
admired so astonishing a genius as Caesar, and she must also have felt
gratitude toward him, especially as his bewitchment by her was such a
signal tribute to her charms. But policy so obviously bound her to him
that there is at least no necessity to imagine that she reciprocated the
passion which the Dictator felt for her.
In the case of
Antony we are better provided with evidence. The connection lasted
longer— twelve years as compared with three—and the classical writers
felt no constraint in discussing it w’ith a
freedom which they avoided where Caesar was involved. They made out of Antopy’s infatuation a great romance, and they were
perfectly right in doing so. It was a great romance, and the more romantic
for being a true one. Where we may be permitted to differ from
them is in not accepting the hypotheses that in the affair the love
was entirely on one side, and that Cleopatra, having entered upon her
relationship with Anthony because she believed that he was the man whom
she must put in the place of Caesar as her saviour from the menace of Rome, cared so little for him that she was quite
ready to betray him to his enemies when she saw that he could not
save her. It was to the advantage of Octavian that matters should be
represented thus. Antony, in so far as he was a Roman and once the
brother-in-law of Octavian, must be shown as the victim of “the
Egyptian,” the sufferer from her poisonous philtres.
And, inasmuch as Octavian had endeavoured to
purchase from her Antony’s betrayal with promises which he never
meant to keep, she must be shown as offering to be the traitor to one whom
she had from the first only deluded with a pretence of love. Octavian became Augustus the Roman Emperor, and his version
of the story was naturally that which prevailed.
We must admit that
Cleopatra was attracted to Antony and determined to attach him to her because
she saw in him the proper partner in the scheme, which Caesar’s murder had
temporarily ruined, of preserving Egypt from the grasp of Rome. This
is no reason, however, for supposing that he who inspired a lasting
affection in two such dissimilar women as Fulvia and Octavia should have been incapable of arousing a passion
in Cleopatra also. Had Antony been successful at Actium and (were it conceivable) become Emperor of the world known
to the Romans, we should no doubt read of Cleopatra as his faithful
and loving wife. That she was faithful to him in defeat ought to be a
better proof of her love. And was she not faithful? Her death should
testify to this. She did not die with him, it is true. She did not even
kill herself in the tomb before she was captured, being stopped by Proculeius. She waited some days before having
recourse to the famous asp. But she was a mother and loved her children,
for whom she hoped to secure terms from the conqueror. When she
failed to extract any terms, she put an end to her life, having first done honour to the coffin of Antony. And Octavian
had her buried with her lover, not unmoved, it would seem, by the pathos of
their deaths.
But Antony accused
her of treachery to him—when he was so incapable of judging aright
that he seems a totally different man from the Antony who attempted
to take up Caesar’s inheritance. The wild utterances prompted by a
diseased brain 1 surely do not deserve serious attention.
Cleopatra had indeed betrayed him, but not with the petty treachery
which would sell a broken and ruined man to a foe who was in any case
certain to capture him alive or dead. She had betrayed Antony the
Roman when she made him enter into her project of saving and aggrandising Egypt at the expense of Rome. She
betrayed him because * she was a bold stateswoman and he a soldier
of fortune whose ability to cut himself off from his early
associations she had overrated. When she saw on the arrival of the Roman
senators at Ephesus that his country still had a powerful hold over
him, she recognised that her schemes
were threatened with disaster. The outcome of her reflections on this
desperate position was the plan which there was an attempt to carry out
at Actium. The escape from Actium must have seemed to Cleopatra the
only means by which she might keep both Egypt and Antony for herself. The
plan was a bad one, as it was bound to be, being a solution of an
impossible problem. . But at any rate we find no sign that she tried to
sell Antony in order to buy off the punishment for her mistakes. She returned
with him to Egypt and there with him waited to see what fate would
bring. When all his forces failed him, she followed him to the grave. If
we hold that she had no love for him, can we suggest what other
course she should have taken, had she loved him ?
Cleopatra has
sometimes been compared with a tigress. The comparison is not without
its aptness. And no one denies that tigresses have the capacity for
love of their mates.
A tigress, too, is
said to be ready to fight to the last on behalf of her cubs. Cleopatra
displayed no quality which arouses our sympathy more than her maternal
love. We cannot pretend to know how she brought up her children, but
we have the witness of writers very hostile to her that she exhibited
always the greatest solicitude, first for Caesarion alone, and
then for him and her two sons and daughter by Antony, that Egypt
should be preserved as their inheritance. After Caesar’s assassination
and her return to Alexandria her anxiety was that both Egypt and Rome
should recognise Caesarion as her associate on
the throne of the Ptolemies. She persuaded Egypt by such devices as
those whose record was placed on the walls of the temple at Erment. Rome’s consent she bought, it would appear, in
return for the assistance which she tried to give to Dolabella. When she
obtained her ascendancy over Antony she had no difficulty in procuring
from him most generous treatment for Caesarion as well as for the
children whom she bore to himself. And at the end we see her desperately
struggling to save her young family from the fate threatened them at
the hands of Octavian, bargaining with him at the risk of being
denounced to Antony as willing to sacrifice him, and enduring her
own life as long as she entertained any hopes of a compromise. Judged
from the standpoint of a mother, Cleopatra does not deserve to be
ranked among the bad women of history. There is some satisfaction in
thinking she did not live to see the cruel end of her beloved Caesarion.
The case is very
difficult when we look at her relations with her brothers and sister.
The traditions of Oriental despotism were not violated by the Lagidae, and the custom of brother-and-sister marriage very
often introduced an additional horror. The union of Ptolemy Philadelphos with Arsinoe II was followed by good results, but usually the “ divine
marriage ” led to unhappiness. Cleopatra’s wedding of her two
brothers, although owing to the youth of both boys, even at the time of
their deaths, the transaction was possibly formal, turned out
very ill. With Ptolemy XIV she was soon on terms of bitter enmity,
while the mystery of the disappearance of Ptolemy XV reflects grave suspicions
upon her. With regard to her sister Arsinoe, there is no doubt whatever
that Cleopatra dealt with her ferociously, and well merited the title of
her murderess. Both the Ptolemies and Arsinoe only appeared to Cleopatra
in the light of obstacles to her enjoyment of power, and like so many
a Sultan and Sultana she can be credited with no scruples where a rival of
her own blood was concerned.
Cleopatra
exhibited, in fact, all the cruelty which accompanies great craft in rulers,
Western as well as Eastern. When we have the certainty of her behaviour toward Arsinoe and toward Artavasdes, King of Armenia, we need not trouble to
ask whether the tale of her experiments into the action of poisons on the
persons of condemned criminals at Alexandria is true. The dislike
which the Alexandrians so frequently manifested of her was no doubt
inspired by such ruthlessness as she showed after her return
from Actium. They were a troublesome people, and -she ruled them as the
most tyrannical of her predecessors had ruled them before her, that
is by terrorism, mitigated only by the display of a gorgeous pomp
which kept in a good humour those on whom her
wrath did not fall. To show a sign of hesitation might have given her
Alexandrian subjects the idea that she feared them ; and, to do her
justice, it must be admitted that she was singularly devoid of fear. The
only lack of courage with which she can be charged was during the campaign
of Actium. She is alleged to have been dispirited by a series of bad
omens before the fighting began, and to have been a victim of fright in
the battle itself. As for omens, she had good reason to be
discouraged by what occurred when Antony set up his headquarters in Asia
Minor in 30 b.c., for by the arrival at Ephesus
of Antony’s Roman supporters, and their attempt to drive her away from the
man whom they hailed as deliverer of the Republic, all her ambitions
were threatened with absolute ruin. With regard to the sea-fight, while
the supposition of a sudden panic on the part of Cleopatra fits in
best with the ascertainable facts, there are points on which, could we
be enlightened, we should be in a better position to judge. We do not
even know, for instance, whether Cleopatra was a good sailor ! We
hear of her being prostrated by rough weather when she set sail from
Alexandria to the assistance of Dolabella in Syria. At any rate, she
quickly regained her courage after the flight from Actium. During the
last months in Egypt, of all her party and Antony's she best played the
man, down to that day when, in the words of her very grudging critic Florus, “ free from all womanly fear she yielded up her
last breath.”
The almost complete
absence of Egyptian records concerning Cleopatra’s reign is for no reason more
to be regretted than because without them we cannot with any certainty
estimate in what light she appeared to the mass of her subjects. With the
Alexandrians, we know, she was unpopular. But we hear of no
native risings against her authority. The inclination of the Egyptians
to revolt against their Macedonian rulers had no doubt been checked by
the merciless suppression of the Theban rebellion by Ptolemy Lathyros in 67 BC, when he razed to the ground Thebes,
the old Pharaohs’ “Horizon on Earth, the Eye of the Universal Lord,” and
scattered its inhabitants among villages. Yet there was a rebellion in the
South, in the nomes of the Said, in the early
days of the Roman occupation of Egypt, which Strabo attributes to
discontent at the heavy taxation. Under Cleopatra, as under her father
Auletes, taxation was very heavy; but there were no risings known to
us against either Auletes or Cleopatra. Father and daughter seem to
have acted alike in their home policy. While their exactions of money
to fill the royal purse were grievous, they left the provincials otherwise
very much to themselves, under the administration of the local
officials, and they provided for the worship of the native gods. Auletes and
Cleopatra were both temple-builders, as has already been said, and evidence of
their wise attempts to keep a hold over the Egyptians by a
pious expenditure of some of the money ground out of them remains to
this day.
Unhappily the most
important new work of Cleopatra’s reign exists no more. The temple
she erected at Hermonthis, a mammisi or “ birthhouse ” dedicated to Isis, mother of Horus,
in commemoration of her own bringing-forth of Caesarion, suffered the fate described in an earlier chapter, and
is represented only by a few stones at the modern Erment.
We can no longer see, therefore, the actual reliefs representing in so
curious a way the priestly story of the parentage of Cleopatra’s
firstborn, nor the picture of Cleopatra herself adoring the sacred bull of Hermonthis, which was identified with the god Mentu. A similar fate has befallen her buildings at Koptos. At Dendera, the ancient Tentyra,
the great temple of Hathor fortunately remains, one of the most
magnificent and most perfectly preserved examples of Egyptian
architecture, having even its roof over it. Cleopatra probably had little
to do with the building of the temple, to which her father had added
some crypts; but her decorations are much in evidence on its walls.
One of the most striking of these is a relief, on the outer wall, of
herself and Caesarion offering worship and incense to Isis and to Horus. Within
this temple is a small chapel at the west end, in which Cleopatra
may have stood on a few solemn occasions in her reign. It is the “
Dwelling of Hathor,” the innermost shrine of the goddess whom the
Greeks identified with Aphrodite, in which was kept her golden
sistrum, and to which only the sovereign might be admitted.
In the reliefs
Cleopatra appears with the headdresses of both Hathor and Isis, who blended to
a large extent in the legends of Horus, son of the Great Mother. With
Cleopatra’s identification with Isis we are already familiar. It was
a common role for the queens of the Lagid house to adopt, it would
appear; and the ambitious and utterly unscrupulous Cleopatra III to
some extent anticipated her namesake’s assumption of the epithet Nea Isis by calling herself Nikephoros (“Bringer of Victory”) and Dikaiosyne (“Justice”),
both of them titles of Isis.
Plutarch, when he
writes of the Alexandrian triumph, says that “ Cleopatra now, as on
other occasions when she went out publicly, wore the dress sacred to
Isis, different from her ordinary dress, and she was called the New Isis,”
the natural inference from which would be that she encouraged the
cult of herself as Isis from this time. Coins of an earlier date, however,
show her already with the attributes of the goddess.
It is difficult to
say what was the precise import of this identification with Isis, which was
paralleled among the male Lagidae by the fourth
and thirteenth Ptolemies calling themselves Dionysos—as
did Antony when he began to become Egyptianised. The
ruling sovereign of Egypt was by reason of his or her office divine; but
it must have pleased her subjects to see Cleopatra , equate herself with
the “ great mother of the gods,” wearing the plain straight skirt and
the monstrous head-dress of the goddess, or she would hardly have
ventured to do so. Not until her last desperate days do we hear of her
flouting the religious susceptibilities of Egypt ; and even then we
do not know that she may not be maligned by Dion when he makes her rob the
temples of their treasures, “not sparing even the holiest shrines.”
For the bulk of her reign at least, we see her careful to keep on her side
the hearts of the devout.
Taken as a whole,
Cleopatra’s domestic policy in Egypt, though financially burdensome,
does not seem to have been otherwise oppressive, like that of many of
her predecessors. Outside Alexandria complaint against her did not
become fierce. Where she ruined her country was with her foreign
policy. But, on the other hand, it might be said that by this same foreign
policy V she gave Egypt at least seventeen years more of independent
existence than there was any reason to hope for when Julius Caesar set
foot in Alexandria. Dealing with only Ptolemy XIV, Potheinos,
and Achillas, Caesar would hardly have left
Egypt in b.c. 47 a self-governing state. Such it
still was, however, until the middle of the year 30, thanks to the
influence of Cleopatra first over Caesar and then over Antony.
Cleopatra died a
failure. She failed because, as has been pointed out above, the problem
which she attempted to solve was incapable of solution. She had been
seeking how, with the aid of a man who could not forget that he was a
Roman, she might build up Egypt into an empire strong enough to
resist the encroachments of Rome. Herself an Orientalised Greek, queen of a nation mostly alien to her in blood, she did not realise the power of the name of Rome over even
the most lawless of her offspring. Antony only threw off his Roman
citizenship in the madness of Actium, where he lost his manhood
too. Already grown helpless to think for himself, he became unfit to
supply the force to be guided by Cleopatra’s brain, and so left her kingdom, which
she had made also his, an easy prey to Octavian.
But if Cleopatra
failed, yet for a while, between Tarentum and Actium, she came very near
to success. And in any case, whether her ambitions were frustrated because
she chose her instrument unwisely or because there was "no
instrument capable of doing the work which she required of it, there
were in her scheme a breadth and a magnificence which make it impossible
for us to be blind to her fine statecraft or to deny her right to the
traditional title of Cleopatra the Great.
THE END
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