Cleopatra Brother: Verified

JFrog Installation & Setup Documentation

Content Type
Installation & Setup

Cleopatra Brother: Verified

Further reading: “Cleopatra: A Life” by Stacy Schiff; “The Reign of Cleopatra” by Stanley Burstein.

The war ended in 47 BC at the Battle of the Nile. Caesar’s reinforcements arrived, and Ptolemy’s forces were crushed. In the frantic retreat across the river, the young King’s boat capsized. Weighted down by his golden armor, the 15-year-old Ptolemy XIII drowned in the Nile.

Would you like to know more about Cleopatra VII or the Ptolemaic dynasty? cleopatra brother

When we think of Cleopatra, we usually picture the famous queen of Egypt—her intelligence, her romances with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony, and her tragic end. But less known is the fact that Cleopatra did not rule alone. According to Egyptian Ptolemaic tradition, she was forced to marry and share the throne with not one, but two of her own brothers.

Cleopatra famously snuck into the palace inside a laundry bag (or rug) to meet Caesar privately. Her charm and political alignment with Rome won Caesar over instantly. Realizing he had been outmaneuvered, Ptolemy XIII rallied the Alexandrian mobs and his army to lay siege to the palace where Caesar and Cleopatra were staying. Further reading: “Cleopatra: A Life” by Stacy Schiff;

Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator is the man most history books remember simply as the "brother of Cleopatra." However, his short and violent life was far more than a footnote. His reign was defined by a bitter civil war, a clash with Julius Caesar, and a desperate struggle to keep Egypt from falling under the shadow of his sister’s legendary ambition. The Boy King and the Co-Regency

Following her brother’s death, Cleopatra’s position was secure. She was restored to the throne, this time co-ruling with another younger brother, , whom she eventually had poisoned to secure the succession of her son, Caesarion. In the frantic retreat across the river, the

Enraged that Caesar sided with Cleopatra, Ptolemy XIII’s advisors laid siege to the palace in what is known as the .

After Ptolemy XIII’s death, Caesar restored Cleopatra to the throne. To satisfy Ptolemaic tradition, Cleopatra then married her younger surviving brother, , who was only about 12 years old.