
Published online:
20 September 2012
Published in print:
06 March 2007
Online ISBN:
9780748670727
Print ISBN:
9780748615780
Contents
Cite
Bingen, Jean, 'Cleopatra Vii Philopatris', in Roger Bagnall, and Jean Bingen (eds), Hellenistic Egypt: Monarchy, Society, Economy, Culture (Edinburgh , 2007; online edn, Edinburgh Scholarship Online, 20 Sept. 2012), https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9780748615780.003.0005, accessed 14 May 2025.
Abstract
In 37/36 BCE, Cleopatra changed her reckoning of the years of her reign from a simple “year 16” to “year 16 which is also year 1.” The reasons lie in a change in royal ideology linked to her recovery of some of the old Ptolemaic possessions outside Egypt by gift from Mark Antony. At the same time, she changed her titles. One of the added titles was philopatris, “homeland-loving.” This chapter argues that the homeland in question was not Egypt or Alexandria, but Macedonia, the home of her ancestor Ptolemy son of Lagos, the founder of her dynasty. The title helps to link her to the heritage of Alexander the Great (see chapter 1).
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