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Alexander Helios

Son of Egyptian Pharaoh Cleopatra VII


Son of Egyptian Pharaoh Cleopatra VII

FieldValue
nameAlexander Helios
titlePrince of Ptolemaic Egypt
imageAlexander Helios bronze statuette of a boy in Eastern dress (3x4 cropped).jpg
captionBronze statuette identified as Alexander Helios, mid-1st century BC, Metropolitan Museum of Art
successionKing of Armenia
moretext(nominal)
reign34–30 BC
coronation34 BC at the Donations of Alexandria
predecessorArtavasdes II
successorArtaxias II
dynastyPtolemaic
fatherMark Antony
motherCleopatra VII Philopator
birth_date40 BC (presumed, exact date unknown)
birth_placeAlexandria, Egypt
death_datepossibly between 29 and 25 BC
death_placeRome, Roman Empire

Alexander Helios (; late 40 BC – unknown, but possibly between 29 and 25 BC) was a Ptolemaic prince and son of Pharaoh Cleopatra VII of the Ptolemaic dynasty and Roman triumvir Mark Antony. Alexander's fraternal twin sister was Cleopatra Selene II. Cleopatra named her son after Alexander the Great. His second name in Ancient Greek means "Sun"; this was the counterpart of his twin sister's second name Selene (Σελήνη), meaning "Moon".

Life

Alexander Helios was born and educated in Alexandria. He was the second of Cleopatra's three sons, Caesarion being the oldest. In late 34 BC, at the Donations of Alexandria, Alexander Helios, aged six, was dressed in a Median costume and was given the title king of Kings and the ruler of Armenia, Media, Parthia and any countries yet to be discovered between the Euphrates and Indus Rivers, . although most of this territory stood outside of their control at that time. These areas were, in fact, already ruled by Artaxias II of Armenia (who had been elected King that same year after Antony captured his father Artavasdes II), Artavasdes I of Media Atropatene and Phraates IV of Parthia. In 33 BC, Alexander was engaged to his distant relative Iotapa, a princess of Media Atropatene and daughter of Artavasdes I. However, Mark Antony and Cleopatra were defeated by Octavian at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC. The next year, they committed suicide as Octavian and his army invaded Egypt. Iotapa left Egypt to return to her father and later married her maternal cousin King Mithridates III of Commagene, who was of Armenian and Greek descent.

When Octavian conquered Egypt he spared Alexander but took him, his sister and his brother, Ptolemy Philadelphus, from Egypt to Rome. Octavian celebrated his military triumph in Rome by parading the children in heavy gold chains in the streets behind an effigy of their mother clutching an asp to her arm. It is unclear whether Ptolemy Philadelphus survived the journey to Rome, as Cassius Dio mentions the twins only in his History of Rome. Octavian gave the children to Octavia Minor, his elder sister and a former wife of Mark Antony, to be raised under her guardianship in Rome. They were generously received by Octavia, who educated them with her own children.

Later life

The fate of Alexander Helios is unknown. Plutarch, Cassius Dio and Suetonius state that Octavian killed Antony's son Marcus Antonius Antyllus and Cleopatra's son with Julius Caesar, Caesarion. The only further mention of Alexander Helios and Ptolemy Philadelphus comes from Cassius Dio, who states that when their sister, Cleopatra Selene II, married King Juba II [25 BC], Octavian (by then named Augustus) spared the lives of Alexander Helios and Ptolemy Philadelphus as a favor to the couple. After Helios arrives in Rome he disappears from historical records.

References

Sources

References

  1. Sampson, Gareth C.. (2020-08-05). "Rome and Parthia: Empires at War: Ventidius, Antony and the Second Romano-Parthian War, 40-20 BC". Pen and Sword Military.
  2. D. W. Roller, ''The World of Juba II and Kleopatra Selene'', 2003, p. 77
  3. Desmond, Alice. (1983). "Cleopatra's children.". New York, Dodd, Mead.
  4. (1998). "Cleopatra (Famous People Story Books)".
  5. Sapet, Kerrily. (2007). "Cleopatra: Ruler of Egypt (World Leaders)".
  6. Mason, Charles Peter. (1867). "Alexander". [[Little, Brown and Company]].
  7. History, Hourly. (2017). "Cleopatra: A Life From Beginning to End".
  8. Jones, Prudence. (2006). "Cleopatra: the last pharaoh".
  9. Hughes-Hallett, Lucy. (1991). "Cleopatra: histories, dreams and distortions".
  10. [[Plutarch]], ''Antony'' 54.6-9; [[Cassius Dio]] xlix. 41.1-3; [[Livy]], ''periochae'' 131
  11. "Ptolemaic Dynasty Affiliates".
  12. Southern, Pat. (2007). "Cleopatra".
  13. Weigall, Arthur. (1914). "The life and times of Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt".
  14. Cassius Dio xlix. 40.2; xlix. 44.1-4; li. 16.2; Plutarch, ''Antony'' 53.12
  15. Cassius Dio li. 21.8
  16. Plutarch, ''Antony'' 87.1; [[Suetonius]], ''Augustus'' 17.5
  17. Plutarch, ''Antony'' 81.1 - 82.1; 87.1; Cassius Dio li. 15.5; Suetonius, ''Augustus'' 17.5
  18. Cassius Dio li. 15.6; compare Plutarch, ''Antony'' 87.1-2
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