Antony & Cleopatra
Cleopatra VII was not simply beautiful — she was, by all historical accounts, one of the most formidably intelligent rulers of the ancient world. She spoke nine languages, commanded armies, and ruled Egypt with a strategic mind that rivaled any general of the era. When she first met Julius Caesar, she reportedly had herself smuggled to him in a rolled carpet — a theatrical entrance that tells you everything about who she was.
Her relationship with Mark Antony was different in character. Caesar was a political alliance; Antony was, by most accounts, a genuine and consuming passion. They spent winters in Alexandria together, formed a drinking society they called the “Inimitable Livers,” and had three children. When Antony chose Cleopatra over Rome — and over Octavian’s political power — he set in motion the conflict that would end both their lives.
After the defeat at Actium in 30 BC, Antony received false news that Cleopatra was dead. He fell on his sword. Cleopatra, unwilling to be paraded through Rome as a conquered queen, died shortly after — by her own choice. They were buried together, as she had requested. Shakespeare gave their story its most famous form two millennia later, but no dramatist ever managed to fully capture the scale of what they sacrificed.
“Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale her infinite variety.”
— Shakespeare, Antony and Cleopatra, Act IICleopatra: A Life
Pulitzer Prize-winning biography that reconstructs Cleopatra from primary sources — stripping away centuries of myth to reveal one of antiquity’s most remarkable rulers and lovers.
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