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ARSINOE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 655 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ARSINOE  , the name of four

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Egyptian princesses of the Ptolemaic dynasty . The name was introduced into the Ptolemaic dynasty by the
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mother of Ptolemy I . This Arsinoe was originally a
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mistress of Philip II. of Macedon, who presented her to a Macedonian soldier Loqus shortly before Ptolemy was born . It was, therefore, assumed by the Macedonians that the Ptolemaic house was really descended from Philip (see
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PTOLEMIES) . 1 . Daughter of Lysimachus, king of
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Thrace, first wife of Ptolemy II . Philadelphus (285–247 B.C.) . Accused of conspiring against her
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husband, who perhaps already contemplated
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marriage with his
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sister, also named Arsinoe, she was banished to Coptos, in Upper
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Egypt . Her son Ptolemy was afterwards king under the title of Euergetes . It is supposed by some (e.g . Niebuhr, Kleine Schriften; cf . Ehrlichs, De Callimachi hymnis) that she is to be identified with the Arsinoe who became wife of Magas, king of Cyrene, and that she married him after her exile to Coptos .

But this

hypothesis is apparently without foundation . Magas before his
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death had betrothed his daughter Berenice to the son of his
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brother Ptolemy II . Philadelphus, but Arsinoe, disliking the projected
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alliance, induced
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Demetrius the
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Fair, son of Demetrius Poliorcetes, to accept the
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throne of Cyrene as husband of Berenice . She herself, however, fell in love with the young prince, and Berenice in revenge formed a conspiracy, and, having slain Demetrius, married Ptolemy's son (see BERENICE, 3) . 2 . Daughter of Ptolemy I .
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Soter and Berenice . Born about 316 B.c., she married Lysimachus, king of Thrace, who made over to her the territories of his divorced wife, Amastris . To secure the succession for her own children she brought about the
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murder of her stepson Agathocles . Lysandra, the wife of Agathocles, took
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refuge with Seleucus, king of
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Syria, who made war upon Lysimachus and defeated him (281) . After her husband's death Arsinoe fled to Ephesus and afterwards to Cassandreia in
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Macedonia . Seleucus, who had seized Lysimachus's
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kingdom, was murdered in 281 by Ptolemy Ceraunus (
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half-brother of Arsinoe), who thus became master of Thrace and Macedonia .

To obtain

possession of Cassandreia, he offered his hand in marriage to Arsinoe, and being admitted into the
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town, killed her two younger sons and banished her to Samothrace . Escaping to Egypt, she became the wife of her full brother Ptolemy II., the first instance of the practice (afterwards
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common) of the Greek kings of Egypt marrying their sisters . She was a woman of a masterful character and won
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great influence . Her husband, though she
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bore him no children, was devoted to her and paid her all possible honour after her death in 271 . He gave her name to a number of cities, and also to a
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district (
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nome) of Egypt.' It is related that he ordered the architect Dinochares to build a temple in her honour in Alexandria; in order that her statue, made of iron, might appear to be suspended in the air, the roof was to consist of an arch of loadstones (Pliny, Hist . Nat. xxxiv . 42) . Coins were also struck, showing her crowned and veiled on the obverse, with a double cornucopia on the
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reverse . She was worshipped as a goddess under the title of Oea 006.60.ebos, and she and her husband as Owl a&eXcboi (Justin
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xxiv . 2, 3;
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Pausanias i . 7) . See von Prott, Rhein .

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Mus. liii . (1898), pp . 46o f . 3 . Daughter of Ptolemy III . Euergetes, sister and wife of Ptolemy IV . Philopator . She seems to be erroneously called ' The appendix to pt. ii. of the Tebtunis series of papyri (Grenfell, Hunt and Goodspeed, 1907) contains a lengthy account of the topography of the Arsinoite nome . Eurydice by Justin (
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xxx . 2), and
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Cleopatra by Livy (
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xxvii . 4) . Her presence greatly encouraged the troops at the
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battle of Raphia (217), in which
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Antiochus the Great was defeated .

Her husband put het to death to please his mistress Agathocleia, a Samian dancer (between 210 and 205) . She was worshipped as Oea 4aXotrarwp; she and her husband as Owl 4tXo7raropes (

Polybius v . 83, 84, xv . 25-33) . 4 . Youngest daughter of Ptolemy XIII . Auletes, and sister of the famous Cleopatra . During the siege of Alexandria by
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Julius Caesar (48) she was recognized as queen by the inhabitants, her brother, the young Ptolemy, being then held captive by Caesar . Caesar took her with him to Rome as a precaution . After Caesar's triumph she was allowed to return to Alexandria . After the battle of Philippi she was put to death at Miletus (or in the temple of
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Artemis at Ephesus) by order of Mark Antony, at the request of her sister Cleopatra (Dio Cassius xlii . 39; Caesar, Bell. civ. iii .

112;

Appian, Bell. civ. v . 9) .

End of Article: ARSINOE
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