Cleopatra — "No, it is not so; she will not be triumphed over."
No, it is not so; she will not be triumphed over.
No, it is not so; she will not be triumphed over.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"I am prepared for anything but dishonor."
"There is no greater glory than to defy Rome."
"Let my tomb be my throne."
"I have not lived so long to be made a spectacle."
"I shall not be a spectacle."
Last active pharaoh of Ptolemaic Egypt who allied with both Julius Caesar and Mark Antony; her suicide ended the Egyptian dynasty. Closely associated with Mark Antony (her partner and co-suicide) and Julius Caesar (her earlier ally and father of Caesarion). For an intellectual contrast, see Augustus, first Roman emperor (Octavian) — Augustus's defeat of Cleopatra at Actium ended Hellenistic Egypt and started the Roman imperial era. His propaganda machine framed Cleopatra as the foreign queen threatening Roman virtue — the founding template of East-corruption-versus-Roman-discipline rhetoric.
Your cart is empty