Cleopatra — "Better to die a queen than live a captive."
Better to die a queen than live a captive.
Better to die a queen than live a captive.
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"I fear nothing but a life without purpose."
"Let no one say I was easily defeated."
"I have loved and lost, but I have lived."
"I am the mistress of my own destiny."
"Let them say what they will. I am a queen."
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.
A sentiment widely attributed to her, though the exact wording may vary in ancient sources.
Date: 30 BCE
Life & AgingFound in 1 providers: grok
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