The Misfits Pair

The Misfits Lair evil twin

The Real Cleopatra, at last

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** using citations from:
The Daily Mail article by Fiona MacRae
The Daily Telegraph reporter

It always bothered me not only the Hollywoodian view of Cleopatra and all Egyptian Civilization but mostly the popular modern western world view of both Classical and Ptolemaic Egypt. History and Science will always make justice.

Egyptologist Sally Ann Ashton believes the compute regenerated 3D image is the best likeness of the legendary beauty famed for her ability to beguile.

Cleopatra1

Likeness: The computer-generated 3D image has been pieced together from images on ancient artifacts

Pieced together from images on ancient artifacts, including a ring dating from Cleopatra’s reign 2,000 years ago, it is the culmination of more than a year of painstaking research.

The result is a beautiful young woman of mixed ethnicity  –  very different to the porcelain-skinned Westernized version portrayed by Elizabeth Taylor in the 1961 movie Cleopatra.

Cleopatra

Realism: The result is a strikingly beautiful young woman of mixed ethnicity

Dr Ashton, of Cambridge University, said the images, to be broadcast as part of a Five documentary on Cleopatra, reflect the monarch’s Greek heritage as well as her Egyptian upbringing.

‘She probably wasn’t just completely European. You’ve got to remember that her family had actually lived in Egypt for 300 years by the time she came to power.’

untitled  Detail: Image of Cleopatra on the temple walls of Dendera

The picture of the queen contrasts with several other less flattering portrayals. For instance, a silver coin which went on show at Newcastle University’s Sefton Museum last year showed her as having a shallow forehead, pointed chin, thin lips and hooked nose. Her lover, the Roman general Mark Antony, fared little better.

The reverse side shows him to have bulging eyes and a thick neck. The queen’s appearance has long been the subject of debate among academics. While Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra made reference to her youthful looks and ‘infinite-variety’, many believe she was short and frumpy with bad teeth.

A statue of Cleopatra exhibited at the British Museum in 2001 portrayed her as plain, no more than 5ft tall and rather plump.

Born in Alexandra in 69BC, into a Macedonian Greek dynasty which had ruled Egypt for three centuries, Cleopatra acceded to the throne at 17. Three years later she seduced Julius Caesar, bearing him a son, Caesarion.

After Caesar was assassinated she courted Mark Antony before committing suicide on his death. Legend has it that she put an asp, a venomous serpent, to her breast.


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