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Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Numbering the Ptolemies is a modern invention; the Greeks distinguished them by nickname. The number given here is the present consensus, but there has been some disagreement in the nineteenth century about which of the later Ptolemies should be counted as reigning. Older sources may give a number one higher or lower, but the same epithet. Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator (Greek: !"#$%&'(#) *%+) ,-$#./"01, Ptolema!os Theós Philopát"r, lived 62 BC/61 BC–January 13, 47 BC?, reigned from 51 BC) was one of the last members of the Ptolemaic dynasty Depiction of Ptolemy XIII from the temple (305–30 BC) of Egypt. at Kom Ombo Contents 1 Co-ruler of Egypt, inner turmoil 2 Civil war 3 Ancestry 4 References 5 External links Co-ruler of Egypt, inner turmoil Son of Pharaoh Ptolemy XII of Egypt (80–58 BC and 55–51 BC), he succeeded his father in the spring of 51 BC as co-ruler of Egypt by his marriage to his older sister Cleopatra VII of Egypt (69–30 BC). In October of 50 BC, Ptolemy XIII was promoted to senior ruler along with her, although the eunuch Pothinus acted as regent for him. In the spring of 48 BC, Ptolemy XIII and Pothinus attempted to depose Cleopatra VII due to her increasing status as Queen. Her face appeared on minted coins, for example, while Ptolemy XIII's name was omitted on official documents. Ptolemy intended to become sole ruler, with Pothinus acting as the power behind the throne. Civil war Ptolemy XIII and Pothinus managed to force Cleopatra to flee to Syria, but she soon organized her own army and a civil war began in Egypt. Soon their other sister started to claim the throne as Arsinoe IV (48–47 BC), further complicating the situation. At this point, defeated Roman general Pompey the Great came to Egypt seeking refuge from his pursuing rival Julius Caesar. Initially, Ptolemy XIII and Pothinus pretended to have accepted his request, but on September 29, 48 BC, Pothinus had the general murdered, in hopes of winning favor with Caesar when the victorious general arrived. When Caesar did arrive he was presented with the head of his deceased rival and former ally, but reportedly, instead of being pleased, reacted with disgust and ordered that Pompey's body be located and given a proper Roman funeral. Cleopatra VII proved more successful in winning Caesar's favor and became his lover. Caesar arranged the execution of Pothinus and the official return to the throne of Cleopatra VII, though she had never officially abdicated her marriage to Ptolemy XIII. Still determined to depose Cleopatra VII, Ptolemy XIII allied himself with Arsinoe IV. Jointly, they organized the factions of the army loyal to them against those loyal to Cleopatra VII and the relatively small part of his army that had accompanied Caesar to Egypt. The battle between the warring factions occurred in mid-December of 48 BC inside Alexandria itself, which suffered serious damage, including (according to some sources)[citation needed] the burning of some of the buildings which comprised the Library of Alexandria. The arrival of Roman reinforcements from Pergamum gave the victory to Caesar and Cleopatra VII, forcing Ptolemy XIII and Arsinoe IV to flee the city. Ptolemy XIII reportedly drowned on January 13, 47 BC while attempting to cross the Nile. Whether he was attempting to flee or was seeking negotiations remains uncertain from sources of the time. Cleopatra VII remained the unchallenged ruler of Egypt, although she named their younger brother Ptolemy XIV of Egypt (47–44 BC) her new co-ruler. Ancestry Ancestors of Ptolemy XIII of Egypt 16. Ptolemy V Epiphanes 8. Ptolemy VIII Physcon 17. Cleopatra I of Egypt 4. Ptolemy IX Lathyros 18. Ptolemy VI Philometor (brother of 8) 9. Cleopatra III of Egypt 19. Cleopatra II of Egypt (sister of 8) 2. Ptolemy XII Auletes 20. =16. Ptolemy V Epiphanes 10. =8. Ptolemy VIII Physcon 21. =17. Cleopatra I of Egypt 5. Cleopatra IV of Egypt 22. =18. Ptolemy VI Philometor 11. =9. Cleopatra III of Egypt 23. =19. Cleopatra II of Egypt 1. Ptolemy XIII 24. 12. 25. 6. 26. 13. 27. 3. 28. 14. 29. 7. 30. 15. 31. References External links Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator (http://virtualreligion.net/iho/ptolemy_13.html) entry in historical sourcebook by Mahlon H. Smith Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator Ptolemaic dynasty Born: ca. 62 BC Died: ca. 47 BC Regnal titles Preceded by Pharaoh of Egypt Succeeded by Ptolemy XII Auletes 51–ca. 47 BC Cleopatra VII and and Cleopatra VII with Cleopatra VII Ptolemy XIV Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptolemy_XIII_Theos_Philopator" Categories: 60s BC births | 40s BC deaths | Pharaohs of the Ptolemaic dynasty | Hellenistic Egyptians | Deaths by drowning | Rulers who died as children | Ancient child rulers | 1st-century BC African rulers This page was last modified on 6 April 2011 at 08:33. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution- ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. See Terms of Use for details. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization..
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