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  • Carry On, Cleo!


    A team of archaeologists believe that they're on the verge of uncovering Cleopatra's tomb—a discovery that could potentially drive the whole world pyramid-mad, the way King Tut did back in the '20s and then again in the '70s.

    Stacy Schiff has a fantastic essay in the New York Times about the legend of Cleopatra—who, Shiff points out, was not just the lover of two of the most powerful men of her time but a fearsome monarch in her own right, a woman whose "antecedents were the rancorous, meddlesome Macedonian queens who routinely poisoned brothers and sent armies against sons...These women were raised to rule."

    And yet, as we all know, Cleopatra's legacy has little to do with her political prowess:

    Cleopatra has gone down in history as a wanton seductress. She is the original bad girl, the Monica Lewinsky of the ancient world. And all because she turns up at one of the most dangerous intersections in history, that of women and power.

    She presides eternally over the chasm between promiscuity and virility, the forest of connotations that separate “adventuress” from “adventurer.” Women schemed while men strategized in the ancient world, too.

    So is a double standard simply inevitable when it comes to female leaders? Cleo herself is mum on the topic. As Schiff notes, "No matter what the tombs of Taposiris yield, they are unlikely to offer up an answer to the vexed question of women and power." (Though in Shakespeare's version, our queen has some choice words on the subject, perceptively declaring that future dramatists would chalk up Antony's indiscretions to drunkenness, while she herself would have to suffer seeing "some squeaking Cleopatra boy my greatness / I' the posture of a whore.") 

    But according to the BBC, the dig may solve another eternally vexing question:

    Zahi Hawass, Egypt's chief archaeologist, said the coins found at the temple refuted "what some scholars have said about Cleopatra being very ugly".

    "The finds from Taposiris reflect a charm... and indicate that Cleopatra was in no way unattractive," he said.

    Well, thank Amun-Ra for that.
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