CLEOPATRA: Insanely Inbred in Real Life- Family Tree- Mortal Faces

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
  • Cleopatra was even more INBRED than Habsburg's Charles II of Spain. In this video I recreate the Berlin Cleopatra Bust to see how she might have looked in real life. I also add her coin to recreate her real face. AND SHOW HER CRAZY TANGLED FAMILY TREE.
    NOW AVAILABLE- BUY KING TUT & POSTERS HERE: mortalfaces.myshopify.com/
    MORE CRAZY RECREATIONS:
    Charles II of Spain (The Inbred King): • Was Charles II of Spai...
    King Tut (His Terribly Inbred Family Tree): • King Tut's Inbred Fami...
    The Habsburg's Inbred Family Tree (& how more of them looked in real life): • THE HABSBURG: Their In...
    Marie Antoinette's Inbred Habsburg Family Tree Explained: • Marie Antoinette's INB...
    Ramesses II (married his daughters and had kids with them): • RAMESSES II Had Kids W...
    Lucrezia: The Most Beautiful Borgia: • LUCREZIA BORGIA: Was S...
    Queen Elizabeth I (With Scars and All): • Elizabeth I in Real Li...
    King Henry VIII: • HENRY VIII in Real Lif...
    Marie Antoinette: • MARIE ANTOINETTE in Re...
    Queen Victoria: https: • How QUEEN VICTORIA loo...
    Was Anne Boleyn a Real Beauty?: • Was ANNE BOLEYN a Real...
    Empress Sisi of Austria: • How Beautiful was Empr...
    Nefertiti: • NEFERTITI: How She Loo...
    Mark Antony and Julius Caesar: • MARK ANTONY vs JULIUS ...
    Cleopatra was Queen of Egypt/Pharaoh (69BC-30BC). She was the last Ptolemaic Queen to rule Egypt after 300 years of her family being on the throne. Her son (Ptolemy XV Caesar) briefly ruled after her but was likely killed by the Roman Emperor Caesar Augustus.
    Cleopatra's family began the Ptolemaic Dynasty with her Ancestor Ptolemy I who ruled over Egypt after Alexander the Great's death (304/305BCE). The Ptolemy family were from Macedonia but followed Egyptian tradition where sons married daughters and had children. This kept the blood line pure. Surprisingly they were still fertile after 300 years of inbreeding, especially when you look at the many issues Charles II of Spain inherited due to his own inbreeding.
    Cleopatra was a capable and strong ruler who influenced Roman politics and had her famous relationships with Julius Caesar and Mark Anthony. The Egyptian Empire was prosperous under her rule.
    Thanks for watching!
    Subscribe for more recreations!
    / @mortalfaces

Komentáře • 4,9K

  • @MortalFaces
    @MortalFaces  Před 2 lety +32

    NOW AVAILABLE- BUY KING TUT & POSTERS HERE: mortalfaces.myshopify.com/
    Subscribe for more Historical Recreations: czcams.com/users/MortalFaces
    CHECK OUT MY RECREATION OF THE INBRED KING: CHARLES II: czcams.com/video/oWm0XWKa500/video.html
    King Tut (His Terribly Inbred Family Tree): czcams.com/video/LU_6F6ZQMGA/video.html
    Charles II's Habsburg Family Tree: czcams.com/video/36hM5bfLCI8/video.html
    King Henry VIII: czcams.com/video/yiwzdy1eCWg/video.html
    Lucrezia: The Most Beautiful Borgia: czcams.com/video/G377jmh8J-g/video.html
    Marie Antoinette: czcams.com/video/EX8orpz6KBw/video.html
    Queen Victoria: https: czcams.com/video/yVFDc4pDPR4/video.html
    Queen Elizabeth I (With Scars and All): czcams.com/video/Sm93sixiOA4/video.html
    Empress Sisi of Austria: czcams.com/video/5oYM8IAP9-s/video.html
    Nefertiti: czcams.com/video/uLBmtWvIyR0/video.html
    Mark Antony and Julius Caesar: czcams.com/video/T5d11KzmNls/video.html

  • @jamestrickingtonIII
    @jamestrickingtonIII Před 2 lety +13878

    I hate when there aren’t any available sisters to marry so you have to settle for a cousin 😑

    • @SK22520
      @SK22520 Před 2 lety +51

      Or your own daughter

    • @ankavoskuilen1725
      @ankavoskuilen1725 Před 2 lety +366

      @@SK22520 But you would have had to marry your sister first to get a daughter whom you could marry.
      🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔

    • @dgeneeknapp3168
      @dgeneeknapp3168 Před 2 lety +295

      Uhm...there's always one's mom😏😄. Then the mom is also grandmother...BOOM! Only need one mother's day card each year😏.

    • @CoralineMoth
      @CoralineMoth Před 2 lety +71

      Such a bummer right?

    • @offwiththefairiesforever2373
      @offwiththefairiesforever2373 Před 2 lety +33

      So funny 🤣

  • @Dobby_1593
    @Dobby_1593 Před 2 lety +9669

    "He married an outsider because there were no sisters to marry." *banjo noises intensify*

  • @dearhaochen
    @dearhaochen Před rokem +542

    “He married an outsider, because there were no sisters to marry”… got me laughing 😂

    • @whitedragoness23
      @whitedragoness23 Před rokem +4

      It’s a good thing, but it seemed like they did share a bloodline was well. But thank goodness it was farther away than close like brother and sister.

  • @sofia-rosegionomo8201
    @sofia-rosegionomo8201 Před rokem +721

    I like that they just kept naming their children all the same things and just tacking a number on it, how is it possible for 300 years they only used like 4 names, I'm almost impressed. You've gotta love consistency

    • @musotha164
      @musotha164 Před rokem +43

      Wait until you hear about the french monarchy.

    • @picolete
      @picolete Před rokem +24

      Easier for the people, they just had to remember 2 names, and the monuments with the name of the pharaoh lasted generations

    • @moonoggin
      @moonoggin Před rokem +10

      No one could claim their children if they were named after themselves or a famous relative.

    • @marvingordon7121
      @marvingordon7121 Před rokem +13

      It actually happened in history that some children were named by numbers instead of real names. For example 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 😅

    • @anitat9727
      @anitat9727 Před rokem +10

      I mean that wasn't the only thing they were consistent of...

  • @melissak1654
    @melissak1654 Před 2 lety +12384

    “Cleopatra eventually chose her youngest son because she wasn’t too impressed that her other son tried to assassinate her”

    • @SummerRocks50
      @SummerRocks50 Před 2 lety +1631

      And then the younger son is the one that actually killed her lol

    • @SK22520
      @SK22520 Před 2 lety +542

      And then her younger son killed her off anyways

    • @KEYBEATZ
      @KEYBEATZ Před 2 lety +25

      I'd hope not

    • @dittohead7044
      @dittohead7044 Před 2 lety +314

      This is why holidays can be so stressful for the same reasons lol

    • @amberhaskins8707
      @amberhaskins8707 Před 2 lety +15

      Cicearean?

  • @dontbesoforLorn
    @dontbesoforLorn Před 2 lety +14806

    The inbreeding is bad enough without using and reusing like the same four names for 300 years to make it even more confusing.

    • @marjoriecoey3418
      @marjoriecoey3418 Před 2 lety +495

      Keeps it straight for the masses that could not read or write.

    • @jordanjay1479
      @jordanjay1479 Před 2 lety +273

      They passed down the same mitochondrial DNA for generations nonstop for a long period of time. That type of DNA is passed down only by mothers. In almost all cases a male and his offspring do not share the same mitochondrial DNA, but this rare exception happened for generations consecutively. Theres probably a huge amount of people in the world that can be link genetically to them.

    • @dgeneeknapp3168
      @dgeneeknapp3168 Před 2 lety +354

      I know. Doing my family line, I reached a few points on several branches, where numerpus sons were repeatedly named after the father. The women's names were often limited to acceptable Christian names, and I started thinking I was caught in a paperwork or computer loop. Ie John and Catherin Smith begat John who maried Catherine and was father of John and Catherine Smith. This goes on for generations several times. It took side reference research to realize I was actually making progress and NOT stuck in some loop. 😂

    • @YawehthedragondogofEL
      @YawehthedragondogofEL Před 2 lety +279

      The Egyptians liked things to stay exactly the same. In ancient times a Greek mercenary was bragging to a couple of Egyptian librarians that he could trace his family back through twelve generations of nobles. The librarians showed him a record book that recorded over 300 generations of their ancestors who had the same name as them who had worked as librarians in the same library.

    • @highviewbarbell
      @highviewbarbell Před 2 lety +125

      @@YawehthedragondogofEL that or some bored fella wrote his own name 300 times

  • @meelsky
    @meelsky Před rokem +992

    I’m sure many people have pointed this out, but her famous beauty didn’t refer to her physical looks, it refers to her personality and intellect.

    • @MrStubbs8157
      @MrStubbs8157 Před rokem +51

      I dont think, that harsh romans or who else wrote about her really were into "her insides were beautiful" without saying that she was kinda ugly. I dont think anyone cares about inner values when describing people as beautiful. Noone does it today and certainly not back in the day.
      Imbreds could be beautiful as well.
      Look at all of us....we are highly imbred as well all over the world. Otherwise we would have been much more people throughout history, but we werent.
      Just going back 1000 years, which would be 36th generation down from you, it would be 100 billion people....that was clearly not the case.
      The chances (if you take the word inbred like that) of us having had sex with a relative is pretty high...if you go back further, the chances are of course 100% of you sleeping with someone related to you. Usually they didnt inbred (if they could) for 2-3 generations, in which case the chances of deformation dwindle rapidly. Otherwise we wouldnt be here 🤣

    • @fern7306
      @fern7306 Před rokem +76

      Her beauty referred to her enormous wealth 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @JJLewis-so1iq
      @JJLewis-so1iq Před rokem +6

      I always understood that. She was an intriguing woman

    • @JJLewis-so1iq
      @JJLewis-so1iq Před rokem +4

      She was intriguing and a huge presence

    • @MrStubbs8157
      @MrStubbs8157 Před rokem +2

      @@JJLewis-so1iq Who knows?

  • @Sarahscg5
    @Sarahscg5 Před rokem +23

    Sooo is this where the Disney movie Hercules got the quote from pain “the time all the boys were named Jason and all the girls were all named Brittany “ 😂 omg that makes it way more funnier

  • @KATSPF
    @KATSPF Před 2 lety +19083

    I once saw a comment where someone said “Most people have 8 great grandparents, cleopatra has 2. They talk about her beauty but realistically it’s lucky she was able to be born with fully formed lungs”
    I finally get it.

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety +2

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️…

    • @crazygreenlady7907
      @crazygreenlady7907 Před 2 lety +869

      Thanks for this comment...I went back and checked the tree and it seems simple when you comprehend it that way. Mind you, those two great grandparents seem quite closely related already.

    • @nyiayani6747
      @nyiayani6747 Před 2 lety +818

      Lol I think someone lying about her beauty ain’t no way.

    • @anaisabelpais7389
      @anaisabelpais7389 Před 2 lety +250

      Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III were her great grandparents 3 times.
      But lets not forget about her grandfather Ptolemy IX also being being her great-grandfather, along with Cleopatra Selene.
      So 4 great-grandparents? Technically?
      And Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III are also her great-great-grandparents twice, on top of being her great-grandparents three times

    • @dontcare7086
      @dontcare7086 Před 2 lety +794

      I have a feeling she was really beautiful and exotic for the time period. Europe has a equal system of incest with its royalty and so does almost every society. For the greatest men of rome to fall in love with her and actually abandon rome for years on end to be with her tells you it was more than political. These guys could have the most beautiful women in Europe but they found cleopatra to be so captivating.

  • @ankavoskuilen1725
    @ankavoskuilen1725 Před 2 lety +11413

    When you hear this, it sounds complicated but it all (almost) comes down to:
    Boys are named Ptolemy and girls are named Cleopatra.
    Ptolemy marries Cleopatra.
    Not complicated at all.

    • @selfiekroos1777
      @selfiekroos1777 Před 2 lety +182

      Just like the wedding scene in goodfellas

    • @BlazeDupree1525
      @BlazeDupree1525 Před 2 lety +346

      Remember that time when all the boys were named Jason and the girls were all named Britney 😅🤣

    • @pihu2573
      @pihu2573 Před 2 lety +88

      Underrated comment💀✋🏻

    • @Armageddon80
      @Armageddon80 Před 2 lety +274

      throw in a few Berenice's too

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

  • @funnatopia704
    @funnatopia704 Před rokem +48

    You have to keep in mind also that Pharaohs weren't limited to just one wife.
    The Great Royal Wife was the main wife (and was usually the Sibling of the Pharaoh) whose sons were automatically next in line, while the other wives were labeled as lesser wives whose sons essentially served as backups in case the Great Royal Wife either fails to birth sons or her sons die before their father.
    The Great Royal Wife was the only one that was recorded in the dynasty's history, and it wasn't always her biological son that became the next Pharaoh.
    Cleopatra was likely spared from the majority of the consequences that plagued incestuous dynasties solely because of this system.

    • @mikoto7693
      @mikoto7693 Před 5 měsíci +4

      That actually makes a whole lot of sense. Across human history, in many different civilisations around the world the theme of the “divine bloodline” has come up with power passing from parent to child. Pharaoh, King, Emperor. And what was common in all of these cultures? Concubines, lesser wives or harems.
      It actually does seem that the royalty in these cultures figured out that inbreeding was bad, and figured out a system where they could claim the incestuous royal coup produced an heir, but if they couldn’t there were always the illegitimate children of the concubines that they could fall back on. Kinda clever now that I think about it.

    • @fabianhale845
      @fabianhale845 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Except that the previous pharaohs were married to multiple women simultaneously, while the Ptolemies were married to one woman at a time. True the Ptolemaic kings had mistresses, but no children from those unions ascended to the throne.

    • @twarsdune
      @twarsdune Před 2 měsíci +1

      Ptolemy XIII have a mistress, but the son from that union (Ptolemy Apion) is denied royalty and were relegated as a ruler in one of the border provinces. Non inbred Ptolemies does exist, but they are not of royal blood and were never recorded to hold in line of succession. Ptolemy XII marrying his sisterwife's daughter is even a proof of this, as he maneuvered so the so called royal dynasty remain pure.

  • @dylanpilcheruniverse6515
    @dylanpilcheruniverse6515 Před rokem +169

    It’s really amazing how easily people have breezed past how inbred she really was. Therefore this in that alone is one of the more insightful pieces I’ve seen on cleopatra. Sometimes we prefer our imaginations to reality.

    • @Mermaid404
      @Mermaid404 Před rokem +3

      Yep a LOT of people think they cheated on their spouse without Proof.

    • @Brandonhayhew
      @Brandonhayhew Před rokem

      Cleopatra was inbred and so was monarch of European, they were all related they were all cousins

  • @delirium8992
    @delirium8992 Před 2 lety +6846

    When the family tree is a wreath

  • @emmalicious3
    @emmalicious3 Před 2 lety +6427

    I think she may have been average looking, but as a pharaoh her beauty may have been exaggerated, or cosmetics did the work. Also, her intelligence may have made her attractive.

    • @edennis8578
      @edennis8578 Před 2 lety +994

      Plus the power and the glamour of royalty. Look how European princesses are usually described as beautiful when most of them are downright unattractive. The most beautiful European princesses are the wives of the princes, not the women born to the purple.

    • @NC-ij9rb
      @NC-ij9rb Před 2 lety +255

      Agreed. Her power, wealth, and brains made up for it.

    • @helenrose5383
      @helenrose5383 Před 2 lety +468

      Also who would dare to describe a ruler anything other than beautiful and people might have just assumed she was beautiful because we often associate beauty with power, especially when women are concerned!

    • @whiskeywhiskeyromeo3730
      @whiskeywhiskeyromeo3730 Před 2 lety +172

      It's possible anybody not in royalty would have been hideously filthy, malnourished, diseased and lord only knows what other disfiguring processes..

    • @kuroyuri04
      @kuroyuri04 Před 2 lety +10

      @@edennis8578 described as beautiful...
      (In faces, but not their brain) 😅

  • @Smiles2U4Ever
    @Smiles2U4Ever Před 8 měsíci +48

    I doubt Cleopatra was ugly or looked deformed. She lured both Julius Caesar and Marcus Antony to her bed and had kids with them. She was likely exotic-looking and knew how to use her body and personality. She was intelligent and knew how to manipulate.

    • @midnightkitty7
      @midnightkitty7 Před 2 měsíci +14

      Exactly , not only that Roman and Early Greeks saw deformities as weakness so there was no way they would fall for her

    • @blackbartthepoet3820
      @blackbartthepoet3820 Před 2 měsíci

      UNLESS she had that GYAT

    • @tiredteen8906
      @tiredteen8906 Před 2 měsíci +7

      Girlboss

    • @dawnelder9046
      @dawnelder9046 Před měsícem +2

      The Romans thought a unibrow was beautiful.

    • @MikeScott-ez7iw
      @MikeScott-ez7iw Před měsícem

      ​@@midnightkitty7
      Egypt y'all can have ugly Cleopatra let's be clear Ancient Egypt was pure African people not Egyptian and Mediterranean dark 🌑 skin bs 💯 true facts

  • @alittleimagination9023
    @alittleimagination9023 Před rokem +11

    4:38 it's like the couldn't keep track of the number, and when they learned they skipped to 8, they decided to go back to 7 instead of going to 9. Lol

  • @coconoisette
    @coconoisette Před 2 lety +7100

    "He married his full sister, _apparently_ they were in love"
    "He married an outsider because there were no sisters to marry"
    "Cleopatra would go on, to no surprise, to marry her older brother"
    The shade lmaoo i swear these videos are the best it just keeps getting worse and the narrator gets increasingly fed up with the bullshit

    • @MortalFaces
      @MortalFaces  Před 2 lety +497

      🤣

    • @Sylphadora
      @Sylphadora Před 2 lety +536

      "She would be the last imported wife for a few generations"

    • @adsones
      @adsones Před 2 lety +21

      @@Sylphadora 😂😂

    • @TVwriter23
      @TVwriter23 Před 2 lety +42

      If you read those ancient Egyptian love poems

    • @leaaronsanchez
      @leaaronsanchez Před rokem +76

      Cleopatra was the firstborn so she didn't have a older brother, just younger brothers and a younger sister. When her parents died and she became the new Queen she was 16 her oldest brother was 12, and by rule she was married to him.

  • @elisekellett2378
    @elisekellett2378 Před 2 lety +6618

    Oh my..... I'm really going to have a chuckle to myself the next time someone claims to have been Cleopatra in a former life 😄😄

    • @jol4342
      @jol4342 Před 2 lety +357

      There are so many of them! 😆

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Před 2 lety +41

      Indeed 😂

    • @purplevamp3132
      @purplevamp3132 Před 2 lety +158

      I actually know someone like that-absolutely insane! I keep quiet...😐

    • @joltjolt5060
      @joltjolt5060 Před 2 lety +39

      She had a sucky life. Why would anyone WANT to be her?

    • @VeiledDancer
      @VeiledDancer Před 2 lety +8

      😂

  • @Askeladd_
    @Askeladd_ Před rokem +62

    You didn’t mention the reason they were inbreeding. Context: The reason the Ptolemy royals practiced incėst was, upon conquering Egypt and becoming pharaoh, Ptolemy I adopted Egyptian religious customs as instructed by the Egyptian priestly class, these customs included sibling marriages, something uncommon in Macedon. This was an Egyptian royal custom, perhaps common Egyptians also practiced some form of inbreeding, as first cousin-marriages are relatively common in present Egypt and also the countries of the near east today.

    • @Bangandthedirtisgone
      @Bangandthedirtisgone Před rokem

      Beyond tradition for the sake of tradition though how did no-one seem to have a problem with it? It's inconceivable to me.

    • @meganheinzle644
      @meganheinzle644 Před rokem +4

      And this is why we have the Bible 😂

    • @samumoth
      @samumoth Před rokem

      They marry cousins because Mohammad permitted it.

  • @theshiniestmermaidonearth4283
    @theshiniestmermaidonearth4283 Před 2 lety +4161

    Wow, her family tree was like a bowl of spaghetti. I've also heard that it's very possible Cleopatra's mother cheated on her father with someone outside the family lineage, and that's why she didn't have many deformities compared to those around her.

    • @GoldLove21
      @GoldLove21 Před 2 lety +233

      Like mother like daughter👍

    • @pearltoomer6392
      @pearltoomer6392 Před 2 lety +313

      LUCKY FOR HER CHILDREN THE INBRED BLOODLINE HAD TO STOP HER MOM MAY HAVE SEEN THAT.

    • @jayklink851
      @jayklink851 Před 2 lety +241

      If true, smart move on her part. Many speculate King Henry didn't put his last wife's head on the chopping block because she bore him a son. Most, however, speculate that she made trips to the wood pile lol.

    • @offwiththefairiesforever2373
      @offwiththefairiesforever2373 Před 2 lety +12

      Yes quite possibly.....I think they might have figured out the inbreeding wasn't such a good idea....alot of them 😉 so and so begat so and so and so on and so forth....but the way countries used to be....and family.....constantly murdering each other to rule....just surviving your family was obviously a bit of a miracle 😉

    • @corinazzz1347
      @corinazzz1347 Před 2 lety +169

      @@jayklink851 first off all, he didn’t kill his last wife. He killed his second and fifth wive. He let his second wife get killed bc he said she was sleeping with her brother and other men. Which is probably a lie. Nobody really believes it. He just wanted her out of the way bc he already found someone new to marry and wanted a son

  • @gblikestosew
    @gblikestosew Před 2 lety +5088

    Just because we've found out that she wasn't super conventionally attractive doesn't mean that back in the day she wasn't super hot to her fellow ancient Egyptians*. (I'm aware that she was ethnically Greek! But, she was the queen of EGYPT and was politically very important to the country she ruled so I refer to her as Egyptian for this reason) Our standards of beauty change drastically over time and I almost wonder if "inbred-looking" features were admired back then (as a sort of status symbol) because it implied you came from a bloodline worth preserving? Idk. Just thoughts.

    • @maepicnic2460
      @maepicnic2460 Před 2 lety

      Exactly. And a bigger interesting nose is still considered beautiful today. Especially if your loved ones shared it. Big eyes? Yes. Low brow bone? Sultry! But it’s wrong to inbreed obviously in the end is just a form of Stockholm syndrome

    • @rikosama7648
      @rikosama7648 Před 2 lety +564

      I agree , no matter how abnormal it is now , the norms we assume is defined by us , and at that time the "norms" were different than nowadays standard

    • @Kanelle88
      @Kanelle88 Před 2 lety +328

      I think having someone else around to hall buckets of bath water also helped with the 'beauty' part of her appearance. Not to mention royals were probably not underfed like everyone else. Sweaty and rough looking skeletons are not pretty. It probably contributed to much of the belief that royals were chosen by god/s over the ages. A healthy person among the starved would look beautiful and 'blessed' in comparison. At least that's my theory...

    • @CapucineNighly
      @CapucineNighly Před 2 lety +73

      Well ya, I mean back then the unibrow was the hottest in look. 😒

    • @nerdkartoffl9019
      @nerdkartoffl9019 Před 2 lety +64

      @@Kanelle88 Afaik the "slaves" that worked for for the egyptians, weren't actually slaves. They were workers and did not starve. They had a "better" life then a farmer for example.
      (i'm not really sure, how accurate my information is)

  • @ChiefBrianIrons
    @ChiefBrianIrons Před rokem +19

    I am confused a historian on Netflix drama documentary said that her grandmother told her that Cleopatra was black 😂

    • @blackbeauti8429
      @blackbeauti8429 Před 2 měsíci

      I was always told she was black as well just like Jesus was black but in the United States he white with blue eyes

    • @dawnelder9046
      @dawnelder9046 Před měsícem

      ​@@blackbeauti8429In reality Jewish or Arab looking. The Jews then would have been part of the Arab community. Same genetics.
      When they moved into Europe they started to mix with the local populations.
      So Southern Europe Jews still had that Arab, Mediterranean look. In Northern Europe you start to get more of the blue eyes showing up. Same with Russian Jews.
      Most of the images you see come from Europe or Russia and their idea of how he looks dates back centuries. They painted what they knew.
      If Europe had remained pagen and Southern Africa had become the dominate Christian area, Jesus would have been painted as black, because that is all the people would have known.
      If the Middle East had become the dominant Christian area, Jesus would have looked the right way in paintings.
      If China had been the dominant Christian area he would have looked Chinese.

  • @christopherkrug2191
    @christopherkrug2191 Před rokem +11

    Kinda like Jada Pinckett smith huh

  • @SK22520
    @SK22520 Před 2 lety +1742

    Cleopatra chose her younger son because her older son kept trying to kill her.
    Her younger son assassinated her.

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

    • @yellowmesh7821
      @yellowmesh7821 Před 2 lety +23

      Lmfao

    • @Saral_Lekhi
      @Saral_Lekhi Před 2 lety +25

      I thought she died of snake poison as a form of suicide

    • @Catalyna
      @Catalyna Před 2 lety +63

      @@Saral_Lekhi he's talking about the cleopatra mother the one who would be her great grandma i think, your talking about the last pharoh, and the last female pharoh the legendary Cleopatra the 7th,

    • @LDuke-pc7kq
      @LDuke-pc7kq Před 2 lety +2

      @@Saral_Lekhi yes

  • @PC-dc1kv
    @PC-dc1kv Před 2 lety +1224

    What a crazy mixed-up family. No way she could’ve looked like Elizabeth Taylor.

  • @damouretdelaine5311
    @damouretdelaine5311 Před rokem +33

    "She wasn't too impressed that her eldest son tried to assassinate her..." LMAO. This stuff is gold!

    • @Peekaboo-Kitty
      @Peekaboo-Kitty Před 4 měsíci

      No, it was her brother who tried to assassinate her!

  • @zarasbazaar
    @zarasbazaar Před rokem +10

    The description you give of her in the beginning sounds exactly like how Roman sculptures of women looked: prominent nose, deep set eyes, thin lips. She may have indeed been beautiful to the Romans.

    • @BlueMoonCircus
      @BlueMoonCircus Před 3 měsíci

      She was Greek.

    • @MarisaPaola-um5yb
      @MarisaPaola-um5yb Před měsícem

      there is a theory that artists automatically gave strong leaders a 'strong nose' to reflect their personality.

  • @more444store6
    @more444store6 Před 2 lety +3046

    That is a lot of inbreeding. Very informative, a lot of people assume Cleopatra was Egyptian, but as you point out, she is from Greek kingdom, but even the ancient Egyptians married in the family, and Akenaten is a great example of what inbreeding does.

    • @annemurphy9339
      @annemurphy9339 Před 2 lety +153

      True, the Ptolemy dynasty was fanatical to only marry within their own family to keep their bloodline “pure.” As odd as it seems, this was common within the majority of ancient royal dynasties.

    • @rayyanez3527
      @rayyanez3527 Před 2 lety +20

      Regular ! Ancient Egyptians ! Did NOT Marry ? Their siblings ! Only Certain ! Pharaohs Did ! You are Making shit up !!!!!;🙄

    • @user-ru1ki
      @user-ru1ki Před 2 lety +50

      A lot of people assume? What people? Cleopatra never had any Egyptian blood. Her surname was Philopator. Cheers.

    • @venanziocalise946
      @venanziocalise946 Před 2 lety +20

      MACEDONIAN GREEK WAS CLEOPATRA.

    • @nisaba5752
      @nisaba5752 Před 2 lety +104

      @@user-ru1ki She was a Philopractor? Interesting. My uncle was a Chiropractor.
      😆 Sorry mate I HAD to go there

  • @993LD
    @993LD Před 2 lety +738

    The ancients all lied about their own beauty, men and women.. just like we do today 🥴😂

    • @pash9956
      @pash9956 Před 2 lety +31

      Exactly! And when you look into transvestigation of celebrities, you see that the female version of "sexy" is a ten year old boy in drag (Taylor Swift). And we bought it!

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety +1

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

    • @no.6377
      @no.6377 Před 2 lety +21

      They would've loved filters 👌😅

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      @@no.6377 ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

    • @KarelChytilArt
      @KarelChytilArt Před 2 lety +3

      That ancient Instagram was not so complicated as Today

  • @babywah3290
    @babywah3290 Před rokem +4

    Cleopatra’s catchphrase was - “Hey, you guys!!!!!”

  • @InfamyJunkie
    @InfamyJunkie Před rokem +9

    Apparently, based on the upcoming Netflix doc, she’s black, too.

    • @Choucheeeenn
      @Choucheeeenn Před rokem +8

      That "documentary" is absolutely not historically accurate.

    • @InfamyJunkie
      @InfamyJunkie Před rokem +4

      @@Choucheeeenn hahah I saw a comment somewhere else that called it a mockumentary.

    • @bill-ms8ec
      @bill-ms8ec Před rokem +7

      Why is she not played by a transgender "he/she/it furry 2 spirit flying spaghetti monster???🤔🤔🤔

    • @lethalvenusian
      @lethalvenusian Před 17 dny

      she wasn’t lol

  • @sopheed9266
    @sopheed9266 Před 2 lety +862

    Videos explaining Cleopatra's family tree always make me laugh, because Cleopatra didn't have a family tree: she had a family Christmas wreath 😂

    • @virginiaconway374
      @virginiaconway374 Před 2 lety +4

      Cleopatra Greek sounds about right because she was not light-skinned.

    • @XX-qj5mv
      @XX-qj5mv Před 2 lety +25

      @@virginiaconway374 greeks are not dark skin people!!!! Go to Greece and look then speak!!!!

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

    • @ingeniousmaultasche6602
      @ingeniousmaultasche6602 Před 2 lety +13

      @@virginiaconway374 Greeks are white like Tzatziki. Go to Europe once in a while, then speak. Some get tan, yes, I must admit that

    • @luckystar9279
      @luckystar9279 Před 2 lety +3

      I keep seeing the family wreath joke. The first person who made it must be proud.

  • @lucyk2371
    @lucyk2371 Před 2 lety +2627

    Normally I would say yes. However, I think that there were a lot of illegitimate children passed off as the pharaoh's. She spoke 6 languages and had a witty, captivating way of luring people in. She would not have been that smart if severely inbred. I think some of that was for show.

    • @bethc9313
      @bethc9313 Před 2 lety +84

      Not true , that she couldn’t have been that smart. Inbreeding brings out both the worst and best traits so it is quite possible that while you can inbreed a mentally deficient person you can also inbreed a genius

    • @youisastar3246
      @youisastar3246 Před 2 lety +136

      It is possible because Strabo said that Ptolemy IV was the son of Agathocleia, the mistress. The only confusing part is that Agathocleia was actually the mistress of Ptolemy IV and not his father, Ptolemy III. He could be trying to say that Ptolemy V was the son of Agathocleia considering that she and her family plotted and killed the Queen, Arsinoe III who is said to be the mother of Ptolemy V. However, Agathocleia was related to the Ptolemies.

    • @porkpork2169
      @porkpork2169 Před 2 lety +271

      not all inbred people have inbred illnesses or deformities. normally yes they do, but not always

    • @GenerationBright
      @GenerationBright Před 2 lety +475

      @@porkpork2169 yeah, first generation inbreeding often doesn't result in the deformities especially if it's half siblings or first cousins. But successive generations? It becomes exponentially worse.

    • @crazysquirrel9425
      @crazysquirrel9425 Před 2 lety +28

      Makes one wonder if some of our politicians are inbred....

  • @Moi_81
    @Moi_81 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I think people were required to say she was beautiful. She was a ruler.

  • @tommorales2371
    @tommorales2371 Před rokem +5

    Now this I believe,, I highly doubt cleo looked like a Maybelline model..

  • @nicolesmith5240
    @nicolesmith5240 Před 2 lety +2222

    I knew she wasn’t physically beautiful, but she was extremely intelligent, spoke several languages fluently and they said her voice was mesmerizing. She also knew the art of seduction.
    A lot of people think that looks alone are what captivate, but charisma, personality and that IT factor is what truly attracts people.

    • @LegendRonk
      @LegendRonk Před 2 lety +108

      First comes looks.. face it, she was busted

    • @penitentone6998
      @penitentone6998 Před 2 lety +157

      Or maybe just like her looks, her intelligence was also exaggerated

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

    • @roddo1955
      @roddo1955 Před 2 lety +25

      I think the seduction part is male conjecture. It fits the patriarchy to paint Cleo as a seductress. Because a woman can't be succesful unless she seduces a man, right?😉Julius Ceasar didn't marry Cleo because she seduced him; it was political strategy. The two agreed that her brother was unfit to rule. And the only way to stop the Greek elite from standing in Cleo's way, was with Roman support. When Cleo married Julius, nobody challenged her claim to the Egyptian throne. Without Rome's backing, she would have been assassinated.Cleo ruled because she was the most capable. Julius Gaius did not become Ceasar because he was the kind of man who allowed a teenager to sweep him off his feet. And Cleo did not become Pharao because she was a good seductress. She was a highly capable, highly intelligent and a politically savvy, individual. Very practical, too. She was the only one in her family who recognised the importance of good PR; She spoke Egyptian, her family did'nt bother. She actively took part in religeous ceremonies for all the people to see. That is politics and mob-control. And that is what made Julius great in Rome when he became dictator: PR. the grand heroic general who rid Rome of the corrupt Republic and ensured 'strong' leadership. All smoke and mirrors and still he crossed the Rubicon.When he met Cleo, he must have thought:" now this is a political ally on my level. Plus I need her because of all the grain we import from Egypt. She is loved by her people. If I marry her; Egypt will see me as her consort instead of their dictator. While in Rome, they will see her as my conquest and subject instead of a separatist rebel. Win-win situation!"

    • @idylledoll
      @idylledoll Před 2 lety +146

      EXACTLY. Men everywhere wanted her and she was average in comparison to queens of her time because physical beauty only goes so far, she had captivated men through her charm, intelligence and personality...THAT is what truly hooks a man long term.

  • @MikaelaKMajorHistory
    @MikaelaKMajorHistory Před 2 lety +554

    Although she’s now more known for her beauty, originally there are accounts saying that she wasn’t actually that pretty at all and men probably fell in love with her due to her knowledge and wit.

    • @GoldLove21
      @GoldLove21 Před 2 lety +102

      And money, anthony and julius needed money for those wars

    • @susanandrew5240
      @susanandrew5240 Před 2 lety +13

      Now that would be a “ first “ , falling in love with her due to her knowledge and wit ! You can bet she was beautiful and witty !

    • @MikaelaKMajorHistory
      @MikaelaKMajorHistory Před 2 lety +75

      @@susanandrew5240 it actually happens more often than you think. In Korea for example, high class prostitutes would be given a rigorous education and learn to play musical instruments like a high class woman would in order to stay engaged with their clients and not just be a pretty face to get bored of.

    • @jabronis33
      @jabronis33 Před 2 lety +5

      I refuse to believe Marc Anthony died because he wanted an ugly cleopatra. Marc Anthony was a Chad, so I don't want to believe that.

    • @MikaelaKMajorHistory
      @MikaelaKMajorHistory Před 2 lety +4

      @@jabronis33 Marc Antony would be a chad 😂

  • @runcamyt
    @runcamyt Před rokem +6

    The black delegation withdraws its claim to Cleopatra...
    Clearly, we were reaching.

    • @Amazingfilms148
      @Amazingfilms148 Před rokem +2

      The moment they talk about inbreeding, I know she wasn't black.

    • @--Traveler--
      @--Traveler-- Před rokem

      @@Amazingfilms148 hyper cope. because plenty of african royals both tribes and monarchies have practiced inbreeding. haha
      not a man of history it seems ;P
      also 6/10 bw claim to be m0l3sted by a blk male relative.

    • @iammadeoutofstarstuff957
      @iammadeoutofstarstuff957 Před 3 dny

      ​@@--Traveler--what in the actual fuck

  • @vields2352
    @vields2352 Před rokem +16

    Records say she was not a great beauty but still attractive and her personality made her more so. I don’t think powerful men like Caesar and Mark Anthony who had their pick of women would have fallen under her spell if she had been deformed in some way.

    • @elipotter369
      @elipotter369 Před rokem +2

      She resembles Sophia Loren, who is super beautiful.

    • @senerzen
      @senerzen Před rokem

      They weren't dating her because she was beautiful. They were dating her to better control Egypt, despite her ugliness. Real life isn't a Hollywood movie.

  • @bethy4212
    @bethy4212 Před 2 lety +536

    They certainly weren't very creative at naming their kids, huh?

    • @emanuel-vw8rg
      @emanuel-vw8rg Před 2 lety +28

      Just like Georgian royalty naming almost all their daughter's maria something

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

    • @tangyjoe4326
      @tangyjoe4326 Před 2 lety +13

      @@emanuel-vw8rg Or George Forman naming all his five sons George!

    • @roddo1955
      @roddo1955 Před 2 lety +3

      Your name is Beth....😉

    • @bethy4212
      @bethy4212 Před 2 lety +6

      @@roddo1955 Technically it's a nick name. But, sure.

  • @scz1770
    @scz1770 Před 2 lety +810

    I think this whole debate ignores the fact that pharaohs had concubines. The only time it's mentioned is when it's said that it's possible Ptolemy XII's mother wasn't actually Cleopatra IV but was possibly a concubine. It's not acknowledged that even if a child was born of a concubine, their official mother was the First Wife on record, which is what we pull our history from. I think this occasional genetic influx from outside the gene pool is what kept them somewhat fertile over the years instead of solely producing sterile children or stillbirths.

    • @kaamn1829
      @kaamn1829 Před 2 lety +5

      what do you mean by first wife on record?

    • @eep_eep
      @eep_eep Před 2 lety +36

      @@kaamn1829 lots of wives man

    • @IrisRiedel6
      @IrisRiedel6 Před 2 lety +106

      @@kaamn1829 it means officially, it was written that these kids belonged to the first wife. Even though the pharaoh's concubines gave birth to them.

    • @susie9893
      @susie9893 Před 2 lety +91

      Good point. AND the most logical argument imo.
      Given all these political marriages they probably had the same view of marriage that so many aristocrats have had through the ages - that you marry for gain then can sleep with whoever you want

    • @augustusfreeman4032
      @augustusfreeman4032 Před 2 lety +27

      @@susie9893 DNA Tracing has shown that this was actually extremely rare, lol, women back in the ancient times were loyal! At least when it's time to have children to be honest.

  • @mikrophone8499
    @mikrophone8499 Před rokem +5

    "We Kangz, we saw, we looted"
    - Julius Tyrone and shieet

  • @oldharpydisguised709
    @oldharpydisguised709 Před rokem +10

    Well inbred or not Cleopatra was both extremely bright and said to be very charming. She was very well educated by male standards, being a polyglot as well as a known mathematician. It probably also helped that she was Queen of the bread basket of the world at that time.

  • @Shiresgammai
    @Shiresgammai Před rokem +7

    The Berlin Cleopatra is - like most ancient busts - an idealized depiction of Cleopatra. Look at statues of Gaius Iulius Caesar and Octavian/Augustus: Caesar didn't have the physique of a teenager at fifty and Augustus didn't have the body of a body builder with a sixpack. Same goes btw for Egyptian portrayals of Pharaohs, those depictions were also idealized, one notable exception though are statues by Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV) which depict him with a beer belly and a postural defect.

  • @chriswald7700
    @chriswald7700 Před 2 lety +320

    It seems like ancient statues flattered the depicted ones and coins showed them unattractive. The truth lies probably in between: You can have prominent features and also be attractive. Cleopatra had so many enemies amongst the Romans that they would have held her bad looks against her if she really had them, but... they did not. However, Plutarch wrote: ""For her beauty, as we are told, was in itself not altogether incomparable, nor such as to strike those who saw her; but converse with her had an irresistible charm, and her presence, combined with the persuasiveness of her discourse and the character which was somehow diffused about her behaviour towards others, had something stimulating about it. There was sweetness also in the tones of her voice; and her tongue, like an instrument of many strings, she could readily turn to whatever language she pleased..." So her appeal my have been a combination of "average attractiveness", education, wit, intelligence, charme, make-up, power and sexual aggressiveness.

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️…

    • @kerrimccauley1245
      @kerrimccauley1245 Před 2 lety +11

      That would make sense

    • @Sunflower-lv9iu
      @Sunflower-lv9iu Před rokem +7

      Yes I think that was it. She most likely had the “it” factor. In Mexico we have a word called Guapa, GUAPA is a woman who is attractive eventho she is not typically pretty. They know how to make themselves look attractive by the way they dress, speak, carry themselves with confidence, they usually have good hair & know how to style it, they work on their bodies & r skilled at makeup, perfume etc. Cleopatra considered herself a goddess so she dressed in a very beautiful and dramatic way, she adorned herself in gold and showed off her body. She made people believe she was more than just a mortal woman.
      She also made everything around her beautiful & pleasurable- she transported people into a different world when they were with her- the best food, music, incense, soft rugs, pillows, dancers etc. she made her men feel special, like gods on earth & she was most likely very talented at sex. I think her sexual talents r a huge factor, especially if women in Rome were too religious & uptight at that time. In plain words Cesar & Marc Anthony were 😻 wooped! And she had youth, she was 22 when Cesar was around 50. That combination mixed with her intelligence was surely mesmerizing.

    • @aliciadelsordo5511
      @aliciadelsordo5511 Před rokem +3

      @@Sunflower-lv9iu really? Guapa in Spain means literally pretty!!

    • @Sunflower-lv9iu
      @Sunflower-lv9iu Před rokem +4

      @@aliciadelsordo5511 yes, pretty is Bonita. Bonita is someone naturally pretty, beautiful features. Guapa can be pretty too I guess, but it means attractive more, if that makes sense. 😆

  • @laken1804
    @laken1804 Před 2 lety +201

    They were a bunch of psychopaths. Marrying and killing each other.

    • @ladyville3
      @ladyville3 Před 2 lety +3

      Why would they think of it in that way? Like talking to a caveman about iPods.

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

    • @thegamingda7404
      @thegamingda7404 Před 2 lety +2

      The English royal family still practice this incest stuff ,just need to look at them to see

    • @Catalyna
      @Catalyna Před 2 lety +3

      @@ladyville3 Yup especially since in those days that's what they had to do to survive, nobody wanted to live in exile especially when they could live with everything pampered and lots of power not just political power either.
      They were born into these powerful families and were raised by their parents to hold onto this power anyway they could they were also revered as closet human beings to god and gods,
      even kings and queens in the royal english french spanish etc families they say kings(and therfor queens once king passed) are anointed by god, even if it was not true and they were picked by their marriages,bloodlines, and relatives/governments of power.
      Because of what they believed and were told that thy were chosen by god they believed they could get away with things like killing each other and they could once they held onto power to make it go away, similar to how many rich people get away from long punishment sentences and even convictions alone just by the sheer amount of money they have which can buy them connections bribes and legal teams that none other without their money can do

    • @Sevren_
      @Sevren_ Před 2 lety

      Morality is is very fluid. So I wouldn’t call them psychos

  • @TheStevenChannel
    @TheStevenChannel Před rokem +6

    She was Greek . LOVE HER

  • @evil_seagull
    @evil_seagull Před rokem +23

    Without a doubt, this is the most accurate depiction of Cleopatra to date.

    • @Facade953
      @Facade953 Před rokem

      And she wasn't black like WOKEflix's " historical documentary " claims! I REALLY hope the Egyptian government wins that 2 billion dollar lawsuit! We Greeks should have sued them as well!

  • @christinetitus6388
    @christinetitus6388 Před 2 lety +845

    Wow 😯 what a mess! I knew Cleopatra married her brother but I really did not know anything about the rest of the family. Yikes 😬. You had me 😂 when you said Cleopatra might have been thought of as a beauty because her deformities may have been better when compared to others. Thank you for a great job covering this.

    • @venanziocalise946
      @venanziocalise946 Před 2 lety +38

      Beauty properganda after her death, brains diplomacy intelligence and battle strategy and architecture building designs were her talents.

    • @pliny8308
      @pliny8308 Před 2 lety +24

      I don't think that's it. She went to Rome, and the Romans detested her and called her all kinds of names. Had she been deformed they would have said so. I think it may be a situation like that of the Hawaiian royal family. They too practiced brother/sister marriage and uncle/niece marriage. The defective offspring were thrown into the volcanoes as offerings to the gods. Only the ones who looked normal were kept. Bad dog breeders do the same, to be able to sell the puppies. Of course, some defects can't be seen, bad hips being a prime example

    • @ataventurine7515
      @ataventurine7515 Před 2 lety +2

      @@pliny8308 are you serious? The Egyptians don’t have volcanoes.

    • @dukey19941
      @dukey19941 Před 2 lety +18

      @@ataventurine7515 Pliny 830 was talking about Hawaii with regards to volcanoes.

    • @pearltoomer6392
      @pearltoomer6392 Před 2 lety +5

      @@ataventurine7515 Hawaiian royal family.

  • @kael6720
    @kael6720 Před 2 lety +622

    What's interesting is that in the ancient Egyptian perspective, marrying a sister/brother wasn't all that absurd, particularly for the pharaohs. The gods often married siblings (Shu+Tefnut, Geb+Nut, Osiris+Isis, Osiris+Nephthys, Nephthys+Set), and the royal line were supposed to be genetic descendants and/or reincarnations of the gods.
    So all that inbreeding is just business as usual...

    • @susie9893
      @susie9893 Před 2 lety +67

      Yup, you can justify any behaviour (including incest) if you say your gods do it

    • @maykemabulkul4896
      @maykemabulkul4896 Před 2 lety

      I think it actually worked the other way round
      As in, egyptian royalties wanted to inbreed and then fabricated the legends of how their gods practiced incest as well as defense mechanism.

    • @runicspyder
      @runicspyder Před rokem +38

      Incest in Mythologies isnt that uncommon! Hell the Greek Gods did it too XDDD

    • @jensenhealey08
      @jensenhealey08 Před rokem +22

      @@runicspyder In the bible too. Lot and his daughters.

    • @runicspyder
      @runicspyder Před rokem

      @@jensenhealey08 yep. He was raped by his daughters and he offered em up to be raped by sodom.

  • @bakchang
    @bakchang Před rokem +3

    So this came out about a year ago (or more than a year) before the Netflix Cleopatra African Queen vs Macedonian descent claims.... "Cleopatra was a strong willed, a fighting queen, she represents".... Gosh.

  • @EdgarAllanGo
    @EdgarAllanGo Před rokem +5

    This was brilliantly explained and visualized

  • @SK22520
    @SK22520 Před 2 lety +62

    The killing off everybody and then marrying each others sisters brothers cousins daughters fathers whatever is just insane.

  • @janicem9225
    @janicem9225 Před 2 lety +514

    Well.
    You have to remember....
    In Egypt, they used tons of makeup, including thick eyeliner, dark red lip color, dark, tightly curled or woven wigs, lots of beautiful jewelry, etc., so with enough makeup, she could have passed for pretty, or even somewhat attractive.
    Some of the writings from the time, called her beautiful and charming.

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

    • @DarkAquaVII
      @DarkAquaVII Před 2 lety +6

      That is very true. I agree!

    • @TheMehrkornbroetchen
      @TheMehrkornbroetchen Před 2 lety +22

      But there’s no way the make up was as good as what we are using today
      I mean it must have looked very mask like

    • @samSamSam11918
      @samSamSam11918 Před 2 lety +1

      He'd know lmao. I think he discussed why she would be considered pretty at that time in the beginning itself.

    • @moononthewindynight27
      @moononthewindynight27 Před 2 lety +39

      I don't know why is it so hard to accept that those types of facial traits were just considered pretty at the time. People's general taste changes over time (I mean just compare the 90s and now!)

  • @HepCatJack
    @HepCatJack Před rokem +37

    There was a contemporary painting of her made after she committed suicide commissioned by Octavian. The artist was the same one that done a painting of Cleopatra with Mark Anthony when they were alive. The painting commissioned by Octavian was destroyed in WWI but descriptions of it survive. She had red hair.

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA Před rokem +4

      There is also Herculaneum portrait that survived having auburn or reddish hair... that would make her pale too, as that's how redheads work. This ALSO doesn't mean she was 100% European either, as Middle Eastern and North African people can have red hair, it's just more rare than, say, in Scotland... when it comes with ancient dynasties, take their family trees with a huge grain of salt. It's unknown who was Cleo's mother and her paternal grandma was likely from Syria. But we don't have the bloodlines of mistresses and every random pharaohs lover.

    • @k.c.r.5974
      @k.c.r.5974 Před rokem +4

      "We wuz kangs too" - some ginger freak

    • @RainyCityVibe
      @RainyCityVibe Před 11 měsíci +2

      This is untrue. There are no records of there ever being any paintings done of Cleopatra while she lived, the oldest known painting is the Herculaneum portrait that was made decades after her death.
      After Augustus ascended to Princeps, he spent a lot of time trying (futilely) to erase Antony from Roman history. It's unlikely he would have wasted effort commissioning work by Antony's similarly traitorous lover (regardless of the history she had with Caesar). Especially unlikely considering her parading of Cessarion.
      Furthermore, photography existed well before WW1. If such a painting had been destroyed by this time, it's likely there'd be photographic evidence of it.

    • @Maesterful
      @Maesterful Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@RainyCityVibe Surely she would have had paintings of her done in Egypt though?

  • @KitsuyuutsuR
    @KitsuyuutsuR Před rokem +18

    Remember all this when you decide on a Cleopatra costume for Halloween… If you aren’t so inbred that your mom’s your sister and your dad’s your uncle, you can’t pull it off 😂

  • @ShinyStarfire
    @ShinyStarfire Před 2 lety +77

    When your family tree is only the trunk of a tree.

  • @jordyn.24
    @jordyn.24 Před 2 lety +34

    “Once her uncle-husband died” LMAO

  • @mikejames8031
    @mikejames8031 Před rokem +7

    Cleopatra may have been inbred but she was attractive during the time. People talked about her even today. Her beauty was legendary....that could not been made up!!!

    • @Lavender1775
      @Lavender1775 Před 6 měsíci

      Babes...legend is different from reality and looking a the logistics of her bloodline and family tree, it leans more to her being abnormal looking due to all the inbreeding. Look at current long term inbreeding cases in our modern world and you will see how the children come out looking. I’m surprised Cleopatra was capable of even walking properly or breathing cause most often have internal defects as well.

  • @NgaBalkan
    @NgaBalkan Před rokem +11

    No you’re all wrong. Netflix say she is black now 😂

  • @alessiodecarolis
    @alessiodecarolis Před 2 lety +508

    This is simply monstrous, how was possible that no one tought of these unions as insane (at the best!).
    After all there was a reason for all these pharao's dynasties, they were so inbreeded that in few generations went extinct...and then another one repeated the cycle

    • @zenkiea9663
      @zenkiea9663 Před 2 lety +8

      Could not agree with you more!

    • @tallgrasslanestitches6635
      @tallgrasslanestitches6635 Před 2 lety +125

      I think it had to do with the idea that pharaohs were gods, and therefore couldn’t marry regular people. And there was no way to understand genetics as it is now understood. I also wonder if any physical characteristics and/or disabilities that we now to be signs of incest would never have been pointed out as negative or problematic simply because no one dared insinuate there was anything wrong with them.

    • @mkuti-childress3625
      @mkuti-childress3625 Před 2 lety +30

      They would have known that inbreeding caused horrible problems in animals, so it wouldn’t have been from a lack of information.
      However, if they were anything like the European royal family, also inbred (though not to this horrifying degree), they believed that they were different from commoners, as God made them “special,” and set them apart to rule. They probably assumed that God would also protect them from any negative results that might happen if they had “only” been commoners.
      It’s just so creepy!!

    • @Jaheartsjonas
      @Jaheartsjonas Před 2 lety +9

      I think around that time or years before the Hebrews were one of the few in that surrounding Mediterranean area to teach against incest and other harmful practices, hence why up to today why people believe the ten commandments and the other laws they were given are truly from God

    • @iamjustsaying4787
      @iamjustsaying4787 Před 2 lety +42

      @ Alessio De Carolis it is unfair to judge these ancients by modern knowledge and ethics. There is no doubt that if the tolls were reversed they would be horrified at our lack of understanding in engineering and our societal norms.

  • @rachel_sj
    @rachel_sj Před 2 lety +158

    Calling the Ptolemy family tree Spaghetti is a bit too generous, it looks more like a Pancake

  • @originalquizmoe
    @originalquizmoe Před rokem

    Thank you very much for putting this video together. It is excellent.

  • @psychedelicmusings
    @psychedelicmusings Před rokem +4

    this is why i dont really understand why people are so obsessed with her.

  • @GoldLove21
    @GoldLove21 Před 2 lety +234

    I got a headache trying to rember all that, sir you have my respect for memorizing that treacherous grapevine of a family lineage👏

    • @MortalFaces
      @MortalFaces  Před 2 lety +19

      Thank you

    • @pash9956
      @pash9956 Před 2 lety +8

      Like a rootbound plant that circles and circles around the pot.

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

    • @Areyousayingidontknowmyname
      @Areyousayingidontknowmyname Před 2 lety +5

      LOL not a grapevine its a string with nothing coming from it at all.

    • @golden8972
      @golden8972 Před 2 lety

      No joke, right?!

  • @elizabethshaw734
    @elizabethshaw734 Před 2 lety +385

    Usually coins and things are an idealized version of the person. So according to her coin she looks worse than the coin and the coin looks pretty bad!

    • @VideoDotGoogleDotCom
      @VideoDotGoogleDotCom Před 2 lety +25

      Let's see your coin!

    • @chicosmommy498
      @chicosmommy498 Před 2 lety +13

      @@annewilson9301 and they got Charles 🤢

    • @asiakat7700
      @asiakat7700 Před 2 lety +1

      Ur jelly,she was gorgeous,like Camila cabello

    • @asiakat7700
      @asiakat7700 Před 2 lety

      Jelly 😂 she was a natural beauty

    • @jamiemohan2049
      @jamiemohan2049 Před 2 lety +18

      They masculanised her face on purpose. She could have been pretty. But didn't have her artists make her that way

  • @blymperopoulou5410
    @blymperopoulou5410 Před rokem +7

    And there are still people claiming she is not Greek 😂 the girl was Greek through and through they all married their siblings 😅

  • @graciel3725
    @graciel3725 Před rokem

    Kudos to you for keeping all those Cleopatras straight!! Wow!

  • @arissa3959
    @arissa3959 Před 2 lety +71

    Damn that was so complicated. So much drama and literal back-stabbing in that family

    • @lohaye3260
      @lohaye3260 Před 2 lety +4

      And you think that your family is bad 😐

    • @saranya1111_
      @saranya1111_ Před 2 lety

      @@lohaye3260 Man 😂😂😂

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️…

  • @mysryuza
    @mysryuza Před rokem +228

    The fact that media that I grew up with didn’t specify how screwed up Cleo’s family tree is and how I somehow never knew she had ancestors she was named after is crazy

    • @stephaniefogelvik4756
      @stephaniefogelvik4756 Před rokem +6

      This is why it's important to read books.

    • @LiterallyAllNamesAreTaken
      @LiterallyAllNamesAreTaken Před rokem +17

      @@stephaniefogelvik4756 or schools should just include information like this (when teaching ancient egypt) because it’s interesting. although please tell me the name of a book that talks about this stuff? 😅 mhm yea.

  • @claireviennaguide8576

    How insane ! Thank you for this amazing job :) so interesting !

  • @Marc-ty1iq
    @Marc-ty1iq Před rokem +10

    Was Cleopatra racially african, european, or asian? Nah man, she was 100% alabama.

  • @The10mmcure
    @The10mmcure Před 2 lety +45

    There's a crazy broad that calls in to George Noory every so often talking about how she was Cleopatra in a past life and knows everything Cleopatra knew. I just want one caller or guest to ask her "which Cleopatra were you"? That would be a priceless meltdown to behold.

    • @RC.-
      @RC.- Před 2 lety +21

      Or ask her “Do you remember marrying your brother?” 😂

    • @babywah3290
      @babywah3290 Před rokem

      I think Art Bell might’ve asked that if he had the patience not to hang up on her😂

  • @leylalienhart9799
    @leylalienhart9799 Před rokem +33

    I guess the question “I wonder if the baby will look more like the mothers or more like the fathers side” was a question never asked nor needed in THAT family 🤣🤣🤣

  • @stembysaketh7656
    @stembysaketh7656 Před rokem +11

    Can you do Akhenaten next? I love your videos! I am a 13 year old very interested in Egyptology, and your videos help me learn a lot!

  • @beastshawnee
    @beastshawnee Před rokem

    Thank goodness you were X ing out people as we went! This is definitely the most clear understanding I have had of this historical mess.

  • @fatnsassy99
    @fatnsassy99 Před rokem +10

    Only a face a mother could love. In her case, a brother

  • @elizabethshaw734
    @elizabethshaw734 Před 2 lety +28

    They were scared to death of losing the throne so they married children and cousins and whatnot.

  • @peyote.
    @peyote. Před rokem +3

    I never been into history but this is history worth knowing!

  • @mistypuffs
    @mistypuffs Před rokem

    Omg i subscribed so fast when I saw this channel.
    So interesting.
    Binge watch ^^

  • @VideoSaySo
    @VideoSaySo Před 2 lety +342

    Paganini...I want to see a full body recreation of Paganini. I asked about it in another video but they only did the bust. I have a grim curiosity to see how his unusually long bones and unique physical appearance would come out! Contemporaries wrote about how he was strange looking...they even thought he was demon possessed! Show us what he really looked like, pretty please? =))

    • @nisaba5752
      @nisaba5752 Před 2 lety +20

      I don't know much about him, but when you say "long boned" I'm wondering if he had Marfan Syndrome? People with Marfan Syndrome often have unusual facial features, so that would be interesting to see his likeness.

    • @VideoSaySo
      @VideoSaySo Před 2 lety +9

      @@nisaba5752 Exactly! I couldn't remember Marfans...so my big fancy thesaurus helped me to pick out something easier lol!

    • @patriciarose9532
      @patriciarose9532 Před 2 lety +9

      @@VideoSaySo like Lincoln?

    • @VideoSaySo
      @VideoSaySo Před 2 lety +4

      @@patriciarose9532 Very much so!

    • @spiritmatter1553
      @spiritmatter1553 Před 2 lety +11

      @@nisaba5752 You took the words from my mouth! I read the words "long bones," my mind leaps to "Marfan's syndrome"!

  • @elforeigner3260
    @elforeigner3260 Před 2 lety +43

    Things haven’t changed that much in those lands. From Morocco to Pakistan they still marry their cousins over and over again, to keep their belongings and lands in “family” hands. Remember most marriages are arranged by the parents and it looks more like a comercial transaction

    • @maepicnic2460
      @maepicnic2460 Před 2 lety

      Sometimes cousins look nothing alike? Depends right…Hopefully if luck would have it.

    • @stealthwarrior5768
      @stealthwarrior5768 Před rokem

      I think that is just a prejudiced stereotype your trying to perpetuate. I'm fairly sure it is not illegal to have a sexual relationship with your sibling in the U.S.A

    • @goddesst
      @goddesst Před rokem

      @@stealthwarrior5768 it is illegal in most states, there's laws against incest. Also, thats not just a stereotype in Pakistan, it's a way of life and i know first hand it is. My mom became friends with a guy from there who was forced to marry his 16 year old cousin, they had babies and everything.

  • @loriflynn78
    @loriflynn78 Před rokem +1

    Love your channel ❤

  • @CITADEL5
    @CITADEL5 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Excellent video! Clearly describes Cleopatra VII's very muddled family tree. Concise and well presented!
    One issue I would hesitate to accept is you generated an image of Cleopatra VII that appears physically deformed. I believe this is unlikely.
    The Berlin bust you display of her was done while she was alive and living at Rome and although it does not show a raving beauty by any means there is no physical signs of deformity visible. You mentioned the nose and the chin. Being Greek myself I can tell you those are very standard Greek features. I have a cousin who could have passed for her sister at the same age. Further she was not well loved by Caesar's enemies at Rome who would have been eager to mention any "flaws" that Cleopatra displayed. There is no mention of this in Roman writings of the time. This would suggest that whatever issues Cleopatra VII had do to her incredibly inbred family tree they do not seem to have manifested themselves in visible deformity although I see it as very likely she and her siblings had plenty.

  • @Lutomoria
    @Lutomoria Před rokem +108

    I feel like nicknames would have been used heavily in this family, considering every male is named Ptolemy and all the girls are Bernice, Arsinoe, or Cleopatra.

    • @darnellgrape-drinker4916
      @darnellgrape-drinker4916 Před rokem +6

      There were; Ptolemy Soter (Savior), Ptolemy Philadelphos (Brother Loving), Ptolemy Ceraunos (Lightning Bolt), etc...

    • @happyyuk
      @happyyuk Před rokem +6

      Or maybe that's why they liked to kill of each other so they would be the only one remaining Ptelomy/ Cleopatra in the generation lol

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA Před rokem +2

      Yes, the one everyone knows is Cleopatra VIIth Philopator.

    • @johnnyhammer
      @johnnyhammer Před rokem

      Egyptian Goodfellas wedding scene.

  • @LadyCoyKoi
    @LadyCoyKoi Před 2 lety +163

    Unlike Charles II, Cleopatra still managed to bump and grin with Roman generals and have children with them, while also being very intelligent and well knowledge in military strategy and knew many languages. Charles II wasn't able to speak clearly in his own language muchless speak in that of other languages. Which makes you question does the extra X chromosome protect women from the imbecile side of being inbred-ed? 🤔 I read that the extra X chromosome protected females from various diseases and disorders which plagued males more often. Cleopatra also goes to show that when you have family members who educate and expose you to certain information you manage to pick it up, especially when exposed at a young age, despite learning disabilities and inbreding negative side effects. Charles II of Spain had no luck. He was basically manipulated and isolated since infancy. Had he been taught by patience caring teachers, he too would've learned over 7 different languages and been a great Spanish leader. Properly would've adopted kids from noble families as his own, since he couldn't have his own children, but saved the Habsberg dynasty by adopting nephews, nieces or younger cousins to be his children, avoiding the harsh wars and battles after his death and continued the Habsberg dynasty through adoptions. Unfortunately, his education was piss poor. Cleopatra in that sense was super lucky to have family and tutors who cared for her and that she wanted to learn. That makes a huge difference.

    • @jennyrose9454
      @jennyrose9454 Před 2 lety +30

      Yeah. Also maybe she wasn't a drooling mouth breather.

    • @mangot589
      @mangot589 Před 2 lety +36

      That’s an interesting thought🤔. The Habsburg women did have some jaws, not as severe, but they seemed to have escaped the worst of the problems.

    • @silverstuff182
      @silverstuff182 Před 2 lety +13

      It's not an "extra" X chromosome. One of them comes from Mom and one of them comes from Dad and there are no guarantees either way.

    • @tuathadesidhe1530
      @tuathadesidhe1530 Před 2 lety +12

      Yes the X is protective against many genetic diseases, women often carry them but are not affected physically by them = the Y chromosome is a faulty X.

    • @peachymeechie1844
      @peachymeechie1844 Před 2 lety +19

      I think you might be on to something here, because I had read somewhere that Charles II's sister had a slight Habsburg chin, but other than that wasn't too awfully affected by their inbreeding. By this time I'm pretty sure they were getting close to understanding that the inbreeding was an issue, but still married her off to a family member! So I guess I'm the end they didn't care about anything but keeping the money and power in the family. Idk why, because you don't take it with you when you go, or at least for the Egyptian pharoahs they had some belief in taking their riches with them and needing them in the afterlife. So k guess I could understand from their point of view keeping it in the family, but still their offspring should have been important to them. That's just human nature!

  • @Sophie-sm4tf
    @Sophie-sm4tf Před rokem +9

    This made me remember what a friend told me. She is from Norfolk in the UK. She said to her sister one day ' a bloke at work said that in Norfolk we are all interbred'. To which her sister replied ' don't they eat sandwiches where he comes from'.

  • @heathers432
    @heathers432 Před rokem

    My face the entire time watching this video…….😦😯🤭
    Never has a video captured my full bewildered attention like this one. Bravo!

  • @ailecdreifuss8627
    @ailecdreifuss8627 Před rokem +20

    Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and personality attract much more. She was an incredible leader for her time.

  • @roxyndra
    @roxyndra Před 2 lety +261

    Oh wow that was an incredibly helpful visual - thank you!
    Side note, children often weren’t /actually/ those of siblingspouses, but just passed off as such for like uh, sacred dynastical reasons. Basically, they knew repeated inbreeding was bad, but it was tradition, so the royals found a workaround to appease the people whilst avoiding what would inevitably be death to a line otherwise.

    • @lltbcke
      @lltbcke Před rokem +35

      so probably having harems was a good justification back then. I can't believe how those people survived inbreeding

    • @FrenchViking466
      @FrenchViking466 Před rokem +10

      Spot on.

    • @bernlin2000
      @bernlin2000 Před rokem

      So it's quite possible these family trees are effectively forgeries. Mistresses have been a long tradition of royalty and I wouldn't be the least shocked if many of these marriages had outside genetics brought into the mix. Why it was tradition to in-breed remains a mystery, but surely it's an archaic notion, that obviously lacked any scientific merit. This idea that royal blood was "divine".

    • @teejay8258
      @teejay8258 Před rokem +8

      That makes sense. While listening, I thought it seemed infeasible that the offspring were normal with so much inbreeding!

    • @jamiemohan2049
      @jamiemohan2049 Před rokem

      This is just not true. Incest does NOT guarantee offspring are defermed. The Ptolemies were all lunatics and many members are believed to have suffered from genetic diseases. The Ptolemies were that inbred and many were also totally functional as happens in real life.

  • @NICU2
    @NICU2 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I am half Greek and half Irish. Im named after my greek grandfather who was named after his father who was named after his father and so on going back almost 300 years as far as i could track.

  • @rolturn
    @rolturn Před rokem +1

    The fact that you could say, "half-brother cousin" and keep a straight face is hilarious.

  • @dramallama6811
    @dramallama6811 Před 2 lety +15

    That was a wild ride

  • @quix66hiya22
    @quix66hiya22 Před rokem +2

    I read a book 40 years ago that said she wasn’t beautiful at all.

  • @earthling8585
    @earthling8585 Před rokem

    Wow, thank you. You have explained a lot.

  • @advocacynaccountablity
    @advocacynaccountablity Před 2 lety +227

    Excellently done - thank you for putting this together. It's interesting/horrifying to know the extent with which some families went to ensure their power.

    • @venanziocalise946
      @venanziocalise946 Před 2 lety +8

      Look at royal family of England...Europe.

    • @SixMiracles-uj1zp
      @SixMiracles-uj1zp Před 2 lety +1

      Their blood is different. They are the tares. They get to be royal, rich, famous, etc. in this Second Earth Age. Then it is over for them. (There are three Earth Ages. 2Peter, Ch. 3) They cannot mix with God's own.

    • @janicem9225
      @janicem9225 Před 2 lety

      @@SixMiracles-uj1zp
      Huh?
      I don't think you know what you're talking about in any way. 🤣

    • @currentlyearth8867
      @currentlyearth8867 Před 2 lety

      ❤️❤️❤️czcams.com/video/WkyLI8UIeXg/video.html❤️❤️❤️Humanity❤️❤️❤️

  • @whyology.
    @whyology. Před 2 lety +13

    there’s so many ptolemys and cleopatras, imagine calling one of them and a ton come

  • @RedFlyRuledByTheRiff
    @RedFlyRuledByTheRiff Před rokem +1

    Holy cow! That is insane!😂

  • @amjemison
    @amjemison Před rokem

    Just wow. 😂 good job