What did Cleopatra Look Like? Facial Reconstructions Revealed, with History.
Vložit
- čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
- I'm an artist that uses photoshop to bring old images and statues into the modern day. Let’s talk about Cleopatra, one of the most enigmatic figures of ancient history. She was the first Ptolemaic ruler of Egypt to even speak the Egyptian language, and she routinely outwitted her foes. She seduced two powerful Romans. But what did she look like? What did she do? What ethnicity was Cleopatra? Let’s talk the history & appearance of Cleopatra, now.
Narration & Art: Becca Segovia
Writing, Editing & Music Direction: Andre Segovia
Find me here:
Instagram: @Royalty_Now_
Tik Tok: @RoyaltyNow
Patreon: Patreon.com/RoyaltyNow
RoyaltyNowStudios.com
This video creation and final image are ©Royalty Now.
Motion courtesy of My Colorful Past (MyColorfulPast.com) - Get 10% off his Photo Restoration, Colorization and Motion services when you check out with code ROYALTYNOW.
Sources and Further Reading
www.thoughtco.com/was-cleopat...
www.smithsonianmag.com/histor...
www.britannica.com/story/what...
www.cambridge.org/core/journa...
www.knowledgesnacks.com/artic...
www.knowledgesnacks.com/artic...
www.knowledgesnacks.com/artic...
historum.com/threads/roman-pa...
/ is_it_true_that_a_stat...
0:00 Introduction
0:50 What Do We Know About Cleopatra?
2:03 Historical Sources for her Appearance
4:23 What We Don't Know - Cleo's Ethnic Background
7:08 Her Hair & Eye Color
7:25 Statue Recreation Reveals
7:52 Was Cleopatra a Redhead?
8:22 Redhead Recreation Reveal
8:47 Conclusion - Zábava
So this was clearly ignored by Netflix.
I can’t wait till Netflix make the Hitler documentary with him being black😤
That’s on brand for Netflix
Netflix is a radical leftist streaming service that doesnt care about factual truth or any kinda evidence. Its pure emotional propaganda.
Egypt is sueing them now for changing their history. I do not understanding if there are actual factual things from the time period portraying a historical figure, people can still say it was a different way?
The people that created the statues an coins actually saw the realm person and uses her likeness.
@@gusmacker919 I don't understand your comment. Are you saying that the Cleopatra that lived during the time of Julius Ceasar was mentioned in the bible? Because that is an absolute lie
Finding this after the Netflix issue is so fascinating and i just love the reasoning behind every decision you took when making this. As an Egyptian I thank you for respecting history
I find this to be fascinating. I mean, Cleopatra was FOREIGN ruler. Egypt was subdued and occupied by outsiders. But you guys still defended her and regarded her as integral part of your history. I live in Indonesia and we aren't kind to foreigners who occupied Indonesia. Since we were kids, we were told that the Dutch was very evil and cruel. We were taught how the Dutch sucked out our resources, killed our national heroes with evil tricks, and stuff like that. We don't hate the modern Dutch but we really hate the historic Dutch. IF someone made history movie about Dutch occupying Indonesia and they made the Dutch BLACK, I think the Indonesians would NOT defend the Dutch. Yes it's our history but it's painful history.
the true ancient Egyptians are the people we call Ethiopians today. the so-called fake Egyptians are just arabs slave masters from the white man, stop lying you stole the land call your self Egyptians its disgusting. look at david bowie wife ? shes is the true queen Egyptians. not you nasty slavery arabs who enslave black people. CLEOPATRA! was black not white
I don’t care what scholars or historians say, my grandma told me that Cleopatra was black.
@@rovin9547 hahahahah
No grandmother testimony here😂
The red-haired one looks more natural to me than the brown-haired version. Like it fits her facial features better. I loved the AI animation of her at the end. What an absolute treat to be able to actually SEE what these people may have looked like through the eyes of their contemporaries.
I disagree about her dark-haired versions looking less natural I've seen plenty of women that look very similar and even stunning, I did also prefer the redhead though.
idk as a greek both look natural to me lmao
Maybe it's something in-between?
all her ancestors were from northern Greece. No reason to skip portraying her as possibly blonde.
@@teo2975 yes but her mother has egyptian rutes so she is more of a brown skinned women with blackish brownish hair but possibly black.
I would have loved to actually see what she actually looked like back then. Like take a literal time machine and go back to Ancient Egypt and watch her story play out in front of me like a movie. She’s beautiful in this depiction. Nice video. Thank you! She’s one of my favorite historical figures.
You'd not be allowed anywhere near her. And you certainly wouldn't want to be around her at the end.
@@conservovirtus5796 cleopatra had public ceremonies, and people were for certain allowed to go on them.
@@pendragonsxskywalkers9518 true, but be like meeing a president or famous singer, guards preventing you from getting to close
A 9 minute video that tells more about Cleopatra than a whole Netflix series' reimagining of Cleopatra's life
What's worse is that it's called a documentary.
Buuuuut she blak tho???
@@datadavis can't tell if joke or not. Things go right over my head by text. *Woosh
@@swagmuffin9000 Its a joke, i dont speak ebonics, lol
@@datadavis lol no worries
But... someone's grandma told them that Cleopatra was black and it didn't matter what anyone told them. This is so confusing.
LMAOOO 🤣
omg 😁😁😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂
I am dying of laughter.....ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
And here i thought she was native American because i was told by someone from the looney house 🤷
i got chills with her. she extended the Egyptian empire far beyond its expiration date. she was a brilliant mind...and one of the most famous women in history
If she looked even remotely like what you deduced, I can totally see why men in power were willing to throw it all away for her. Your depictions of her are absolutely amazing...When the very first one showed, I was just like..."WOW!"
I can’t wait for someone to make series portraying Julius Caesar as historically being Zulu.
Don’t wish for things that just might come true. After the Netflix Cleopatra fiasco nothing is safe. Who knows, they might make a “revised” version of Lincoln, Queen Elizabeth, and Santa Claus.
It's actually quite possible, even likely. These freaks from unHollywood and the rest of USA MSM obviously have no shame, no boundaries of their depravity.
Don't laugh, they will. Instead, start campaigning for films about historically black characters, but cast them with clearly non black actors. That'll fix things for a generation.
@@kenjifox4264 Revised Lincoln was already made (whitewashed), Santa Claus is fictional and Queen Elizabeth is known as white
@@mysterionmccormick_ wrong. There are color paintings of cleopatra made when she was alive and none of them ever depict her with any black physical traits. None. The Egyptian government itself has put out an official statement confirming that Cleopatra was definitely light-skinned and not black. Cleopatra was Greek and Greeks are not black.
I'm a Greek living in Greece all my life, and you made her look like someone I could've known. She looks super familiar to me, honestly maybe even too Greek lol. Myself, I have green eyes and light brown hair, and I'm happy you mentioned that not all of us have dark hair and eyes. Thank you for explaining the historical aspects as well, and not just show us the pictures.
Greeks are dark, she looked Macedonian.
@@gocestojanovski3723from the greek region of macedonia right? ;-)
All Greeks have black olive eyers, she is Macedonian
@@evilassjitnem Same, Republic of Macedonia or on your side
Most Greeks have Brown hair, i.e. dark blond. We also have a lot of totally blonde people, but most of them are turning brown in early puberty, for unknown reasons. In Greece, we always had all possible colors in our hair, from ancient times till nowadays.
She certainy wasn’t a sub Saharan African black woman, right Netflix ?
I have seen a lot of reconstructions of Cleo as historians try to reconcile the written descriptions of her with the art that is available. I think yours was probably the best reconstruction I have seen. She feels beautiful and seductive while still resembling the bust.
to me as a Persian, she looks like an average Persian woman. Also I've seen many Egyptians with same features too so it shouldn't have been hard for netflix to choose someone who would represent her perfectly knowing that there are amazing Greek/Egyptian/Persian actresses out there to choose...WHY NETFLIX, WHY?
Yeah my grandpa is Egyptian and he’s really white. America thinks that all africans look the same. While there are brown and white africans
Jada pinket smith made the Netflix film (produced or w/e) and she stated she wanted cleopatra to be a strong black woman. So that’s what she did.
@@ZionistGundam meanwhile in reality, there are Egyptians who are really dark and some with same hair texture as myself today and all throughout Egypt's history. White people live in Africa today of course but not native to Africa or specifically Egypt
@@cjpp78ytube lol, what about North Africa? Berbere people have been there for a long time, and they aren't black.
Africa is a continent with a lot of countries and different people, different colors, facial structures, different cultures, languages and religions.
Africa is not "a big country with only black people".
Sick of black Americans who don't even know their original countries and think Africa is just a big land with black shades.
because the women who made this documentary aren't Greek/Egyptian/Persian
The red-haired version is the most captivating.
same. Considerably more alluring than just standard dark hair.
Totally agree she looked stunning
Can certainly see the attraction.
The one at 4:00 mark is the image made closest to her being alive.
The red headed one is the keeper. :)
Excellent research on Cleopatra. So well done and thorough. She was an amazing woman and your reconstructed appearance of her shows a truly stunning and appealing person. It's no wonder the Roman Ceasars were captivated by her. Thank you for this video.
Now wait just one minute. Jada and Netflix know what they are talking about. They even hired a historian that tells us that when she was a little girl, her mom said to her, "no matter what anyone tells you, Cleopatra was Black" Her MOM said it so what's more definitive than that? C'mon, facts, right?
I'm Asian and waiting with bated breath for when Jada and Netflix show strong African queens from China.
👋🏿Hey. Pretty wacky, right? I only came to this video to see how accurate the information is. Apparently it's simply white pride. Great premise but more attention to the facts should be paid. Thanks for the honesty, it was powerful. You can tell by the low amount of likes (YES!🤸🏿♂️), nowadays it means you're likely correct😂
@@ml_kayAli So "white pride" equates to trying to be as historically accurate with the most reputable information known/gleaned? And what's wrong with literally anyone having pride in their ancestors and where they came from as long as they don't use it to put themselves on a pedestal above others/other races? Boy, you're wacky. *Extreme* Afrocentrism is a very special form of delusion.
I guarantee you, that they'll find a black Chinese queen.
I hate how netflix decided to make cleopatra in their new show, black. They really did not bother to get their facts straight. They really claim that she was black.
Which is strange because they told their woke employees to quit and then turn around and made that SJW propagandistic garbage
@@stephensharper4312Its truly an insult to Greek and African history. It implies that Africans dont have any real history and they have to be white to be valued and it just erases the fascinating true history of Cleopatra
my grandmommy told me she was black so she is black! LALALALALALALALALALA YOU CAN'T CHANGE MY MIND LALALALALALALALALALALALALA I NEVER DEVELOPED AN ADULT BRAIN LALALALALALALALALALA
They could portray Julius Cesar as a Chinese either, because that's what Netflix does.
It’s the new woke mandra
I suggest to unsubscribe
Alexander and Cleopatra having reddish hair is no surprise, as it was/is a common Macedonian trait. I love your final reconstruction, especially the smile at the end!
Greek Macedonians
her face is on a coin she looked noting like this
It wouldn't surprise me.....I mean Ramses II has reddish hair on his own mummy which is insane.
basically Thracians were depicted with red hairs, but it should be normal to have mixed blood in those regions. macedonicans and thracians were neighbors
Also, red hair was seen as barbarian hair to many ancient Greeks too :P I mean earlier classical age
Thanks for going into such detail in a short video clip, I would have assumed that she had dark hair and brown eyes from the Egyptian aspect, but the reddish brown was fascinating and the last example where you brought her to life was totally captivating.
Cleopatra was Macedonian/Greek by ethnicity. She was actually the only one of her family which learn Egyptian language-other Ptolemaic rulers considered locals as beneath them.
Once again you nailed it. Both were not only beautiful, but honestly what I would have pictured!
Spoke several languages is a massive understatement. According to Plutarch, she was fluent in more than 9 languages at a time when other Egyptian leaders could not even be bothered to learn Egyptian.
So, she spoke several languages.
@@drdassler lmao
@@drdassler more like she spoke innumerous languages or a myriad of languages... several languages for me is something like 4 to 6 or 7, give or take. we are splitting hairs.
She probably was fluent in Greek and spoke some bits of a handful of different languages, and because she was noble and the Queen of Egypt, they made "was fluent in more than nine languages" out of it.
*Where did Cleopatra learn the Egyptian language ?*
*Who taught Cleopatra the Egyptian language, given that no one in her paternal family had bothered to learn it after centuries of reign ?*
Women have been coloring their hair with henna for thousands of years, so Cleopatra could have colored her brunette locks red on occasions. I agree with many other viewers that her redheaded depictions are stunning.
henna on black hair doesn't show up as bright red unless it's covering greys, which shine up like new-minted copper wire.
Or maybe her hair was red/auburn it’s quite common in that part of the world. More than you might think. I have been there and seen it for myself
It is quite common for people with mixed European and Asian ancestry to have dark hair in the winter months and for it to get bleached by sunlight in the summer months to a reddish brown.
It could have also been a wig.
@@threenorns3 My hair is dyed with henna and it's red as in her picture, it only looks darker indoors, but it's still overtly red, so it would be described as red, I think. And my natural color is darkest brown. Women also have ways to lighten hair before using henna - back then, even. Just a thought.
Way more faithful to history than Netflix! Great work!
The red head version definitely looks more attractive.
Red-haired Cleopatra stopped my heart. There would be no turning away from her in real life, especially to hear her voice and laugh. I absolutely 100% understand all the hype now. Thank you for making this.
She was inbreed her bloodline is all f up
Made my heart stop too. Probably because it’s true
Η Κλεοπάτρα ήταν Ελληνίδα στην καταγωγή! Οπότε κάλλιστα θα μπορούσε να είναι κοκκινομαλλα
Seriously???
She looked better in black hair
Search Cleopatra inbred on CZcams she did NOT look even remotely good as this video is trying to make her out to be.
Can you please give this info to Jada Pinkett Smith; who have turned Cleopatra black.
Classic Amercian stupidity and arrogance
Cleopatra was indeed a strong, proud, dignified black woman, a Queen indeed, a fact which, because of the racisms, she covered up with white makeup. When Caesar found out, he cried out, "By God I've been humbugged!", ran into the Senate, and stabbed himself 23 times.
@@jgirlLVR I can confirm. I know this guy that had a cousin who knew a girl who's best friend had an uncle that once met Marcus Anthony and he confirmed it.
Why!?
@jgirlLVR Cleopatra is a Greek name and it means Her father's pride. You AfroAmericans go out of your way to culturally appropriate European, and Egyptian culture as if black Africans dont have a culture of their own.
Thank you for this accurate description of what Cleopatra looked like. It is exactly how I imagined her to be.
I learn more in under ten minutes from a CZcamsr that a four hour documentary from Netflix
It make a great deal of sense that Cleopatra was of greek and likely Persian descent. Timely considering the Netflix controversy.
Fabulous presentation as always.
that's the CZcams Algorithm for ya lol
She was black
@@FRAKKKA She was not black man, lol...
@@Telarius yes she was a black transgender man
Controversy? There is no controversy. She is black now. End of discussion. Marc Antony was Asian, and Caesar was Arapaho. End of discussion. Get with the program.
The red haired version just really rings true, fantastic artistry
Fantasy is not reality.
@@bierlichen1 "fantastic artistry" in this context see adjectives: excellent, superb, remarkable, "artistry" in reference to technique, not subject matter.
@@bierlichen1 She is depicted in art contemporary to her life as having reddish hair.
FANTASTIC BULLSHIT!
I agree.
Thanks so much for the work... It was such an emotion to see her statue come to life... I almost cried!! Thanks so much!!
This is really cool! A fascinating history lesson followed by a carefully researched reconstruction. Amazing work!
The transition from the sculpture to her face…. Literally gave me chills and tears in my eyes. It is crazy how much a human-likeness can evoke emotion out of us - and how much it means to empathize with history. thank you for doing this ❤️
Thank you so much! Glad you enjoyed it
I felt the same thing!
I always have doubts about paintings and sculptures regarding their ancient accuracy to the image being portrayed.
However I'm now leaning more towards the idea Cleopatra was genuinely recognized for her beauty as well as her judgment and ruling skills, at least for a time.
And all the new technology, that allows this!!!! 😮😯😲
sure when you all relaxed and safe at home
I think the hair was all wrong.
All I know is when you showed the version with the red hair I got chills. Stunningly beautiful. Both are, but the red haired version would have been unique and would definitely left a lasting impression. Thank you!
I felt the same as you, very strong.
And, usually, what gives me chills, that’s the TRUTH. 😁
Yes and back then women with red hair in that part of the world with dark hair as the majority red hair was thought of as so beautiful. I learned that from the journals of Mohamed favorite wife
She was known to use henna in her hair and henna has natural red tones to it whether the color is dark brown or not, red undertones are always present. So that would absolutely make sense ❤️ what a beauty!
imagine time travelling back and see her, talk with her. it is mind blowing.
@@myspates6 Back then in the Mediterranean people were much fairer than today.
Red hair is even quite common in modern Greece - and our genes are mixed in with Persian, Turkish and Albanian.
I watched this again. So beautiful and so powerful. You do amazing work. Thanks so much...
Thank you for researching and bringing to life such an important character from the past!
The red haired version immediately jumped out at me and was the most captivating. How could one not fall in love
If you're not shallow? You can't just fall in love with a face unless you're a shallow 16 year old boy.
@@butterflymoon6368 Yes, you are not wrong, but think of it this way: she was a woman of power, frequently on display, possessing charms, breeding and grooming in addition to whatever personality glimpses, real or cultivated, were 'slipping out' in addition to that pretty face. Thats a breeding ground for fantasy land crushes of people thinking they 'know her' or just plain lust, especially for someone not immediately impacted by the backlashes of her status. Celebrity crushes of all shapes and sizes are not that uncommon. Frankly I wouldn't be surprised.
She build a fake smile, with a static lower part of eyes...but not to bad.
A little bit sad to work hard on a deep humanity history, and not studying a smile !
@@butterflymoon6368 Hahahahaha, no, 16 year old boys don't fall in love with faces ...
@@palimpalim5291 Yep - all boys and men are all about the face.
For a woman of her time, that redheaded version would've been very captivating. The dark hair was probably wigs that she wore to look more Egyptian like. Your version is the closest thing to authentic that I have seen. Very impressive.
Thank you so much, I appreciate the kind words ❤️
Pharaoh Rameses the Great had red hair. Still has it, since he's a mummy.
It definently was as it has also been proven she wasn't ethnically Egyptian.She was actually Macedonian Greek.
Stunning!
In those times red wigs were more common that dark color wigs.
I like your work. You obviously do a lot of research but are not afraid to make educated guesses, too. It is fun to watch the past come to life. Thank you.
You guys do an excellent job !!!
I think beauty has more than just physical appearance. Intelligence, sophistication, grace, sympathy can play important factors in this game.
No she probably was beautiful as well. Probably no supermodel but probably pretty and that combined with charm can be a powerful mix especially when trying to influence men.
A women of extreme beauty without the charm may struggle to shape the direction men are moving in but a women with a personality and charm can be extremely powerful.
Literally what she said in the video.
Do you judge a flower’s beauty by its physical appearance or its intelligence, sophistication, and grace? A woman’s vagina in many cultures is compared to as a lotus flower.
yeah, sadly, however, most people just discren that from appearance anyway when it comes down to it
Very much so, JFR. And this goes for both men and women, by the way. All of which are deplorably lacking in this day and age. Warmest Wishes. Be Well and Safe. Out.
It could be that both versions are correct. Wealthy women throughout the Antique world would often dye their hair in order to appear fashionable and flaunt their status (as the dyes were expensive and the process was quite laborious, so only someone with ample free time and spare resources could afford it). It is known that ancient Egyptians used henna as a hair dye, which produces a reddish-brown hue, so Cleopatra was no doubt familiar with it.
Also, Roman artwork frequently depicts Venus with auburn hair. Given her personal association with Isis/Venus, Cleopatra might have intentionally dyed her hair during her stay in Rome to further the semblance with the goddess. The fact that Venus was considered the mythical ancestor of the Julii family might have been an additional factor, Cleopatra taking a deliberate effort to appear like Venus in order to further cement her relationship with Julius Caesar. Having a queen as a mistress who furthermore held a striking semblance to his mythical ancestor would have no doubt stroked Caesar's ego greatly, which Cleopatra no doubt would have used to her advantage.
I can actually see her doing that to look more like Venus, being the smart woman she was.
Your reply was very interesting. Thank you for all those facts about Cleopatra and the hair dye. Of course, henna was very popular in Egypt (still is), and Cleo would have wanted herself to look more like Venus. Well written!
I mean, maybe. Cleopatra also came from a Macedonian royal line stretching back to Ptolemy I Soter, a minor aristocrat from Macedon in northern Greece, where the nobility and royalty constantly intermarried with Thracians and Illyrians in marriage alliances. The Thracians were consistently noted as redheads in both art and literature.
@@LaryAk47 that would be pretty incredible, its a nice theory
@@ericconnor8251 That's a good point. A lot of royals had red hair. I would think it would be difficult to dye your hair red if it is naturally dark, without bleaching it. I have medium brown hair and using red henna gives it a slight reddish hue, but from far away it just looks brown. Her frescoes were light brownish red, so likely her hair was light brown or red.
So fascinating. I always thought she had dark hair but I'm not so sure now. Your reconstructions of both in dark and red hair are beautiful and either one could be her.
Woah I've been following you on Instagram and only just realized you have a CZcams channel where you go into more detail. Insane!
Curly hair picture looks *EXACTLY* like *Deanna* *Troi* from Star Trek! *ALSO* the actress Marina Sirtis is *Greek!* So she’s actually a very good example of what Cleopatra could look like!
You nailed it. Especially after watching season three of Picard, Deanna Troy fits exactly the description of Cleopatra. Her beauty was truly in her presence, not 100% in her looks.
Omg so true! Someone like Deanna would be perfect for Cleo. No wonder everyone would say she was alluring.
Well spotted 👍shame Netflix isn't so observant 🤔
OH Thank you...I thought there was something familiar about her.....
I was just about to comment this. You beat me to it. Curly haired Cleo looks just like Deanna from TNG.
It is very common for women in the Mediterranean to use henna to make their hair red. So whether Cleopatra was a natural redhead or not, she probably used henna.
Native Egyptians certainly used henna to that effect, but the Greeks had a variety of hair colors. Like most other Europeans, dark brown and light brown hair were majority phenotypes, but a minority did have blonde and red hair. Macedon in northern Greece was also right next to Thrace. Thracians were noted as redheads in art & literature.
maybe she made herself auburn if her hair was already dark
But many middle easternes have redhair and blue eyes too. Even now.
@@dinil5566 Yeah, and we're talking about a Greek woman, Cleopatra VII, whose ancestors came from northern Greece close to Thrace, a land filled with Thracians who were universally depicted in art and literature as a bunch of redheads. Even art from Macedon like mosaics depict various people with red hair and for that matter the name "Pyrrhus" (like the famous Pyrrhus of Epirus) means "flame haired" in Greek. To this day there are a minority of light haired people in mainland Greece, mostly in the the north, far less so in the south and almost none in Aegean islands like Crete (although some Cretans are blondish brunets).
That's true. Good thought👏👏👏
Another beautiful depiction of a historical figure and a fascinating history lesson. Thank you.
Oh wow, the red headed one really popped out to me for some reasons. Anyway amazing work and amazing video, keep it up!
One of the things that I like about Cleopatra's story, is that she was considered breath taking and beautiful, even though she didn't look perfect. I wish we could be less perfectionistic nowadays and see the beauty and charm in people, without constantly feeling pressured to look like only one specific way.
Cleopatra VII IS gorgeous, but its important to remember that she is highly intelligent, highly ambitious and determined. Her beauty and grace are extra bonuses
we do my friend... we do... nearly none of us men loves perfection... we are searching for some trademarks like freckles, non-symetric face, bigger eye brows or thin, a little scar that looks cute, beauty-marks (tell called beauty marks because normaly u would say: a black point on your face isnt nice but it was because its something different and only few woman had those), etc etc etc. most men and woman dont search for perfection.
I like how the running joke in Asterix & Obelix was showing her having a big nose and always have men infatuated with it. This isn't about imperfections but about ridiculous standards of beauty that kinda try to tell Middle Eastern women to get rhinoplasty to look whiter as that is supposed to be more attractive.
this
@BraisedRotisserie I think that it was most likely the beauty standard from those days. Overtime our perception of beauty has change.
" Her intelligence was off the charts", even with all of the inbreeding in her own family line, what you said here is the main reason why she has a lasting legacy. It doesn't really actually matter what you look like when you captivate people's minds and hearts it truly stands the test of time.
So true. I know I find nothing more attractive than an intelligent woman I can talk science with. Adds +6 to their attractiveness for me... if not more.
beautifully put...made my heart smile...
Cleopatras grandmother was a concubine, no inbreeding there which is probably why Cleopatra was beautiful.
Another famous tragic royal figure, Empress Elisabeth "Sisi" of Austria was also very smart, yet she had some real issues due to the inbreeding. One does not exclude the other.
In fact, she spent a lot of time in her mansion on Corfu, called "Achilleon", developed a love for the Greek people, financed some essential infrastructure projects on the island hence is being held with very high regard up to this day. She also spoke the Greek language very well and did the first translations of some of the most important European classic literature into Greek herself.
@@chrystale888 Inbreeding makes you get birth defects, it does not make you ugly.
I watched this when you first published it, and I have a great long term, early childhood memory, but a lousy short term memory, so I am now enjoying this masterpiece all over again!
All Netflix had to do was study on CZcams like everybody else
Thank you for acknowledging her intelligence, so many people discuss her as an airheaded minx. She was a genius.
genius though? How do you come to that conclusion?
@@jaykarhunen6568 fluently speaking ten languages, for a start
@@aubreyackermann8432 And a marketing genius. She understood how to create an aura around herself, and to shock and surprise.
I've never heard her described as anything but intelligent. She was practically the only woman of that time that was allowed to be educated like a man. I've only ever seen her described and perhaps slightly above average in looks, but it was her intelligence that made her beautiful and captivating. The first female largely, that powerful men looked to as an equal. Don't make her a pitiable thing, I've never ever heard anyone ever say she was an airhead.
@@jaykarhunen6568 Well Jay, besides speaking several languages, she must have also been a very astute politician, having managed to enchant the two most powerful persons of that time, Caesar and Marc Anthony ! History would have turned out completely different had she not been around - or not been as intelligent as she must have been !
Wow, there's more historical facts and more to learn about the real Cleopatra in this 9 minute video then the whole series on Netflix. The integrity you have finding the facts and bringing alive several possibilities is beyond commendable.
yeah, well, I can't wait until someone comes up with the likeness of God!
@@mhmitzee God is probably: 👽
@@ourdivinemouseoverlord3308 : Probably made up!
@@mhmitzee or Jesus
@@REAL6 : is there physical proof Jesus existed?
Nice to see your work go viral on twitter! I appreciate your evidence-based research and hypotheses - to the extent such evidence exists. That red-headed "recreation" is a stunning image of a woman, regardless of ethnic background. Undoubtedly, inasmuch as virtually everyone on the planet still knows her name over two-thousand years later, she must have been an extraordinary human being.
Another portrait beautifully done, you captured the intelligence in her eyes. I feel like i can finally put a face to the story and name Cleopatra.❤
Giving her red or auburn hair just magnified her beauty x1000. Looking like that explains how she could withstand the test of time. I am in love with your talent! Excellent work on this one.
yeah the second red hair version (the less defined eyelashes) is the most natural and prettiest IMO
The Netflix documentary taught me that a historical figure can be any race. I believe Martin Luther King was actually Asian and Hitler was black.
Lol nice joke but I not the case😂
Hitler was Mexican, a black man never would have been that powerful. (And yes I'm a black woman. Not sorry)
Hitler was also a woman and MLK was an attack helicopter
Mussolini was a moose
I always thought Hitler was a Palestine freedom fighter opposing the Israeli suppression 😜
Wow so much history and so much more facts of how Cleopatra was thank you i am so glad and grateful for your short movie on her as well.👉👈💯👍✌️✊👊👌🤝
the image with the reddish brown hair, looks most flattering, i think.
I love the red headed version. It's like a breathtaking fire and she's looks beautiful.
Wasn't expecting it to be animated, that caught me off guard 😅
Seeing as how Hollywood keep erasing and replacing red heads with black people. It's funny to see Cleopatra could also be red head, and now they try to erase and replace her as well.
I personally think the dark haired version is the truth. Very beautiful regardless
Henna is a dye derived from the leaves of the primordial henna plant that grows in warm climates. While there is some conjecture regarding when it first came into popular use, the recorded history of henna points to ancient Egypt.
They dyed hair back then. 'Red hair greek' theory is absurd. You people want to believe there was this mysterious race that no longer exists when, in fact, modern people are a mirror to all the conquerors and original inhabitants that once existed. Red hair is almost nonexistent in modern Greece, if only by Western European migration. The Romans described the Celts, distinguishing their unique red hair. If that was commonplace in Greece, which was closer to the near east and interacted and mixed with the eastern civilizations, then it would be commonplace in Rome, which was more western.
@@maaz322Greece is more common then you think.
As the daughter of a Greek mother, the eyes you gave Cleopatra are breathtaking AND represent Mediterranean eyes. It's usually their best physical feature. Many also have a high degree of intelligence as well.
Hahaha, high intelligence A? The Greeks got everything they know from Africa. Y'all still pushing this BS?
The eye-colour is surely wrong. The macedonians were pure indoeuropeans like Alexander himself. We find also explanations about the process of racemixing in Aristotles "politics". But at the time of Alexander the macedonians self were in every case a absolute pure tribe. What you called "Mediterranean eyes" are the eyes of mixed persons and such creatures were like the late sumerians, egyptians and so forth mostly the result of race-mixing with coloured slaves, in Egypt for instance with nubian slaves.
@@reneguenon7824 Cleopatra was a Ptolemy, a Greek. She was the only one who spoke Egyptian as well which is why many mistake her as Egyptian.
I'm Mediterranean and have the colouring.
@@chiarac3833 The Ptolemies were Macedonians and kept their blood clean from foreign influences. Thats why I guess that she owned macedonian features. Mediterranean mean nothing. In ancient times all greek nations, starting with the Dorians were indoeuropeans with the look like the pure vedic and iranian people. Thats why many greek gods showing the "nordic look", pale skin, blonde hair, blue or grey eyes. And thats also the case with the most greek heros like Achilles or Odysseus or the Kings and Rulers of Sparta.
Was Cleopatra look beautiful that I could cry.....? ;(
Nice , properly detailed and refreshing !
Oh my goodness!! Wow this was amazing! Personally, I liked the red haired Cleopatra the best :)
I know someone who looks just like the red headed version and she is from Oman. Greek, arab mix. She walks into a room and everyone is just blown away. She also has the most amazing effect on people. Everyone is left smiling.
Is that person single? Harmless joke. 😊
@@johnc.8461
You don't want to marry her because the queue to be in her bed would be a mile long ! 😂
I have always wondered why guys want to marry the most beautiful women .
Me : I would just do them when given opportunity but marry a plain jane home maker
Reincarnation?
Not at all, she was Macedonian
Cleopatra was black and since she was several generations of incest inbreeding she had deformities, she wasn't beautiful as they portray her
Wow I didn't expect to be so struck by her with red hair. I feel like maybe that's how the Roman's felt seeing her. Beautiful work
This is you people fantasizing. You wish she looked like that. Netflix got it right 😅😅😅😅
@@narmabc yeah ok man
@@narmabc Cope.
@@narmabcyou live in ignorant bliss
Beautifully done. Thank you.
I have a whole new appreciation for Cleopatra. Thank you for your research, your reconstrucitonefforts and this video.
Red haired Cleopatra is....wow. If she looked anything like this I understand Marc Antony's immediate emotional response incredibly well. Beautiful work, truly.
Antony also had a similar hair color, actually. He had reddish brown hair.
And Julius Caesar
@@tabbymrp yeah people keep falling for her for sure. But historically I don't understand the hype, just kinda seems like all you had to do was be roman.
@@grizzlyblackpowder1960 To bed Cleopatra you had to be *the* most powerful Roman. And willing to give her heirs i guess! Caesar gave her a son and Antony gave her at least 3 little brats.
As an Egyptian, I won't say which one I believe is closer. Of course everyone will favour the version closest to theirs , but I applaud that you made ACTUAL RESEARCH AND EFFORT to reach that conclusion, unlike some people you tried to reach the truth and not apply some agenda to gain sympathies
Despite everything, makes me happy that there's still ppl around the world who can't tolerate history and facts being tampered with
some people that try to reach their political agenda, NOT the truth!! Reach a LIE rather
I agree with you 100% my friend. I find the "Documentary" from that nutty Jada Pinkett Smith nauseating. She made that self serving mess with only that poor old lady claiming that "her grandmother told her that no matter what anyone tells you, Cleopatra was black" Now who can question a reputable "historian" such as her ? 😂
Well, a sense of shame and being able to write your own history only happens with groups of people who have more than an IQ of 80.
According to the genetic data we have from people living alone the Mediterranean Sea around 2000 years ago more than 99% was what is called genetic white skin color, which means it you where working most of the day in the sun in Egypt you would have light brown skin, but it you where a very wealthy person like Cleopatra you would be unlikely to spend long hours in the sun every day and probably be white pale skinned.
Similar to what I have seen the president of Egypts sister looks like skin tone.
There are several Egyptians living in Denmark and most of them get as pale skin as ethnic danish people in the 6 months of the year where the sun is so weak that UV light doesn’t effect the skin color, unlike Egypt where the sun is strong enough all year 🌞 genetically white means that it can become light brown when exposed to long periods of UV light.
According to the genetic data we have from people living alone the Mediterranean Sea around 2000 years ago more than 99% was what is called genetic white skin color, which means it you where working most of the day in the sun in Egypt you would have light brown skin, but it you where a very wealthy person like Cleopatra you would be unlikely to spend long hours in the sun every day and probably be white pale skinned.
Similar to what I have seen the president of Egypts sister looks like skin tone.
There are several Egyptians living in Denmark and most of them get as pale skin as ethnic danish people in the 6 months of the year where the sun is so weak that UV light doesn’t effect the skin color, unlike Egypt where the sun is strong enough all year 🌞 genetically white means that it can become light brown when exposed to long periods of UV light.
I'm glad you even mentioned that there might be some holes in what you found, like the one at the end of her with red hair
Yes I agree, who knows what she really looked like but by the sculptures of her and her images on the coins...I d say it's a solid guess, bravo, great great work. You are very talented!
The brunnette version is quite good, but the red-haired version is stunning. I think she might have been like a friend of mine who is pretty, but you never get a sense of how attractive she is in a still image. But once she is animated in video or person, it's just wow! I think you captured some of that in the second recreation. Love your work.
Cleopatra was BLACK DECENT
@@daquieshakeaundra2854 Not sure I follow you, She was of Greek ancestry and Egyptian royalty. We know who her parents were, we know where they came from. Are you saying she was Nubian? BLACK DECENT isn't a phrase I know. I would like to she an interpretation of her as a Nubian Woman.
@@daquieshakeaundra2854 ha ya right. And it’s descent*
She was the Queen and ruler of Egypt but she was of Makedonian and Pelopponisian descent. Both Greek. 🇬🇷 By the way she was a Red-head too
@@fredscholpp5838 to see* not she
She is physically Ebony.
Actually, we know now that many Greek and Roman statues were painted, and to find out Cleopatra's skin, hair, and eye color, it might be possible to do spectrographic and other techniques to find out what pigments were used and in what tones and shading used on her statues.
They did it on the bust in Berlin and the hair color came out as brown. They didn't define the shade.
Well there's still all the wall frescos of her that are painted, she used them in the video.
@@stsk1061 Alexander The Great had rosy blonde hair. Ptolemy I had brown-red hair, a bit like myself. So the odds of Cleopatra having had dark red/brown hair seems very likely, especially since her colorized illustrations show her with deeply dark red hair, not light red.
@@TheStraightestWhitest Two of Cleopatra's ancestors are described as being blond, but that was 200 years before her time. The evidence seems to suggest that she had dark brown hair but very fair skin.
@@stsk1061 Did you watch the video? I've seen countless illustrations of her with dark red hair.
This is fascinating! I can se why you would have made the choices you have. Your images are clearly attractive (but not amazingly so), and it's easy to imagine how she could have emphasized her appearance to fascinate people around her. She also looks highly intelligent. Well done!
the orange hair stands out to me! So beautiful!
In other words her personality was what drew people around her not so much what she looked like. The opposite of what we view as beautiful in today's world. Looks!
Yep. They said she was ungodly charismatic and charming. Some women have that way about them
Obviously looks can be very magnetic. But even the people today who are celebrated for their physical beauty, also have a way to carry themselves that is out of the ordinary. But she would probably still be viewed as a physical beauty. As a queen, she would have presented herself in a, well, regal way, and have access to extensive beauty rituals to keep her looking her best. She would also not be subject to malnourishment and illness, which ensured that she would develop into the most attractive version of herself she could be.
She would also have grown up with constant positive reinforcement, which would improve confidence and self-esteem, and that is something that is very noticable in a person. You see that in modern day upper class people as well - they do not have the same doubt about themselves. She would also be held to high expectations, and have teachers to help her achieve those expectations. Both socially, in ettiquette, skills, beauty, intelligence, diplomacy, etc. In combination, these factors would boost each other, and increase both her confidence, self esteem and charisma. Not to say that royals didn't also meet greater challenges and higher pressure than most people - but their baseline was 'higher', so in everyday social situations, this would greatly influence peoples first impression and the genreral impression of them.
So even if there would maybe be more physically beautiful women, she would definitely still be considered very physically beautiful, as well as very magnetic. It was more because she also had a way of conducting herself that drew people even closer.
she still was pretty
Well she’s beautiful in the depictions
whoa hold them horses ... back then ..(still and always)... big thick woman were the sign of complete beauty. All during the ages women, have tried every dangerous procedures to fit into the times. Beauty was always implied.
This is 100× more accurate, informative and enjoyable than netflix series. 🎉 well done 👏
accurate and that netflix series don't even belong in the same sentence.
@bear532 Accurate and Netflix in general don't belong in the same sentence.
It is entirely speculative and is presented without evidence.
Of course, the Netflix historical revision wasn't designed to be accurate or entertaining. It was designed to push diversity and induce eye rolling, like all woke garbage.
@@kurtpena5462 I know and it’s crazy that Netflix ran with it
Wonderful video. Very clearly explained and compelling!!
much better than a netflix docummentary!
you mean the unintentional mocumentary
@@olgahein4384 yeah! thats the one XD
mocumentary, shitumentary, disinformumentary, there are many names :D
I'd really like to know what Helen of Troy looked like for after all she had "the face that launched a thousand ships."
Netflix producers should watch this.
@@Nin10dofan8 R.L.M Redhead lives matter too !!!!!
@Solur Lol that's actually funny :D
@Solur what does red head have to do with black
@@sammyjr6989 Hollywood has replaced any redhead female with Black, including Ariel.
@@wesmo_ I see your point but why
I was thinking that you might make her glance away and smile. I have seen your work with a number of famous people and every time they move, it is kind of breathtaking in that they actually come to life for a moment. Stirring work that cannot become tiresome. Congratulations.
Both depictions are beautiful. I think I lean toward the red-haired portrait, echoing the historic renditions of Cleopatra that were in color. But both are incredible!
Netflix was lying 😂
I loved this. I really like the red headed version
Thank you!
yep it blew my mind when that image smiled!!!absalute knockout
I could see someone with that look capturing the eye of the two most powerful Romans of their time, and her intelligence and social grace keeping them captured.
@@RoyaltyNowStudios Can you do on Gautam Buddha?Plz🙏🏻🙏🏻.
He had blue eyes and curly hairs.
Thank you
Excellent job. I am happy that you researched the history and didn't spread the lie that many are pushing about Cleopatra.
You're an amazing artist. Well done!!
This is amazing work and Netflix needs to take notes.
Did you watch the video?
She says in this video that her father’s side was Greek… BUT no one knows definitively who her mother or grand mother were.. AND that one of her ancestors on father’s side is known to have a native Egyptian concubine.. so it IS entirely possible she does have native Egyptian ancestry… she just claims that the chances are low.. BUT she WAS certainly a woman of color given confirmed Persian and Syrian ancestry..
again.. did you actually watch the video??
@@doctorSpoc Yeah. Not even one rendering was of a black woman. Which is what Netflix "documentary" claims.
@@forbidden-cyrillic-handle but yeah.. would have been interesting to see a darker skinned version in addition to the olive skinned one.. we can say definitively that straight haired one is just wrong.. I have not seen even one statue or painting of her with straight hair so we can likely throw that one out!
@@doctorSpoc Which video did you watch? Your grandma video?
@@doctorSpoc Did you? Have you seen the profiles on the coins, the statues depiction...? That is pretty close to caucasian. Pretty Greek looking... even if some genes got mixed into the pot, she still looks Greek on those coins.
Imagine after all this research, someone come saying “I don’t care what they teach u at school, cleopatra is ………..” and somehow she is a professor
Wow. Just…wow. Thank you 🙏🏼
It's certainly more accurate than the Netflix depiction of her as a black African queen... I thank you for caring about history and not falsifying it for the sake of modern identity politics.
Netflix should take notes
This is much more accurate than the Black Cleopatra from Netflix
Yet again, I thoroughly enjoyed your historical review.
I think the redheaded version is the best. The face shape, the bright and coquette eyes, the innocent smile, ... just wonderful!
Although, I was surprised by your description of her ethnic background; I always thought she would have been dark skin African given the region she lived in.
As they say: the more you know
Thank you! It was so insightful!
I think we all gotta admit, it's a new norm when enthusiasts on CZcams do a better job than huge corporations.
Your version of Cleopatra shows her to be a radiant beauty.
Just Beautifully Stunning 😍
So it's not only a myth . She was really beautiful
She was the product of 5 to 8 generation of heavy inbreeding. Just check her family tree. So her beauty is questionable.
@@locolobo958 Does inbreeding affect beauty always? I thought it affected the mind and lead to madness on occasion.
@@UrielsJunkDrawer king Tut and Charles of Spain were also example of generations of inbreeding, both have lot and lot of deformities, whole body including face. King Charles ancestors were marrying cousins but in the case of egypt they were marrying sisters and brothers, father daughter, half sister. So if king tut and Charles have a lot of issues and far from being beautiful, doubt Cleopatra was beautiful, also the coins with her face look like a witch, with long nose etc. You can read everything about all these people on internet.
History: she is Greek, maybe with some Middle Eastern and Egyptian.
Netflix: Did you mean West African?
😂😂😂
"I don't care what they tell you in school, Cleopatra was black"
Netflix logic
Netflix is for the masses, no Netflix is for the woke crowd.