Category
page 11st-century BC Egyptian people

Cleopatra
Cleopatra VII Thea Philopator (; 70/69 BC10 or 12 August 30 BC) was Queen of the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt from 51 to 30 BC, and the last active Hellenistic pharaoh. A member of the Ptolemaic dynasty, she was a descendant of its founder Ptolemy I Soter, a Macedonian Greek general and companion of Alexander the Great. Her first language was Koine Greek, and she is the only Ptolemaic ruler known to have learned the Egyptian language, among several others. After her death, Egypt became a province of the Roman Empire, marking the end of the Hellenistic period in the Mediterranean,

Cleopatra Selene II
queen consort of Mauretania from 25 to 5 BC

Berenice IV of Egypt
Ptolemaic dynasty queen regnant

Arsinoe IV of Egypt
Queen of Ptolemaic Egypt from 48 BC to 47 BC
Alexander Helios
son of Egyptian Pharaoh Cleopatra VII
Ptolemy Philadelphus
King of Syria from 34 to 30 BC
Thrasyllus of Mendes
1st-century AD Egyptian Greek astrologer and philosopher
Charmion
servant to Cleopatra
Lysimachus
Egyptian grammarian
Taimhotep
Taimhotep (t3ỉ-ˁỉỉ-m-ḥtp, in Greek: ταιμουθης, Taimuthis; December 17, 73 BCE – February 15, 42 BCE) was an ancient Egyptian woman known from two stelae made during the reign of Cleopatra VII. One of these, a limestone stela from 43 or 42 BCE was found in Memphis or Sakkara and is today in the British Museum (BM 147), the other is a Demotic version of its text; its fragments are also in the British Museum (BM 377).