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  1. Ankhmakis Usurper Revolutionary Pharaoh in the South (199-185 BC) Continuation of the House of Ptolemy. Ptolemy V Epiphanes (Upper Egypt in revolt 207–186 BC) (204–180 BC) Cleopatra I (Wife of Ptolemy V, co-regent with Ptolemy VI during his minority) (193-176 BC) Ptolemy VI Philometor Died 145 BC (180–164 BC)

  2. Ptolemy IV Philopator ("Father-loving") was the son of Ptolemy III and Berenike II and the fourth ruler of the Ptolemaic Dynasty. He was married to his Monetary System Denominations AU Octadrachm (27.8 grams) AU Tetradrachm (13.9 grams) AU Drachm (3.1

  3. In 187 BC, Cleopatra I was appointed vizier. Then in 180BC upon her husband’s death, Cleopatra I ruled the Egyptian Empire on behalf of her young son, Ptolemy VI. She was the first Ptolemaic queen to be a sole ruler of Egypt. Cleopatra I minted her own coins, which also bear her name before that of her son. Before Ptolemy V died, he had ...

  4. Dioceses of Diocletian. Diocese was the name given to the 12 new territorial divi sions of the Roman Empire in the provincial reforms of Diocletian. The problem of the provinces had long trou bled the rulers of Rome, as governors had rebelled and had seized the throne, while the Senate had not relin quished its own, albeit dwindling, influence ...

  5. About 278 BC, a few years after the defeat of his wife’s father Lysimachos, Ptolemy II accused Arsinoe I of complicity in a plot against his life and banished her to Coptos, in Upper Egypt. Shortly thereafter, Ptolemy II married his sister,Arsinoe II, who had previously been married to King Lysimachus, father of his first wife.

  6. Ptolemy XV Philopator Philometor Caesar (June 23, 47 BC – August 23, 30 BC), is really known to history as Caesarion or the “little Caesar” who was the son of Cleopatra VII and Julius Caesar. He was the last king of the Ptolemaic dynasty of Egypt who was eventually killed by Octavian who did not want a son of Julius Caesar to compete with ...

  7. 2024年1月31日 · Join Kerry Lutz and renowned economist Martin Armstrong for a captivating discussion centered around the Socrates computer model’s uncanny accuracy in predicting political and market trends since 1985. Discover the model’s compelling projection of a 61% ...

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