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Caesarion

Ptolemy XV Philopator Philometor Caesar, nicknamed Caesarion (little Caesar) (lived June 23, 47 to August, 30 BC; reigned September 2, 44 BC to August, 30 BC) was the son of Julius Caesar and Cleopatra VII of Egypt and the last pharaoh of the Ptolemaic dynasty of Egypt.

Image:cleopatra_&_caesarion.JPG
Cleopatra and Caesarion

He was nominated co-ruler by his mother on September 2, 44 BC at the age of three. Although he was probably king in name only, with Cleopatra keeping actual authority to herself, he was intended by her to be the successor to his father. When Caesar's great-nephew and adoptive son Octavian invaded Egypt in 30 BC, Cleopatra sent Caesarion to the port of Berenice for safety, but the Romans lured him back and captured him. Octavian captured the city of Alexandria on August 1, 30 BC, the date that marks the official annexation of Egypt to the Roman Republic. Cleopatra's consort Mark Antony had committed suicide prior to Octavian's entry into the capital; she followed his example by committing suicide on August 12, 30 BC.

Octavian now had to deal with the fate of the captured teenage Pharaoh. Fearing that "too many Caesars", as he put it, would threaten his claim to being the sole successor to his adoptive father, he decided that his adoptive brother must be put to death. Octavian then assumed control of Egypt. The year 30 BC was considered the first year of the new ruler's reign according to the traditional chronological system of Egypt. In lists of the time Octavian himself appears as a Pharaoh and the successor to Caesarion.

Caesarion is the subject of a poem written in 1918 by Konstantinos Petrou Kavafis.

Preceded by:
Ptolemy XIV and Cleopatra VII
Ptolemaic King of Egypt
with Cleopatra VII
Succeeded by:

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