Hellenistic and Roman eras , 1st century AD In his triumphant procession at Rome in 29 BC, Octavian paraded Cleopatra's children Alexander Helios and Cleopatra Selene II, but he also presented an effigy to the crowd depicting Cleopatra with an asp clinging to her. This was likely the same painting discovered in emperor
Hadrian's Villa in 1818, now lost but described in an archaeological report and
depicted in a
steel engraving by
John Sartain. The poet
Propertius, an eyewitness of Octavian's triumph along the
Via Sacra, noted that the paraded image of Cleopatra contained multiple snakes biting each of her arms. Citing Plutarch, Giuseppe Pucci indicates that the effigy may have even been a statue. In his "Notes isiaques I" (1989), French Archaeologist
Jean-Claude Grenier observed that an ancient
Roman statue of a woman wearing a
knot of Isis in the
Vatican Museums portrays a snake crawling up her right breast, perhaps a depiction of Cleopatra's suicide while dressed as the
Egyptian goddess Isis. Cleopatra's association with Isis continued in Egypt after her death, at least until 373 AD, when the Egyptian scribe Petesenufe compiled a book of Isis and explained how he decorated images of Cleopatra with gold. A mid-1st century BC
Roman wall painting from
Pompeii most likely
depicting Cleopatra with her infant son Caesarion was walled off by its owner around 30 BC, perhaps in reaction to Octavian's proscription against images depicting Caesarion, the rival heir of Julius Caesar. Although statues of Mark Antony were torn down, those of Cleopatra were generally spared this program of destruction, including the one erected by Caesar in the
Temple of Venus Genetrix in the
Forum of Caesar. An
early 1st century AD painting from Pompeii most likely depicts the suicide of Cleopatra, accompanied by attendants and even her son Caesarion wearing a royal diadem like his mother, although an asp is absent from the scene, perhaps reflecting the different causes of death provided in
Roman historiography. Some posthumous images of Cleopatra meant for common consumption were perhaps less flattering. A Roman terracotta lamp in the British Museum made –80 AD contains a relief depicting a nude woman with the queen's distinct hairstyle. In it she holds a palm branch, rides an Egyptian crocodile and sits on a large phallus in a Nilotic scene. A
Roman cameo glass vessel in the British Museum known as the
Portland Vase contains a possible depiction of Cleopatra and her imminent death. Dated to the reign of Augustus, it depicts various other figures often identified as Augustus, his sister
Octavia Minor, Mark Antony and his alleged ancestor Anton. The seated woman identified as Cleopatra grasps and pulls Antony toward her while a serpent rises from between her legs and the Greek god of love
Eros (
Cupid) floats above them. The story of the asp was widely accepted among the
Augustan-period Latin poets such as
Horace and
Virgil, in which two snakes were even suggested as biting Cleopatra. Although retaining the negative views of Cleopatra apparent in other pro-Augustan
Roman literature, Horace depicted Cleopatra's suicide as a bold act of defiance and liberation. Virgil established the view of Cleopatra as a figure of epic
melodrama and romance.
Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque periods The story of Cleopatra's suicide by snakebite was often depicted in
Medieval and
Renaissance art. The artist known as the
Boucicaut Master, in a 1409 AD
miniature for an
illuminated manuscript of
Des cas de nobles hommes et femmes by the 14th-century AD poet
Giovanni Boccaccio,
depicted Cleopatra and Antony lying together in a
Gothic-style tomb, with a snake near Cleopatra's chest and a bloody sword driven through Antony's chest. Illustrated versions of Boccaccio's written works, including images of Cleopatra and Antony committing suicide, first appeared in France during the
Quattrocento (i.e. 15th century AD), authored by
Laurent de Premierfait.
Woodcut illustrations of Boccaccio's
De Mulieribus Claris published at
Ulm in 1479 and
Augsburg in 1541 depict Cleopatra's discovery of Antony's body after his suicide by stabbing. Like much of
Medieval literature about Cleopatra, Boccaccio's writings are largely negative and misogynistic. The 14th-century poet
Geoffrey Chaucer counters these depictions, offering a positive view of Cleopatra. Chaucer began his
hagiography on virtuous pagan women with the life of Cleopatra, depicted in a satirical fashion as a queen engaged in
courtly love with her knight Mark Antony. His depiction of her suicide included a pit of serpents rather than the Roman tale of the asps. , c. 1535 Free-standing nude depictions of Cleopatra poisoned by an asp became common during the
Italian Renaissance. The 16th-century
Venetian artist Giovanni Maria Padovano (i.e. Mosca) created two marble reliefs of the suicide of Antony and Cleopatra, as well as several free-standing nude statues of Cleopatra being bitten by the asp that were partly inspired by ancient
Roman sculptures such as the
Esquiline Venus.
Bartolommeo Bandinelli created a drawing of Cleopatra as a free-standing nude committing suicide that served as the basis for a similar engraving by
Agostino Veneziano. Another engraving by Veneziano and a drawing by
Raphael depicting Cleopatra's suicide as she slumbered were inspired by the ancient
Greco-Roman Sleeping Ariadne, which at the time was thought to depict Cleopatra. Works of the
French Renaissance also depict Cleopatra slumbering while pressing a snake to her breast.
Michelangelo created a black-chalk drawing of Cleopatra's suicide by asp bite around 1535. The 17th-century
Baroque painter
Guido Reni depicted Cleopatra's death by asp bite, albeit with a snake that is tiny compared to a real Egyptian cobra. The
Sleeping Ariadne, acquired by
Pope Julius II in 1512, inspired three poems of
Renaissance literature eventually carved into the
pilaster frame of the statue. The first of these was published by
Baldassare Castiglione, which became widely circulated by 1530 and inspired the other two poems by
Bernardino Baldi and
Agostino Favoriti. Castiglione's poem depicted Cleopatra as a tragic but honorable ruler in a doomed love affair with Antony, a queen whose death freed her from the ignominy of Roman imprisonment. The
Sleeping Ariadne was also commonly depicted in paintings, including those by
Titian,
Artemisia Gentileschi, and
Edward Burne-Jones. These works tended to
eroticize the moment of Cleopatra's death, while
Victorian era artists found the unconscious, recumbent female form as an acceptable outlet for their eroticism. Cleopatra's death features in several works of the performing arts. In the 1607
play ''
Devil's Charter'' by
Barnabe Barnes, a
snake handler brings two asps to Cleopatra and allows them to bite both her breasts in a racy manner. In
William Shakespeare's 1609 play
Antony and Cleopatra the snake represents both death as well as a lover who Cleopatra desires, yielding to his pinch. Shakespeare relied on
Thomas North's 1579 translation of Plutarch for crafting his play, which can be viewed as both a comedy and a tragedy. The play involved use of multiple asps, as well as the character of Charmion who killed herself by asp bite after Cleopatra.
Modern era In modern literature,
Ted Hughes' poem "Cleopatra to the Asp" (1960) creates a monologue of Cleopatra speaking to the asp that is about to kill her. During the Victorian era, plays such as
Cléopâtre (1890) by
Victorien Sardou became popular, although audiences were generally shocked by the emotional intensity of stage actress
Sarah Bernhardt's depiction of Cleopatra reacting to Antony's suicide. In opera,
Samuel Barber's
Antony and Cleopatra, first performed in 1966 and based on Shakespeare's play, Cleopatra recounts a dream that Antony, now dead before her, would become emperor of Rome. When
Dollabella informs her that Caesar intends to march her in his triumph in Rome, she commits suicide with Charmion by asp bite, before being carried off to be buried with Antony. '', by
Edmonia Lewis, 1876 The character of Cleopatra had appeared in forty-three films by the end of the 20th century.
Georges Méliès' ''
Robbing Cleopatra's Tomb (), an 1899 French silent horror film, was the first to depict the character of Cleopatra. Following the Italo-Turkish War (1911–1912), the 1913 Italian film Marcantonio e Cleopatra by Enrico Guazzoni depicted Cleopatra as the embodiment of the cruel Orient, a queen who had defied Rome, while the actions of her lover Antony, after his suicide, are forgiven by Octavian. In cultivating a stage persona for her character in the 1917 US film Cleopatra'', actress
Theda Bara was seen in public petting snakes while the
Fox Film Corporation posed her in front of Cleopatra's alleged
mummified remains in a museum, where she announced that she was the reincarnation of Cleopatra, having received
hieroglyphic tributary offerings from a reincarnated servant. Fox Studios also had Bara dress as a leader of the occult and associated her with perverse
death and sexuality. The 1963 Hollywood film
Cleopatra by
Joseph L. Mankiewicz contains a dramatic scene where the Egyptian queen, portrayed by
Elizabeth Taylor, is engaged in a slap-fight with her lover Mark Antony, portrayed by
Richard Burton, inside the tomb where they would be interred. In other modern visual arts, Cleopatra has been depicted in mediums such as paintings and sculptures. In her 1876 sculpture
The Death of Cleopatra, African American artist
Edmonia Lewis, despite championing the non-white female form in artworks, chose to depict Cleopatra with
Caucasian features, perhaps in keeping with Cleopatra's recorded lineage as a
Macedonian Greek. Lewis'
Neoclassical sculpture offers a
post-mortem view of Cleopatra dressed in Egyptian regalia and sitting on her throne, which is decorated with two
sphinx heads that represent the twins she bore with Mark Antony: Alexander Helios and Cleopatra Selene II. An 1880
plaster sculpture of Cleopatra committing suicide, now found in
Lille, France, was once thought to be a work by
Albert Darcq, but restoration and cleaning of the sculpture revealed the signature of
Charles Gauthier, to whom the work is now attributed. The 1874 painting
Death of Cleopatra by
Jean-André Rixens depicts a dead Cleopatra with very light skin, accompanied by maidservants with rather dark skin, a combination frequently found in modern artworks portraying the scene of Cleopatra's death.
Orientalist paintings by Rixens and others influenced the hybrid Ancient-Egyptian and Middle-Eastern decor found in the
J. Gordon Edwards' film
Cleopatra starring Bara, seen standing on a
Persian carpet but with
Egyptian wall paintings in the background.
Paintings File:Guido Cagnacci - The Death of Cleopatra.jpg|
The Death of Cleopatra by
Guido Cagnacci, 1658 File:Death of Cleopatra by Rixens.jpg|
The Death of Cleopatra by
Jean-André Rixens, 1874 File:The Death of Cleopatra by Juan Luna1881.jpg|
The Death of Cleopatra by
Juan Luna, 1881 File:The Death of Cleopatra arthur.jpg|
The Death of Cleopatra by Reginald Arthur, 1892
Prints File:Cleopatra, Jan Muller, after Adriaen de Vries, c.1598.jpg|
Cleopatra, by
Jan Muller, after
Adriaen de Vries, c. 1598 File:The suicide of Cleopatra; the asp is wriggling up the left a Wellcome V0041560.jpg|The suicide of Cleopatra: the asp is wriggling up the left arm of the
sleeping Cleopatra (after the
Sleeping Ariadne),
engraving by
Jean-Baptiste de Poilly (1669–1728) File:Robert Strange - Cleopatra.jpg|
Cleopatra, by
Robert Strange (after
Guido Reni), 1777 File:Anne seymour damer antony and cleopatra.JPG|A 1788
engraving depicting the
bas relief Antony and Cleopatra, sculpted by
Anne Seymour Damer Statues, busts and other sculptures File:Esquiline Venus Musei Capitolini MC1141 n1.jpg|The
Esquiline Venus, 1st century AD
Roman copy of a late
Hellenistic artwork from the 1st century BC, with a snake depicted on the vase at the base and a woman wearing a royal
diadem. File:Adam Lenckhardt - Cleopatra - Walters 71416 - Right.jpg|Cleopatra taking her own life with the bite of a venomous serpent,
Adam Lenckhardt (1610–1661), Ivory,
Walters Art Museum File:Cleopatra Bertin Louvre RF3717.jpg|Bust of Cleopatra committing suicide, by
Claude Bertin (d. 1705) File:Lille PdBA gauthier cleopatre 2.JPG|
Cleopatra, by
Charles Gauthier, 1880 ==See also==