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Drusilla (daughter of Ptolemy of Mauretania)

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Julia Drusilla (Greek: Δρουσίλλη; AD 38–79) was a princess of the Roman client kingdom of Mauretania in North Africa. She was the daughter of Ptolemy of Mauretania and thus a great-granddaughter of Cleopatra VII and Mark Antony.[1] She was married to the procurator Marcus Antonius Felix in the reign of Roman emperor Claudius[2] and later the Emesene priest-king Sohaemus.[1][3]

Family

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Drusilla's lineage is not entirely clear; Tacitus calls her a granddaughter of Cleopatra VII and Mark Antony, which would make her a daughter of King Juba II and Queen Cleopatra Selene II of Mauretania, but the chronology of her lifespan makes it more likely that she was their great-granddaughter.[4][5] Drusilla was probably the daughter and only child born of Ptolemy and his wife, Julia Urania.[2][6]

Her mother may have been a member of the Royal family of Emesa.[6] She is mentioned in the funeral inscription of her freedwoman Julia Bodina at Caesaria as "Queen Julia Urania".[7]

Early life

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Drusilla was most probably born in Caesaria (modern Cherchell, Algeria), the capital of the Roman client kingdom of Mauretania. She was named in honor of her father's second maternal cousin Julia Drusilla, one of the sisters of the Roman Emperor Caligula who died around the time of her birth.[6]

First marriage

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Her father was executed while visiting Rome in 40. Mauretania was annexed by Rome and later became two Roman provinces. Drusilla was probably raised in the Imperial Family in Rome. Around 53, the Roman Emperor Claudius arranged for her to marry Marcus Antonius Felix, a Greek freedman who was the Roman Governor of Judea.[6] Between the years 54 to 56, Felix divorced Drusilla as he fell in love with and married the Herodian princess Drusilla.

Drusilla held the Latin honorary title of Regina.[6] The Roman historian Suetonius only uses the word Regina to describe a queen regnant or a queen consort. According to Suetonius, she is one of the three queens whom Felix married.[6] Her title may have been purely honorary; possibly it reveals Felix's influence, the high position to which Claudius had appointed him, and his quasi-royal status in the imperial court. (As explained by Tacitus, Felix and his brother Marcus Antonius Pallas were descended from the Greek kings of Arcadia.) At the time of her first marriage, Drusilla was the only daughter of a king of a former kingdom, which may explain her title; the title may also reveal the identity of her second husband.[citation needed]

Second marriage

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In 56 Drusilla married her distant relative the Emesene Priest King, Sohaemus,[1][3] who ruled from 54 until his death in 73. Sohaemus was the Priest of the Syrian Sun God, known in Aramaic as El-Gebal. Through marriage, Drusilla became Queen consort of the Roman client kingdom of Emesa. Drusilla and Sohaemus had a son, Gaius Julius Alexion, also known as Alexio II, who later succeeded his father as Emesene Priest King. A possible descendant of Drusilla was the Syrian queen of the 3rd century, Zenobia of Palmyra.[1][3] According to some speculation she may also have been an ancestor of Julius Bassianus, father of empress Julia Domna (wife of the Roman emperor Septimius Severus and mother of emperor Caracalla) as well as Julia Maesa (maternal grandmother of the emperors Elagabalus and Severus Alexander).[8]

Relationship of Drusilla to Sohaemus
Ptolemy V EpiphanesCleopatra I Syra
Ptolemy VI PhilometorCleopatra II
Ptolemy VIII PhysconCleopatra III
Ptolemy IX LathyrosTryphaena
Ptolemy XII AuletesLaodice VII Thea
CleopatraAntiochus I Theos
Cleopatra Selene IIMithridates IIAthenais
Ptolemy of MauretaniaMithridates IIIIotapa
Iotapa
DrusillaSohaemus

Ancestors

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Chris Bennett (2012) [2001]. "Affiliated Lines (Descendant Lines)". The Ptolemaic Dynasty. Retrieved 2015-01-28.
  2. ^ a b Tyldesley, Joyce (2011). Cleopatra: Last Queen of Egypt. Profile Books. p. 202. ISBN 978-1-84765-044-3.
  3. ^ a b c Chris Bennett (2012) [2001]. "Points of Interest: Cleopatra VII & Ptolemy XIII". The Ptolemaic Dynasty. Retrieved 2015-01-28.
  4. ^ Dray, Stephanie (2013). Daughters of the Nile. Penguin. p. 549. ISBN 978-1-101-62723-5.
  5. ^ Roller, Duane W. (2011). Cleopatra: A Biography. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-982996-5.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Chris Bennett (2010) [2001]. "Cleopatra Selene (footnote 10)". The Ptolemaic Dynasty. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 2015-01-28.
  7. ^ Ptolemaic Genealogy: Cleopatra Selene, Footnote 10 Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Chad, Carlos (1972). Les dynastes d'Émèse (in French). Dar el-Machreq éditeurs. p. 92.

Further reading

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  • Bennett, Chris (2003). "Drusilla Regina". The Classical Quarterly, 53(1), pp. 315–319.