Arsinoe I

Arsinoe I

Arsinoe I (Greek: Αρσινόη Α’, 305 BC[1]-after c. 248 BC[2]) was a Greek Princess who was of Macedonian and Thessalian descent. She was the second daughter and youngest child born to King Lysimachus from his first wife, Nicaea of Macedon.[3][4] Arsinoe I had two older siblings: a brother called Agathocles and a sister called Eurydice.[3][4]

Life

Arsinoe's paternal grandfather was Agathocles of Pella,[5] a nobleman who was a contemporary to King Philip II of Macedon who reigned 359-336 BC, while her maternal grandfather was the powerful Regent Antipater.[6] Arsinoe I was named in honor of an unnamed grandmother,[7] who may have been the mother of Lysimachus or the mother of Nicaea whose both names of these women are unknown.[2] Little is known of her life prior to her marriage.

Between 289/28[8] and 281 BC,[9] Arsinoe became the first wife of Ptolemaic Greek Egyptian Pharaoh Ptolemy II Philadelphus, who was also her distant maternal cousin. Arsinoe I married Ptolemy II as part of an alliance between her father and Ptolemy II, against Seleucus I Nicator.[10]

Arsinoe I was, by marriage, Queen of the Ptolemaic Kingdom. Arsinoe I bore Ptolemy II three children; two sons: Ptolemy III Euergetes, Lysimachus of Egypt and a daughter called Berenice.[11] At an unknown date between after 279-274/3 BC, a sister of Ptolemy II called Arsinoe II arrived in Egypt, who was the last wife of Lysimachus and had fled from her half-brother-husband Ptolemy Keraunos. Probably at the instigation of Arsinoe II, charges of conspiring to assassinate Ptolemy II were soon brought against Arsinoe I.[10]

Ptolemy II had convicted Arsinoe I of plotting against him. He ended his marriage to Arsinoe I and divorced her. Ptolemy II had exiled Arsinoe I to Coptos in southern Egypt.[10] It is chronologically plausible that these events were also connected to the banishment of Ptolemy II’s niece, Theoxena of Egypt as Theoxena was sent to the Thebaid,[12] perhaps to Coptos. Afterwards Ptolemy II married his sister Arsinoe II and after the death of Arsinoe II, Ptolemy II’s children with Arsinoe I were officially regarded as the children of Arsinoe II.

Arsinoe I lived in exile for twenty years. During her exile, Arsinoe I lived in great splendour and exercised considerable power, since she was a wife of a former pharaoh. Her first son with Ptolemy II succeeded his father after his death.[8]

A surviving Stele has been found at Coptos which refers to Arsinoe I.[10] The Stele is of Senu-sher, a steward of Arsinoe I and the Stele is assigned to Arsinoe I’s exile.[13] The stele calls Arsinoe I the ‘king’s wife’, but her name is not enclosed in the royal Cartouche, as it is customary for an Egyptian Queen.[10] Another piece of surviving evidence connected to Arsinoe I, is a Phoenician inscription found at Lapithos, Cyprus,[14] which is dated in the 11th or 12th year in the reign of Ptolemy II. The inscription refers to a sacrifice instituted by Yatonba’al on behalf of ‘the legitimate scion and his wife’,[14] hence refers to Arsinoe I. As Arsinoe I was disgraced as a traitor, the fact the person who did the sacrifice on her behalf strongly suggests that the news of her disgrace had not yet reached him.[14]

References

  1. Ptolemaic Genealogy: Arsinoe I, Footnote 4
  2. 1 2 "Arsinoe I". Ptolemaic Genealogy., Footnote 10
  3. 1 2 Bengtson. Griechische Geschichte von den Anfängen bis in die römische Kaiserzeit. p. 569.
  4. 1 2 Heckel. Who’s who in the age of Alexander the Great: prosopography of Alexander’s empire. p. 175.
  5. Lysimachus’ article at Livius.org
  6. Lightman, A to Z of ancient Greek and Roman women, p.233
  7. Ptolemaic Genealogy: Arsinoe I, Footnote 3
  8. 1 2 Lightman. A to Z of ancient Greek and Roman women. p. 43.
  9. Ptolemaic Genealogy: Arsinoe I
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 "Arsinoe I". Britannica Online Encyclopedia.
  11. Ptolemaic Genealogy: Arsinoe I, Footnote 7
  12. Ptolemaic Genealogy: Theoxena, Footnote 6 Archived November 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  13. Ptolemaic Genealogy: Arsinoe I, Footnote 8
  14. 1 2 3 "Arsinoe I". Ptolemaic Genealogy., Footnote 9

Sources

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