Coin Calls Cleopatra’s Beauty Into Question

COIN CALLS CLEOPATRA’S BEAUTY INTO QUESTION

UKTV, UK
Feb 14 2007

A silver coin reveals that Cleopatra and Mark Antony were not the
legendary stunners that films suggest.

British experts studying a silver coin depicting Cleopatra claim that
it is proof that she was not the beautiful queen of legend.

Historians at Newcastle University found that Cleopatra and her lover
Mark Antony were not even close to dashing couple Richard Burton and
Elizabeth Taylor, who played them in the epic film.

The 2,000-year-old coin reveals that Roman general Antony has a thick
neck, a hook nose and bulging eyes, while his Egyptian lover had a
sharp nose, pointed chin and thin lips.

Around the size of a 5p piece, the silver denari features profiles
of Cleopatra and Antony, who are far from the popular romantic images
of stage and screen.

The coin, found in Newcastle-upon-Tyne as part of a search for items
for the new Great North Museum, dates from 32BC and was created
in Antony’s mint to mark military victories in Armenia funded by
Cleopatra.

Lindsay Allason-Jones, director of archaeological museums at Newcastle,
said: "The idea of Cleopatra as a beautiful seductress is much more
recent. Classical age writers tell us that she was intelligent and
charismatic, and that she had a seductive voice. But tellingly,
they make little of her beauty."

Antony and Cleopatra killed themselves just two years after the coin
was minted, as they faced rebellions and invasions.