The story of the world’s best-remembered celebrity couple, set against the political backdrop
of their time.
On a stiflingly hot day in August 30 b.c., the thirty-nine-year-old queen of Egypt, Cleopatra, took her own
life rather than be paraded in chains through Rome by her conqueror, Octavian—the future first emperor,
Augustus. A few days earlier, her lover of eleven years, Mark Antony, had himself committed suicide and
died in her arms. Oceans of mythology have grown up around them, all of which Diana Preston explores in
her stirring history of the lives and times of a couple whose names—more than two millennia later—still
invoke passion, curiosity, and intrigue.
Preston views the drama and romance of Cleopatra and Antony’s personal lives as an integral part of
the great military, political, and ideological struggle that culminated in the full-fledged rise of the Roman
Empire, joined east and west. Perhaps not until Joanna in fourteenth-century Naples or Elizabeth I of
England would another woman show such political shrewdness and staying power as did Cleopatra
during her years atop the throne of Egypt. Her lengthy affair with Julius Caesar linked the might of Egypt
with that of Rome; in the aftermath of the civil war that erupted following Caesar’s murder, her alliance
with Antony, and his subsequent split with Octavian, set the stage for the end of the Republic.
With the keen eye for detail, abundant insight, and storytelling skill that have won awards for her previous
books, Diana Preston sheds new light on a vitally important period in Western history. Indeed, had
Cleopatra and Antony managed to win the battle of Actium, the centuries that followed, which included
the life of Jesus himself, could well have played out differently.