Cleopatra: The Performance
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
Summary
Cleopatra built an empire on image. Every appearance was calculated. Every alliance, performed. Every rumor about her beauty and her power was something she understood, shaped, and weaponized. Image was not vanity. It was governance. Now she learns the whole world does this. The Archivist: History Continued is an AI-generated historical fiction podcast. All guest voices are artificially generated fictional portrayals and are not actual recordings, cloned voices, or authorized statements of the historical figures portrayed. No endorsement, sponsorship, approval, or affiliation by any estate, rights holder, foundation, museum, family member, company, or affiliated organization is claimed or implied.
The last Pharaoh of Egypt encounters influencer culture, the beauty industry, and a world in which the performance of a self is not the exclusive tool of rulers but the daily occupation of billions. She is fascinated. She is unsettled. She has thoughts.
The conversation moves from the Egypt she governed to the social media she never saw coming, from political power to cultural power, from the image she constructed to the image that outlasted her. What happens when the woman who invented manufactured fame discovers that image is no longer the currency of the powerful but the currency of everyone? And does that make it more powerful or less?
The dialogue in this episode is entirely fictional and was written by the show's scriptwriters. Cleopatra's voice is artificially generated. This is an imagined conversation, not a historical reconstruction.
SOURCES AND FURTHER READING
Biographies and Scholarly Works:
Duane Roller, Cleopatra: A Biography (Oxford University Press, 2010); Stacy Schiff, Cleopatra: A Life (Little, Brown, 2010)
Primary Ancient Source:
Plutarch, Life of Antony (1st century CE) — primary source for Cleopatra's appearance, the barge at Tarsus, her nine languages, and her relationship with Caesar and Antony
Additional Historical Context:
Cassius Dio, Roman History — documents Arsinoe IV in Caesar's triumph (46 BCE) and the fall of Alexandria (30 BCE); Suetonius, The Twelve Caesars — records Caesarion's death following the fall of Alexandria
NOTES
Note on Scholarly Consensus:
The characterization of Cleopatra as among Egypt's most capable rulers in its final two centuries reflects a defensible position in current scholarship, not unanimous consensus. Roller (2010) and Schiff (2010) both address this assessment in depth.
Note on the Episode:
The influencer referenced in this episode whose cosmetics empire began in her teens is an unnamed composite figure and does not refer to any specific individual.
EPISODE CREDITS
Cleopatra: The Performance
The Archivist: History Continued
Produced by Open Frequency Media LLC.