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Berenice II Euergetis (267 or 266 – 221 BCE; , Berenikē Euergetis, "Berenice the Benefactress") was of from 258 to 246 BCE and queen of from 246 to 222 BCE as the wife of Ptolemy III. She is sometimes considered co-regent of her Ptolemaic husband.

She married Demetrius the Fair, thus giving him the throne of Cyrenaica, on the death of her father Magas in 250/249 BCE. After a short power struggle with her mother, Berenice married her half-cousin Ptolemy III, the third ruler of the Ptolemaic kingdom. This marriage led to the re-incorporation of Cyrenaica into the Ptolemaic empire. As queen of Egypt, Berenice participated actively in government, was incorporated into the Ptolemaic state cult alongside her husband and worshipped as a goddess in her own right. She is best known for sacrificing her hair as a votive offering, which led to the constellation being named after her. Berenice was murdered by the regent shortly after the accession of her son Ptolemy IV Philopator in 221 BCE.


Life
Cyrenaica had been incorporated into the Ptolemaic realm in 323 BCE, by Ptolemy I Soter shortly after the death of Alexander the Great. The region proved difficult to control and around 300 BCE, Ptolemy I entrusted the region to Magas, son of his wife Berenice I by an earlier marriage. After Ptolemy I's death, Magas asserted his independence and engaged in warfare with his successor Ptolemy II Philadelphus. Around 275 BCE, Magas married , who came from the , which had become enemies of the Ptolemies. Berenice II was their only child. When Ptolemy II renewed his efforts to reach a settlement with Magas of Cyrene in the late 250s BCE, it was agreed that Berenice would be married to her half-cousin, the future , who was Ptolemy II's heir.Justin 26.3.2

The astronomer Gaius Julius Hyginus claims that when Berenice's father and his troops were routed in battle, Berenice mounted a horse, rallied the remaining forces, killed many of the enemy, and drove the rest to retreat. The veracity of this story is unclear and the battle in question is not otherwise attested, but "it is not on the face of it impossible."


Queen of Cyrene
Berenice was hailed (queen) on coins even in her father's lifetime.
(2016). 9781137494627, Springer. .
There are Cyrenean coins with the portrait of queen, the legend ΒΕΡΕΝΙΚΗΣ ΒΑΣΙΛΙΣΣΗΣ (Berenice Basilissa), and the of Magas. It is evidently more plausible that the queen's identity is Magas's daughter Berenice II rather than Magas's mother Berenice I, because the portrait is youthful and unveiled, meaning unmarried.
(2016). 9781137494627, Springer. .
According to coins of Berenice, the accession of Berenice as queen of Cyrene was in 258 BCE.

King Magas died in circa 250 BCE. At this point, Berenice's mother Apama refused to honour the marriage agreement with the Ptolemies and invited an Antigonid prince, Demetrius the Fair to Cyrene to marry Berenice instead. With Apama's help, Demetrius seized control of the city. Allegedly, Demetrius and Apama became lovers. Berenice is said to have discovered them in bed together and had him assassinated. Apama was spared.Justin 26.3.3-6; 66.25-28 After Demetrius' assassination Cyrene was engulfed in civil unrest, and the control of Cyrene was entrusted to a republican government ( ), led by two Cyrenaeans named Ecdelus and Demophanes, until Berenice's actual wedding to Ptolemy III in 246 BCE after his accession to the throne. Berenice II by Chris Bennett


Queen of Egypt
Berenice married Ptolemy III in 246 BCE after his accession to the throne. This brought Cyrenaica back into the Ptolemaic realm, where it would remain until her great-great-grandson left it to the in his will in 96 BCE.


Ruler cult
In 244 or 243 BCE, Berenice and her husband were incorporated into the Ptolemaic state cults and worshipped as the Theoi Euergetai (Benefactor Gods), alongside Alexander the Great and the earlier Ptolemies. Berenice was also worshipped as a goddess on her own, Thea Euergetis (Benefactor Goddess). She was often equated with and and came to be particularly associated with protection against shipwrecks. Most of the evidence for this cult derives from the reign of Ptolemy IV or later, but a cult in her honour is attested in the in Ptolemy III's reign. This cult closely parallels that offered to her mother-in-law, , who was also equated with Aphrodite and Isis, and associated with protection from shipwrecks. The parallelism is also presented on the gold coinage minted posthumously in honour of the two queens. The coinage of Arsinoe II bears a pair of on the reverse side, while that of Berenice bears a single cornucopia.

Berenice was also granted the title of vizier, highlighting her position as king's advisor.Sewell-Lasater, Tara, Becoming Kleopatra: Ptolemaic Royal Marriage, Incest, and the Path to the Female Rule, University of Houston, 2020, p. 166.


Berenice's Lock
Berenice's divinity is closely connected with the story of "Berenice's Lock". According to this story, Berenice vowed to sacrifice her long hair as a if Ptolemy III returned safely from battle during the Third Syrian War. She dedicated her tresses to and placed them in the temple at Cape Zephyrium in , where was worshipped as Aphrodite, but the next morning the tresses had disappeared. Conon of Samos, the court astronomer identified a constellation as the missing hair, claiming that Aphrodite had placed it in the sky as an acknowledgement of Berenice's sacrifice. The constellation is known to this day as Coma Berenices ( for 'Berenice's Lock').
(2026). 9783319276199, Springer.
It is unclear whether this event took place before or after Ptolemy's return; Branko van Oppen de Ruiter suggests that it happened after Ptolemy's return (around March–June or May 245 BCE). This episode served to link Berenice with the goddess Isis in her role as goddess of rebirth, since she was meant to have dedicated a lock of her own hair at in mourning for her husband ., De Iside et Osiride 14.

The story was widely propagated by the Ptolemaic court. Seals were produced depicting Berenice with a shaved head and the attributes of Isis/. The poet , who was based in the Ptolemaic court, celebrated the event in a poem, The Lock of Berenice, of which only a few lines remain. fragment 110 . The first century BCE Roman poet produced a loose translation or adaptation of the poem in ,Catullus 66 and a prose summary appears in Hyginus' .Gaius Julius Hyginus 2.24 The story was popular in the early modern period when it was illustrated by many painters.


Panhellenic Games
Berenice entered a chariot team in the of 243 or 241 BCE and was victorious. The success is celebrated in another poem by Callimachus' Victory of Berenice. This poem connects Berenice with Io, a lover of Zeus in Greek mythology, who was also connected with Isis by contemporary Greeks. When she won in the four-horse chariot race at the Olympics in the early third century BCE, she commissioned an epigram by the poet Posidippus in which she explicitly claimed to have "stolen" the fame (κῦδος) of . Her epigram was included in the so-called , which also indicates its continuing relevance long after the victory itself.


Death
Ptolemy III died in late 222 BCE and was succeeded by his son by Berenice, Ptolemy IV Philopator. Berenice died soon after, in early 221 BCE. states that she was poisoned, as part of a general purge of the royal family by the new king's regent . 15.25.2; 5.94 She continued to be venerated in the state ruler cult. By 211 BCE, she had her own priestess, the athlophorus ('prize-bearer'), who marched in processions in behind the priest of Alexander the Great and the Ptolemies, and the of the deified .


Legacy
The city of Euesperides (now the Libyan city of ) was renamed Berenice in her honour, a name it retained until the Middle Ages.

The asteroid 653 Berenike, discovered in 1907, also is named after Queen Berenice.Use of tree Oils. " Varnish and Berenice." Retrieved on September 02, 2010


Issue
With Ptolemy III she had the following children:Dodson, Aidan and Hilton, Dyan. The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt. Thames & Hudson. 2004.

Married her brother Ptolemy IV in 220 BCE.
King of Egypt from 222 - 204 BCE.
Name unknown, possibly 'Lysimachus'. He was probably killed in or before the political purge of 221 BCE. Lysimachus by Chris Bennett
He was probably killed in or before the political purge of 221 BCE. Alexander by Chris Bennett
Scalded to death in his bath by Theogos or Theodotus, at the orders of Ptolemy IV. Magas by Chris Bennett
Posthumously deified on 7 March 238 BCE by the , as Berenice Anasse Parthenon (Berenice, mistress of virgins). Berenice by Chris Bennett


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