PTOLEMY X. ALEXANDER IL—On his death Berenice as sumed the government, but the son of Alexander I., Ptolemy X., entering Alexandria under Roman patronage, married, and within 20 days assassinated, his elderly cousin and stepmother. He was at once killed by the enraged people and with him the Ptolemaic family in the legitimate male line became extinct. Ptolemy Apion meanwhile, dying in 96, had bequeathed the Cyrenaica to Rome.
The Alexandrian people now chose an illegitimate son of Soter II. to be their king, PTOLEMY XI. Philopator Philadelphus Neos Dionysus (8o-51), nicknamed Auletes, the flute-player, setting his brother as king in Cyprus. The rights of these kings were doubtful, not only because of their illegitimate birth, but because it was claimed in Rome that Alexander II. had bequeathed his kingdom to the Roman people. Two Seleucid princes, children of Soter's sister Selene, appeared in Rome in 73 to urge their claim to the Ptolemaic throne. Ptolemy Auletes was thus obliged to spend his reign in buying the support of the men in power in Rome. Cyprus was annexed by Rome in 58, its king committing suicide. From 58 to 55 Auletes was in exile, driven out by popular hatred, and worked by bribery and murder in Rome to get him self restored to Roman power. His daughter Berenice meanwhile reigned in Alexandria, a husband being found for her in the Pontic prince Archelaus. In 55 Auletes was restored by the pro consul of Syria, Aulus Gabinius. He killed Berenice and, dying in
51, bequeathed the kingdom to his eldest son, aged ten years, who was to take as wife his sister Cleopatra, aged seventeen.
See Mahaffy, The Empire of the Ptolemies (i895) and Egypt under the Ptolemaic Dynasty (1899) ; Strack, Die Dynastie der Ptolemder (1897) ; Bouche-Leclercq, Histoire des Lagides (1904, 1907) ; Meyer, Das Heerwesen der Ptolem-iier and Romer (Leipzig, 1900).
(E. R. B.)