The Ancients - Ptolemy I: The First Greek Pharaoh
Episode Date: October 20, 2024In the aftermath of Alexander the Great’s death his former generals carved out their own kingdoms in the chaos that was the Wars of the Successors. Arguably the most successful of those successors P...tolemy is today's subject, the general who came from Alexander’s deathbed in Babylon to claim one of the richest jewels of Alexander’s empire.Tristan Hughes invites Dr Toby Wilkinson to discuss the man who took Egypt as his prize and laid the foundations for the last ancient dynasty of Egypt.Presented by Tristan Hughes. The producer is Joseph Knight, audio editor is Aidan Lonergan. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.The Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Enjoy unlimited access to award-winning original TV documentaries that are released weekly and AD-FREE podcasts. Sign up HERE for 50% off your first 3 months using code ‘ANCIENTS’. https://historyhit.com/subscriptionYou can take part in our listener survey here.
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It's 322 BC.
The River Nile is in full flow,
and on its eastern bank a group of horsemen can be seen approaching.
They're not Egyptian.
They're Macedonian.
Veterans of Alexander the Great's conquest of the Persian Empire and beyond.
But Alexander is dead, and now his former generals have assumed command of various parts of his empire.
The man leading this group was one such figure,
who had come from Alexander's deathbed in Babylon to claim one of the richest jewels of Alexander's empire,
Egypt, the land of pharaohs. This general had lofty ambitions. War with his rival commanders, his former brothers in arms, was on the horizon.
He had to be ready. He planned to keep hold of Egypt at whatever cost, turning this lucrative
land into a fortress, forging his own dynasty and kick-starting an
age where the heirs of Alexander ruled Egypt. They were high aspirations for this commander
newly arrived at the Nile, but Ptolemy was determined to achieve them.
It's the Entrance on History Hit. I'm Tristan Hughes, your host,
and today we're talking about a period of history that I'm absolutely captivated by.
The aftermath of Alexander the Great's death and the figures that rose to the fore.
Alexander's former generals, who carved out their own kingdoms in the chaos that was the
wars of the successors. We're talking about arguably the most successful of those
successors, Ptolemy, the man who took Egypt as his prize and laid the foundations for the last
ancient dynasty of Egypt, the Ptolemaic dynasty that ruled from Alexandria and became one of the
most powerful kingdoms in the Mediterranean world, a wealthy and intellectual powerhouse.
With great monuments such as the Library of Alexandria, the Lighthouse, a wealthy and intellectual powerhouse. With great monuments
such as the Library of Alexandria, the Lighthouse, and of course the Tomb of Alexander the Great,
it was a dynasty that ended with the famous Queen Cleopatra, Cleopatra VII, when Rome finally
brought this kingdom to its end. But that was almost 300 years after the original Ptolemy, Ptolemy I, was ruling.
It was he that laid the foundations for this extraordinary Hellenistic kingdom to rise to prominence.
And to talk through his incredible life story, from serving Alexander the Great,
to stealing that conqueror's body and crowning himself pharaoh,
I was delighted to interview Dr Toby Wilkinson
from Clare College, University of Cambridge. Toby, he has been on the podcast once before
when he talked through some of the greatest discoveries from Tutankhamen's tomb,
so it was great to have him back on the show to talk through the story
of one of my favourite figures from antiquity.
Toby, it is wonderful to have you back on the podcast.
It's wonderful to be back. Thank you for inviting me.
You're more than welcome. It's been too long since we last talked all the things,
the treasures of Tutankhamun. We picked five particular objects a couple of years ago, which was very, very interesting. But now, I must admit, we're going on to a pet favourite
topic of mine, the last dynasty of ancient Egypt, the Ptolemies.
And the original Ptolemy, Toby, the man who founds this dynasty,
he is an extraordinary figure.
He is.
I mean, he starts off as a military man,
rising up to the top of the army under Alexander the Great,
with whom he has already become great friends, even before
Alexander becomes king. And he ends up as pharaoh of Egypt. I mean, what an extraordinary journey
in one man's lifetime. And set the scene for us, I mean, time-wise, Toby, last time we were talking
all about Tutankhamun, but Egyptian history, it is so long, it's ancient history. How much later are we talking about with Ptolemy I, Alexander,
after, let's say, 18th dynasty, New Kingdom Egypt? Yes. So our period now is the 4th century BC. So
we're talking about 1100 years after the height of the New Kingdom, or a thousand years after Tutankhamen's time.
Ptolemy himself was born in 367, and he is recognised as pharaoh of Egypt in 304,
and dies in 284. So we're really spanning, I suppose, the second half of the 4th century.
And as you've highlighted there, born in 367, but only crowned pharaoh 304,
that is over 60 years. So this field is important to highlight straight away, Toby.
Ptolemy I, the original Ptolemy, he is not Egyptian.
No, he is not. He is of Macedonian Greek heritage. He grows up in the kingdom of Macedon under King Philip,
Alexander the Great's father. He is brought up at court, at the royal court, where he gets to know
the young Alexander, still then a prince, and they take lessons together. In fact, they're taught by
some of the greatest thinkers of the time. And then when Alexander
the Great succeeds his father as king and embarks on this extraordinary series of military campaigns
to forge a new empire, his childhood friend Ptolemy becomes one of his closest lieutenants.
And that would have been enough for most people's careers to follow a great military
leader across the known world, conquering lands and forging an empire. But as you say, in his 60s,
all sorts of other extraordinary things happened to Ptolemy.
Absolutely. And do we know when Ptolemy's fascination with Egypt begins? Because I
know in Alexander's conquests, one of those conquests is the takeover of Egypt. So presumably,
because I know in Alexander's conquests, one of those conquests is the takeover of Egypt. So presumably he first sees Egypt much earlier in his life. Yes, so Ptolemy first visits Egypt with
Alexander the Great in 332. This is when Alexander is welcomed by the Egyptians as a conquering hero,
mainly because he's delivered them from the hated Persians who had been ruling Egypt
for a couple of centuries before
Alexander's arrival. So Ptolemy arrives as a military general in the following of Alexander
the Great. This is his first encounter with Egypt. And in particular, I suppose, it must have been
three episodes in that early visit to Egypt that would have really resonated with Ptolemy. The first was
when Alexander marched to the ancient capital of Memphis, the traditional capital city of ancient
Egypt for 3,000 years, to be formally recognized as pharaoh, no doubt with a whole series of
elaborate ceremonials and rituals. And that depth and antiquity of
ancient Egyptian civilization must have really imprinted themselves on Ptolemy. And then he
follows Alexander to the remote Siwa oasis out in the Libyan desert, where there is an oracle,
which surprise, surprise, proclaims that Alexander is the son of God and he is a worthy
pharaoh. But again, that encounter with ancient Egyptian religion up close and personal must have
left a really strong mark with Ptolemy. And then finally, Alexander's parting gift to Egypt before
he leaves the country never to return to continue his campaigning, is the foundation of a new city
on the Mediterranean coast. Of course, we know it today as Alexandria. But the vision there for this
great new metropolis that was both in Egypt but also looking out to the wider Mediterranean world,
again, a moment of great importance in Ptolemy's life.
Very great. And it kind of sets the scene as to that fascination Ptolemy has with Egypt. And as
you've mentioned there, Toby, so Alexander the Great continues his conquests. Ptolemy goes with
him further east, defeating the Persians and then going as far as India. And then just under a
decade later, you get Alexander the Great's death in 323 BC, the massive chaos that erupts
after that. And Toby, set the scene for us, set the scene of this chaos. Ptolemy, how does he
manage to secure Egypt in this chaos that follows Alexander's death?
Well, I think this is a measure of Ptolemy's strategic and tactical brilliance. Because you can well imagine that the scene after Alexander's
death at Babylon, he has forged literally with his own power and might, this enormous empire
that stretches all the way from the Aegean to India, as you've said. And without that controlling presence, that controlling genius, the empire risks falling
apart. And there are a small circle of companions around Alexander who sort of vie for supremacy
and they want to control this empire. But I think it very quickly becomes apparent
that nobody really other than Alexander himself could hold this whole empire
together. And so you start to get people jostling for position to inherit parts of his kingdom.
And what happens is that different members of Alexander's former inner circle make bids for
power. And Ptolemy is very shrewd here because he's been to Egypt, he's witnessed the
country, and in particular, the country's huge agricultural wealth. That must have made an
impression on him. Egypt, with the fertility of the Nile, was famed throughout the ancient world
as a great breadbasket, a great supplier of food and other commodities. And it also had the great advantage
compared to other parts of Alexander's empire of being relatively easily defended. Egypt sits
within natural borders, the Mediterranean Sea to the north, the Red Sea to the east,
the Sahara Desert to the west. And so unlike parts of Asia, parts of the Greek world,
Egypt is much easier to defend as a kingdom on its own terms. And so Ptolemy evidently decides,
if I want a piece of the action, the best bet for me, both in terms of being easily defended from
aggression and in terms of being a really wealthy
kingdom is Egypt and he has the advantage of having been there and known something of the
lay of the land so he very quickly after Alexander's death makes his way to Egypt and is
recognized not as king immediately but as governor of Egypt, satrap to use the Persian term for the governor.
But very quickly, he starts to effectively rule Egypt, even though he is nominally paying homage
to Alexander's designated successors. That state of affairs really continues for nearly 20 years until eventually logic dictates that Ptolemy is recognised as king
and he's acclaimed as pharaoh, and so begins the reign of the first of the last dynasty.
I mean, Toby, it is absolutely fascinating. Before we kind of go on chronologically,
I feel I must take a step back because as you've beautifully elaborated then, it seems we do know
quite a bit about Ptolemy's
background, his story with Alexander and that immediate aftermath, how he takes control
of Egypt. How do we know this? What types of sources do we have? I'm guessing we have texts
if it's around the time of Alexander, but do we have other types of sources too?
Yes, it's a very good question. So there are a number of accounts of Alexander the Great's life,
campaigning, and death written by his biographers, and they help to elucidate some of the details
around both the campaigning but also the political machinations that followed Alexander's death.
And Ptolemy himself was also a noted scholar. I mean, as I say, he'd had lessons with the young Alexander. They'd been
taught by no lesser person than Aristotle. He thought of himself as a scholar as much as a
war leader. And so he also encouraged around him people to compile histories, to compile natural
histories, and to record and write about him and his reign and the land of Egypt. So
actually, our documentary evidence for the Ptolemaic period is very rich and diverse.
That's interesting. So one of the sources there, Toby, which I find fascinating with Ptolemy is
that he's quite a good PR man, isn't he? He's almost like Julius Caesar or Darius the Great
in the fact that he also writes
about himself. And I'm guessing with his own account, he puts himself in quite a good light.
He does. I mean, he is an early example and a long line that stretches all the way down to
Winston Churchill and beyond of people writing their own accounts of great military campaigns,
which portray them in the best possible light. But I think
even cutting through that spin, there's no doubting Ptolemy's huge accomplishment. I mean,
he not only creates Egypt as his own kingdom, but he sets up buffer zones around Egypt,
which ensure that Egypt retains its autonomy, retains its independence for the next
300 years, unlike all the other parts of Alexander's former empire, which get conquered
and reconquered successively. So he is a master of spin, but he's also a master of political and
military strategy. There's no doubt about that.
I'm very happy you mentioned those buffer zones. We'll get to those quickly, but I must ask one other question in Ptolemy's consolidating of his control over Egypt. Because that aftermath of
Alexander's death, Toby, the Wars of the Successes, one of the most chaotic, tumultuous times in
ancient history, and surely given how lucrative and, as you said, defendable Egypt was,
surely other figures soon enough, they start looking at Ptolemy in Egypt and thinking,
actually, I want to take control of that for myself. Does Ptolemy in those early years,
is it very much him having to fight for his spear one possession that he has to defend and win to
maintain control? He absolutely does. And this is where his brilliance as a military tactician come to the fore.
There was no doubt that other of Alexander's successors would have loved
Egypt as part of their realm.
And indeed, in 312, so this is just over a decade after Alexander's death,
there is an attempted invasion of Egypt by one of the other successors. But what
Ptolemy does, really from the word go, from the moment of Alexander's death, from the moment that
Ptolemy arrives in Egypt, he starts to build up his own military force, because I think he knows
that an attack won't be long in coming. So he builds his own defences. But as I've said, he
also adopts a very clever strategy of surrounding
Egypt proper, which is always going to be the heart of his kingdom, with a series of buffer
zones. So for example, he conquers Cyprus and takes control of that island, which is a key
strategic location in the eastern Mediterranean. He annexes Cyrenaica, which is modern-day coastal Libya, so protecting Egypt from invasion from
the west. So he puts in place pieces of a kind of geographical jigsaw puzzle around Egypt,
not really with the intention of conquering a larger empire, but absolutely as a defensive ring,
a sort of cordon sanitaire around Egypt,
because what he wants to preserve above all is the integrity of the Nile Valley as his new kingdom.
And I guess also, Toby, in that you've got, and I know you looked at this a lot,
because this seems to be a constant area of tension between Ptolemy, his successors,
and these other kingdoms that form following Alexander the Great's death.
This area of the ancient name is Syria, so that Syrian coastline.
Yes. I mean, of course, coastal Syria had been conquered by Egyptian pharaohs way back in the New Kingdom before Tutankhamen's time. It was rich in natural resources, the great timber stands in Lebanon, access to minerals and other raw
materials. And it was also of huge strategic importance as an outpost to prevent invasion
from those other great kingdoms of the ancient world, whether that be Assyria or Persia.
So it was always of strategic interest to Egypt and is likewise of strategic
interest to Ptolemy. So yes, coastal Syria is another part of his defensive ring around Egypt,
and that is fought over over the successive generations regularly. But nonetheless,
Ptolemy's initial vision for encircling Egypt with a kind of protective
ring of steel holds. And the result is that Egypt is the longest lived of the post-Alexander
kingdoms. It's the last one to give up the ghost under the famous Cleopatra,
when all the others have fallen to the might of Rome long before.
You're absolutely right there. And I feel one other object, body, we should talk about that
seems closely entwined with Ptolemy's vision and, of course, the whole legacy of the Ptolemies,
the successors of Ptolemy I, is Alexander the Great's body. This is big, isn't it? How does
Alexander the Great's body end up in Ptolemy's possession? It is quite the story. It is quite a story. And it really illustrates the sort of talismanic quality
of Alexander the Great in death as well as in life. So Alexander dies in Babylon in 323. And
he's laid down quite careful instructions for his funeral and burial.
And his intention was that he should be taken back to the ancestral royal burial ground in Macedon for burial there.
And so the body sets out in a great sort of funeral procession from Babylon, destined for Macedon, an awfully long way,
and would have taken a great deal of time. Well, it makes its way through Persia,
through Mesopotamia, through Syria, and then it's hijacked en route. Ptolemy sends his trusted team, his A-list team, to carry out one of the
most audacious acts in ancient history, which is to capture, to seize Alexander's body en route
to its originally designed burial place. And he diverts the funeral cortege from Syria southwards to Egypt at the point of a
spear. So Alexander's body is brought to Egypt, and this becomes incredibly important symbolically
for Ptolemy. If he's presenting himself as Alexander's successor and as a legitimate pharaoh,
as Alexander's successor and as a legitimate pharaoh. What more powerful symbol could he have in his new kingdom than the body of his predecessor? And I think here he's also tapping
into this very ancient Egyptian belief, which is that how does somebody become a legitimate pharaoh?
They become a legitimate pharaoh by overseeing the burial of their predecessor. That was a rule that was sort of hardwired into ancient Egyptian thought for
hundreds, if not thousands of years. And so Ptolemy, by presiding over the reburial of Alexander,
initially at Memphis, and then subsequently in Alexandria itself. He is saying, I am the legitimate heir of Alexander
because I have buried his body and I have given him his funeral rites in accordance with tradition.
So it's a brilliant and audacious plan, but it works. And the result is that Ptolemy and his
dynasty sort of become unimpeachably pharaonic.
Absolutely. And it's so interesting, isn't it? Because he then is able to fend off this
invasion by another of the successors, a man called Perdiccas, and that helps Ptolemy keep
control of Alexander's body. And you mentioned something really interesting there, first of all,
Toby, because when someone mentions the Ptolemies, you might immediately think Alexandria. But at least at the early
stages of Ptolemy I's reign, Alexandria is still being built. And his capital is, in fact,
that old traditional Egyptian capital further south along the River Nile at Memphis.
Yes. And what's really interesting about Ptolemy, and again, I think it gives you a sense of the man
and his brilliance as a political strategist. He doesn't do what a
lot of invaders might do and simply surround himself with a small coterie of his fellow
Macedonians. He deliberately brings into the highest echelons of government native Egyptians,
people indeed who have served under the last native Egyptian pharaoh.
And who was that, by the way, Toby, if you're saying that the Persians were in Egypt before
Alexander? Because that seems going quite a bit further back.
Yeah. So the Persians, this is a complicated history. The Persians had first conquered Egypt
in around 525. They'd held control of Egypt for quite a long period. They'd then been ousted
by a dynasty of native Egyptian pharaohs who we call
the 30th dynasty. And then after the last of the native pharaohs, Nectanebo II, the Persians had
come back in and had ruled Egypt for a matter of decades before Alexander arrived. So it was a bit
of a to and fro, but there had been this last native pharaoh, Nectar
Nebo II, born and raised in Egypt.
And men who had served under him were brought back into the government by Ptolemy because
they knew Egypt better than anybody else.
And he was also presenting himself not so much as a conqueror, but as a new legitimate
pharaoh.
And so he wanted to buy the loyalty and the support of the native population as well. And this means he's ruling from Memphis,
the traditional capital. He's advised by a number of key figures from the Egyptian aristocracy.
And so it's much easier for him to gain traction as a foreign ruler of Egypt because he's
wrapping himself in pharaonic
clothes, quite literally and metaphorically. And as you say, for the first decades of his time in
Egypt, Alexandria is being built. And one of the amusing things here is that the ancient Egyptians
continue to refer to Alexandria as the building site.
That's their nickname for Alexandria.
And long after it's been finished and inaugurated as a great capital city,
they still somewhat contemptuously refer to it, oh, the building site.
Is this the Egyptian word rakotis?
It is. It's raket in ancient Egyptian.
It becomes rakotis in its Greek form, and it simply means the building site,
which was their rather pejorative description of the greatest city in the ancient world.
it's so clever of Ptolemy isn't it especially as you say he is at the end of the day a foreign ruler I mean he is not a royal blood he's a general Macedonian coming in taking control of
Egypt slowly consolidating his rule not just by linking Alexander the Great
to his governing of Egypt, but also the last native Egyptian pharaoh. Do you start seeing
very quickly Ptolemy, for that idea of legitimacy, linking himself not just with Alexander,
but also that last Egyptian pharaoh, Nectanebo II?
Yes, and there's one very important way in which he does that. So Ptolemy knows,
because he's a brilliant scholar, but he's also being well advised by native Egyptians.
He knows that one of the core duties of an Egyptian pharaoh is to build and beautify the
temples of the gods. And that's how pharaohs are judged by posterity. And he embarks very quickly. In fact,
even before he's recognized as king, even while he's still satrap, governor of Egypt,
he embarks upon a program of restoring and beautifying the temples, but not just any
temples. He's very clever in choosing temples that were either built or added to by Nectonebo II. And then he starts to complete
that work and beautify them further. And that's a very deliberate policy on Ptolemy's part,
linking himself with the last native Egyptian pharaoh and saying, I am continuing the work
of Nectonebo II. I am his legitimate successor. Not only am I Alexander's legitimate
successor, but I'm also now casting myself as the heir to Neptonibo II, carrying on his program of
temple construction. So the strategic aims are just brilliantly executed.
And should we also say here, Toby, as we kind of alluded to at the start,
getting in the mindset of someone like Ptolemy, as you hinted, as you mentioned, a Greeks had a fascination for Egypt. They recognized
that its civilization was of great antiquity. It was also thought of as the source of great wisdom
and knowledge. And Greeks had been in Egypt for a long time. I mean, Greek traders first arrived in Egypt in the 6th century. So there
was a certain degree of knowledge in the wider Greek world about ancient Egypt and a huge respect
and wonder at its civilization. And so both for Alexander and for Ptolemy,
they are embracing something of kind of almost mystical importance.. Although Ptolemy is a very clear-sighted
man, he's a very scholarly man, he's a very good tactician, I think he also recognizes the deep
spiritual significance of pharaonic civilization and seeks to build on that in a way that previous
foreign conquerors of Egypt had not done. So he does absolutely embrace what it is to be a pharaoh.
And I think this is what makes the last dynasty such a long-lived and successful dynasty,
is that they're not ruling Egypt as foreigners,
although they are foreigners and most of them don't speak Egyptian. They are trying to rule
Egypt as legitimate pharaohs. And that really is what makes them unique in the post-Alexander world.
And I know that the large amount of our chat is focused on just Ptolemy I, but I feel it's a
great microcosm for,
as you hinted at there, Toby, understanding the long-lasting success of the Ptolemies and
the practices that ensure this dynasty continues, albeit, let's be honest, also quite a bit of
backstabbing in the court, as we might get to as time goes on. But in regards to acting like
pharaohs, like Ptolemy I, do we see this in how Ptolemy depicts
himself in art too? Yes, and here we get a sense of the two aspects, the two faces, quite literally,
of Ptolemaic rule. Ptolemy and his successors have quite a difficult balancing act. They have
to present themselves to the native population of Egypt as
legitimate pharaohs, but they're also facing another direction. They're facing towards the
Mediterranean world, they're facing towards the Greek-speaking world, and indeed large numbers
of Greek-speaking immigrants who flood into Alexandria and more widely into Egypt under
the Ptolemies. So for that audience, Ptolemy has to present himself
as a hero, a heroic figure in the Greek tradition. You see this in the art. If the king is
commissioning portable sculpture for a Greek context, it will show Ptolemy as a Greek heroic
leader with the sort of tousled locks that Alexander made famous
statuary in the Greek tradition. But in the temples of Egypt, he's shown exactly as pharaohs
have been shown for centuries and millennia, according to the styles and traditions of
ancient Egyptian art. He bears a series of Greek titles, but he also wraps himself in the full pharaonic titulary
of the pharaohs of old. So he is facing quite literally two ways, but using art, architecture,
and religion to do both of those things at the same time, to portray himself as a legitimate,
heroic Greek leader, but also as a fully-fledged pharaoh.
Does coinage also come into this? Because sometimes we always overlook coins, but they're so
interesting sometimes for getting more of an idea of that portrayal of the ruler and how far it
stretches. Coinage is largely unknown in ancient Egypt, but it is very much a feature of the Greek
world. And the coins minted by Ptolemy I and his successors are really aimed, I would say,
at the wider Greek world, which is where coinage is in greater use as a medium of exchange.
So the iconography of Ptolemaic coinage speaks to the Greek aspect of Ptolemaic rule.
And you see the same sort of elements that you would see on the coins of Alexander and other post-Alexander
rulers. That perhaps starts to break down a little bit later on in the Ptolemaic period when,
to be frank, the shine has slightly worn off the Ptolemaic dynasty in Greek eyes,
but they're still very much regarded as legitimate pharaohs by the Egyptians. And then you start to
see more pharaonic iconography sort
of creeping into the coinage. So it is quite an interesting lens through which to examine the
changing face, the changing portrayal of Ptolemaic rule. Before we go on to Alexandria and a bit more
on governing, and I'd like to talk a bit about his family and then legacy, Toby, I'd like to just
quickly ask a little bit more about that key date that you've mentioned already.
I think you said 304 BC,
when Ptolemy goes from governor,
from satrap to king, to pharaoh.
And so this is basically almost two decades
since Alexander the Great's death.
The official heirs of Alexander
that you've also mentioned in passing,
they're both dead by this time.
It'd been two
decades of chaos and turbulence for the successor wars. Why does Ptolemy then decide that that is
the time to take that? And let's remember, this is a huge step for someone who wasn't born into
royalty to take this huge step of becoming a king. Yes, it is. And he's very cautious. I mean,
as you can tell, he waits nearly two decades before making a sort of reality of the situation and adopting royal titles.
The trigger for this is actually the adoption of royal titles by the rulers of other parts of Alexander's empire.
So when the ruler of the Asian domains and the ruler of Macedon and the Greek domains, when they adopt royal titles, essentially saying,
you know what, Alexander's dynasty is over, his successors are dead, we're the new rulers now,
and we're going to make ourselves kings. It's only when they do that that Ptolemy
follows suit. I suppose maybe this is down to his deep loyalty to Alexander, his childhood friend.
He maintains this sort of veneer that Alexander's successors are ruling and reigning until really
that becomes an untenable position. Everybody else has said, no, this is over, we're the new
kings. And then Ptolemy follows suit. So he is quite cautious. That's probably the only area in which
he shows a degree of caution. And I think you can possibly ascribe it to his lingering loyalty for
Alexander. But of course, what it does then is simply confirm what has already been effective
on the ground, which is Ptolemy is the monarch. He is the sole ruler. And as far as the Egyptians
are concerned,
he's kind of been a pharaoh for the last 20 years anyway, even if he wasn't formally designated as
such. I mean, absolutely. I mean, you mentioned that kind of strong loyalty to Alexander. So
is the cult of Alexander, well, first with Ptolemy and then his successors, of all places in the
Mediterranean, is it particularly strong in Egypt that he becomes like an ancient Egyptian
god almost? Well, yes. Alexander the Great was careful to patronise some of the key temples
during his very short stay in Egypt, so putting himself in the long line of traditional pharaohs.
And the siege of Alexander's body by Ptolemy does give the Ptolemaic dynasty this
very special kind of seal of approval. And indeed, it's very telling that Ptolemy and his successors
are buried in the same mausoleum as Alexander in Alexandria. It's almost as if the presence
of the great conqueror himself lends legitimacy
to the entire dynasty that follows. And I'm sure Ptolemy would have wanted himself to
be seen as not the founder of a new dynasty perhaps, but as the successor of both Alexander
and of Neptunebo II. So it's a rather nuanced way of presenting himself because, as you say,
he wasn't born into royalty. He assumes royalty, but one of the ways in which he makes that a
success is by taking on the trappings and the aura of these two great figures of the past,
Neptunebo the last Egyptian pharaoh, and Alexander the Great. Dive into Peloton workouts that work with you. From meditating at your kid's game to mastering a strength program,
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Well, let's move on to Alexandria. So Toby, you mentioned how when Ptolemy begins his reign,
Alexandria is still very much a building site, and that kind of cheeky quip of Alexandria by the Egyptians. When does Ptolemy decide to take that step of moving from the
traditional capital of Memphis to relocating to right by the Mediterranean coast and establishing
his capital at Alexandria? Yes, I mean, it's quite late in his reign, actually. You know,
I suppose it's really signalled by the move of Alexander's
body from Memphis to Alexandria. That kind of signals that Alexandria is now the new capital.
And it's a mistake to think that Alexandria was all kind of done and dusted. It remains a building
site for many, many decades. Its initial layout is dictated by
Alexander the Great himself. He lays out the axes of the principal roads. He sets his seal on what
he wants his city to become and the key monuments and buildings that will be part of it. I mean,
Alexandria seems to be formally designated the capital around 311. So this is 12 years after
Alexander's death, 12 years after Ptolemy has become satrap, 10 years really, a decade after
Alexander's body has been brought to Egypt. But it is and remains a work in progress for some
considerable time. And one mustn't think that Alexandria immediately eclipses Memphis. Memphis
remains an important administrative centre for the whole of the Nile Valley, both in commercial,
political, and indeed in religious terms. So Alexandria is the sort of Mediterranean-facing
capital in Egypt, but Memphis retains a huge importance, as indeed does Thebes as the great
religious centre further south. And you've said how he's building or adding more buildings to
those of previous pharaohs like Nectanebo, these temples and so on along the River Nile.
But at Alexandria itself, are there any particular grand monuments or art that Ptolemy is very much
the patron of that he decides to fund when he
moves his capital there to further adorn this capital that's being built?
I mean, undoubtedly, Ptolemy's greatest legacy to Alexandria, to the Mediterranean world,
indeed to human history, is the Museon, the Temple of the Muses in Alexandria, which is designed to be a new
scholarly academy. I mean, it's been called the first university in world history. The history
of that is very interesting. Ptolemy was a great scholar, as we've already discussed. He also
recognises that scholarship is one of the ways in which you claim glory in the ancient
Greek world. Athens is famed not only for its political dynamism, but above all as a great
centre of scholarship. Ptolemy wants to seize Athens' crown as the great centre of learning in the ancient world. And so he invites a man called
Demetrios of Phaleron to come from Athens to Alexandria and set up an academy which is
deliberately designed to rival Plato's academy in Athens. And it's called the Museon, Museum in
Latin, which means a temple of the muses.
But in fact, it was a bit like a modern college.
It was designed to provide board and lodging for scholars.
In fact, they were paid stipends by the state so that they didn't have to worry about earning
a living.
They could simply devote themselves to scholarship.
There were communal dining areas.
There were shady porticos
where scholars could walk and debate. Museon held drinking parties and debates on great topics of
interest. And eventually, a library is founded to accompany this scholarly academy, which turns
into the Great Library of Alexandria and the greatest repository of knowledge in the ancient world. And I think that above all is Ptolemy's great legacy,
as I say, to human history, as well as to the history of Egypt.
And it's also really interesting, isn't it? Because you said the Museon,
and then other people think of the lighthouse of Alexandria, and all those kind of big monuments, isn't it?
But many of those things, do they come after Ptolemy I?
Or is it much later that they're kind of seen in all their glory?
But Ptolemy I, he almost sets the benchmark
for many of these things that we come to associate with Alexandria.
That's right.
I mean, the museon and the library,
they're up and running before Ptolemy I's death.
So they very much
begin during his reign and they're subsequently enlarged and aggrandized in future reigns.
The lighthouse of Alexandria, the famous Pharos, that also seems to have been initiated very late
in Ptolemy's reign, but it's really a monument that we associate more with his successor, Ptolemy II.
But I think there's no doubt that while Alexander the Great set the blueprint for Alexandria in
terms of the layout of the city, it's Ptolemy I who fashions that into a great dynastic capital,
a centre of culture, a centre of commerce, a jewel in the crown of Ptolemaic Egypt that
attracts settlers, fortune seekers from across the Mediterranean world and remains this most
extraordinary of cities and arguably the greatest metropolis in the ancient world.
That, I think, is Ptolemy I's legacy. Before we completely wrap up with his
legacy, I'd also like to ask about his family. Do we know much about Ptolemy's family? Are there
any big family troubles, or is he able to keep a lid on that as well as he sets up his dynasty?
Well, yes. Ptolemy I, perhaps, is the least complicated of all of the Ptolemaic rulers in terms of his family
relationships because they were a dynasty known for their internecine bloodshed and all sorts of
very strange goings on. Ptolemy I, he marries three times. I mean, one of those wives is at
the mass wedding in Susa when Alexander encourages all of his close circle to marry Iranian women.
As soon as Alexander's off the scene, Ptolemy very quickly divorces that wife and marries a
woman of similar Greek origins to himself. So he has a relatively stable family life once he's
ensconced in Egypt. But as I say, things go downhill fairly rapidly after that. And one
of the characteristics of the Ptolemies is brothers marrying sisters and uncles marrying
nieces and all sorts of strange goings on and murders and incest. But I think we probably can't
lay that at the feet of Ptolemy I. I think that's his successors who really weave that tangled web.
And does it end quite well for Toby? You've got Ptolemy II, so his son and successor,
but there's so many other figures from this, you know, former generals of Alexander the Great,
but let's face it, they don't have a good end. They're normally murdered or they're killed in
battle. With Ptolemy I, does he actually have quite a good death and end, at least compared
to others at the time? Yes, he does. And, is pretty remarkable is that he dies into his 80s. In the ancient world,
this is an extraordinary age for anybody to achieve, let alone somebody who's lived such a
colourful life on the battlefield and so on. He can look back on his life with a huge sense of accomplishment. He has
uniquely amongst Alexander's successors forged a kingdom that is secure in its own borders and
prosperous. He has established a new city as the glittering capital of his kingdom and as a magnet
for the wider world. He set it up as a great centre of
learning to rival Athens. He has a dynasty in the making. He has a son and heir who he very shrewdly
appoints as co-ruler before his own death to ensure a smooth succession. So really uniquely
amongst Alexander's successors, Ptolemy is a success story. And the legacy of that is a kingdom that remains
strong, prosperous, and crucially independent for the next two and a half centuries, which is
a unique accomplishment. I mean, Toby, it is fascinating because sometimes I think we look
at Alexander and then we look at Rome, knowing with that hindsight that Rome is ultimately going
to become the top dog in that area of the world.
But you've kind of answered my final question to you, which would have been, does it seem
his significance as him laying the groundwork for this powerful, intellectual, rich powerhouse
in the Eastern Mediterranean?
I mean, before the rise of Rome, surely Ptolemaic Egypt, it will become the superpower of the
time in the Eastern Mediterranean.
And a lot of that goes back to Ptolemy. It does indeed. I mean, it becomes the most significant political power
in this so-called Hellenistic period, the period between the death of Alexander and the rise of
Rome. Ptolemaic Egypt is the stable factor in what is a very unpredictable part of the world.
in what is a very unpredictable part of the world. And its longevity, its success, its prosperity,
all part of Ptolemy's vision. And I think it just reinforces once again our impression of a man with extraordinary abilities, tactically and strategically, a great statesman, great general,
a great scholar, really one of the most accomplished figures,
I think, in the whole of ancient history. I completely agree. And I was very grateful
that you allowed us to focus in on this particular figure today. Toby, this has been brilliant. And
you cover the story, the rise, reign of Ptolemy I and the other Ptolemies in your new book,
which is called? The Last Dynasty, Ancient Egypt from Alexander the Great
to Cleopatra. Fantastic. Toby, it just goes for me to say thank you so much for coming
back on the podcast. It's been a great pleasure. Thank you.
Well, there you go. There was Dr. Toby Wilkinson talking you through the extraordinary rise and
reign of Ptolemy I and how he forged the great Ptolemaic dynasty
in Egypt. What an interview that was. Thank you for listening to this episode of The Ancients.
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