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Ancient History, Teens - Biography, Historical Biography - Ancient Era, Children - Social Studies, Egypt & the Nile Valley - Ancient History, Children - Biography, British & Irish Drama
Cleopatra: Egypt's Last Pharoah by Don Nardo β€” book cover

Cleopatra: Egypt's Last Pharoah

by Don Nardo
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Synopsis

Examines the life and reign of the woman who ruled Egypt from 51 to 30 B.C. and discusses her relationship with two powerful Roman leaders, Julius Caesar and Mark Antony.

School Library Journal

Gr 6-10-Quoting extensively from 19th- and 20th-century Egyptologists, as well as from available ancient sources, Nardo presents a great deal of information in a smooth narrative, accompanied by archival photographs and reproductions of artifacts, illustrations from the past century or so, and even scenes taken from films and documentaries. Artistry looks at pyramids, colossal statues, tombs, and temples, as well as at the lives of the workers who built them. Arts covers music, dance, board games, and hunting and fishing, along with the wealth of artwork that survives. Nardo discusses the social status of the people who created these works and notes how different the Egyptian concept of art was from our own. Mummies looks at the rituals connected with the dead and the afterlife, as well as creation stories, beliefs about the major gods, and ritual practice. These three sociological titles will serve report writers well. Cleopatra also features quotations from ancient authors, along with Nardo's discussion of how many of these authors were biased, for or against one of the most powerful women in history. He includes her romantic liaisons with Julius Caesar and Marc Antony, which he does not see as mere political unions, and makes it clear that these were not the only reasons for her importance as leader of Egypt. A final chapter looks at how Cleopatra has been rendered in literature.-Coop Renner, Hillside Elementary, El Paso, TX Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

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Editorials

School Library Journal

Gr 6-10-Quoting extensively from 19th- and 20th-century Egyptologists, as well as from available ancient sources, Nardo presents a great deal of information in a smooth narrative, accompanied by archival photographs and reproductions of artifacts, illustrations from the past century or so, and even scenes taken from films and documentaries. Artistry looks at pyramids, colossal statues, tombs, and temples, as well as at the lives of the workers who built them. Arts covers music, dance, board games, and hunting and fishing, along with the wealth of artwork that survives. Nardo discusses the social status of the people who created these works and notes how different the Egyptian concept of art was from our own. Mummies looks at the rituals connected with the dead and the afterlife, as well as creation stories, beliefs about the major gods, and ritual practice. These three sociological titles will serve report writers well. Cleopatra also features quotations from ancient authors, along with Nardo's discussion of how many of these authors were biased, for or against one of the most powerful women in history. He includes her romantic liaisons with Julius Caesar and Marc Antony, which he does not see as mere political unions, and makes it clear that these were not the only reasons for her importance as leader of Egypt. A final chapter looks at how Cleopatra has been rendered in literature.-Coop Renner, Hillside Elementary, El Paso, TX Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Hazel Rochman

This illustrated, detailed biography discusses the life of the legendary queen in relation to the politics and power struggles of ancient Egypt and Rome. Nardo draws on the accounts of her Roman enemies (the influential leaders and writers of her time) as well as the views of later historians to show how racism and sexism built up the image of Cleopatra as a treacherous, exotic manipulator who seduced Julius Caesar and Mark Antony to their doom. Nardo quotes evidence to suggest that she was, in fact, a strong, intelligent, and caring ruler. Part of the Importance Of series, this biography includes many well-documented quotes from primary and secondary sources, and the text is broken up with illustrations and boxed insets on every page. So many of the illustrations depict Cleopatra as a voluptuous, near-nude vamp--whether in a Hollywood movie still of Elizabeth Taylor or a sketch by Michelangelo--that the coy seductress image may be reinforced despite all the protestations of the text. However, this is sure to stimulate interest in a historical figure who is a strong woman for our time.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2005
Publisher
Cengage Gale
Pages
112
Format
Library Binding
ISBN
9781590186602

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