Queen Berenice

1st–4th Centuries
Ancient stone tablet with engraved Greek inscription in several lines, showing clear and well-defined letters.
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Berenice, queen of Chalcis, a tiny kingdom in the mountains of Lebanon, was a great-granddaughter of Herod the Great, daughter of King Agrippa I, and sister of King Herod Agrippa II. Berenice became queen of Chalcis after her marriage to her father’s brother, Herod of Chalcis. She retained the title after her husband’s death and continued to rule over the kingdom with her brother, Agrippa II, with whom she was rumored to have an incestuous relationship. She later married Polemo, king of Cilicia, but ultimately left him. Berenice was present in Jerusalem during the First Jewish Revolt (66–73 CE) and according to Roman historians began a love affair with the future emperor Titus. For the larger context of Berenice’s interactions with the Roman procurators Festius and Florus in the years leading up to the First Jewish Revolt, see “Roman Corruption” and “The First Flames of War.”

Berenice is mentioned several times in Josephus’ Jewish Antiquities and The Jewish War and also figures in his autobiography, Life of Josephus, which mentions her support for Josephus’ enemy Justus of Tiberius. Berenice also appears in the Acts of the Apostles and in the writings of Suetonius, Tacitus, Dio Cassius, Juvenal, and Quintilian, and she is mentioned in inscriptions from Qalaat Faqra, Beirut, and Athens.

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Berenice’s Birth and Marriages

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Agrippa had two sons and three daughters by Cypros. [The…

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Agrippa and Berenice Avert War with Rome

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At this time it happened that King Agrippa was out of the country: he…

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Berenice’s Petitions on Behalf of Justus

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And you, Justus, would have paid the penalty by the order of Vespasian, had not King Agrippa, although he received the authority to put you to death, [merely] imprisoned you in chains for a long time…

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Berenice and Agrippa Sit in Judgment of Paul

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Three days after [the Roman procurator] Festus had arrived in the province, he went up from Caesarea to Jerusalem where the chief…

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Titus and Berenice

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Titus Vespasianus had been dispatched by his father from Judaea. [ . . . ] These considerations and others like them made him waver between hope and fear; but hope finally won. Some believed that he…

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Titus Sends Berenice Away

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Besides cruelty, he [Titus] was also suspected of riotous living, since he protracted his revels until the middle of the night with the most prodigal of his friends; likewise of unchastity because of…