By Damien Gayle | DailyMail
An archaeologist who claimed to have found the bones of Cleopatras murdered half-sister says they are pinning their hopes on new forensic techniques to conclusively identify the remains.
It was claimed that the remains of Princess Arsine IV, who was murdered more than 2,000 years ago on the orders of Egypts queen Cleopatra, were the first relics of the Ptolemaic dynasty to be identified.
But rival experts have since said the evidence linking the bones to the princess is largely circumstantial, and even the researcher who found them admits they have been handled too many times to get a reliable DNA test result.
Nevertheless, Dr Hilke Thuer, from the Austrian Academy of Science, who made the discovery, remains convinced that they belonged to the Classical-era Egyptian royal.
The site of the Temple of Artemis in Ephesus, where Cleopatra had her sister Arsinoe murdered.
Princess Arsinoes purported remains were found in a tomb in Ephesus, a large and important ancient Greek city on the coast of Asia Minor, in what is now modern-day western Turkey.
She was Cleopatras younger sister or half-sister. It is believed both were fathered by Ptolemy XII Auletes, but whether they shared a mother is unclear.
Still, however closely they were related by blood, there was no love lost between Arsinoe and her powerful sister.
Face of a princess? A 3D computer model of the face of Arsinoe made from remains discovered in Ephesus which archaeologists believe were hers.
A power struggle between Cleopatra and her brother Ptolemy XIII, in which the legendary seductress enlisted the help of Julius Caesar, saw the younger sister join the Egyptian army to resist Romes legions, LiveScience reported.
After Cleopatras victory with Romes help, Arsinoe was taken captive and allowed to live in exile in Ephesus. But, it is believed, the Egyptian queen continued to see her younger sister as a threat.
After Caesars assassination, she persuaded her new lover, Mark Antony, to have Arsinoe murdered in 41BC.
Two-thousand years later, in 1904, archaeologists excavating Ephesus found a ruined structure which they dubbed the Octagon after its unusual shape.
Further digs in 1926 revealed a grave chamber within the Octagon, inside of which were found the bones of a woman judged to be about 20 years old.
Dr Thuer, who is an expert in ancient architecture, told the Charlotte Observer: When I was working with the architecture of The Octagon and the building next to it, it wasnt known whose skeleton was inside.
Then I found some ancient writers telling us that in the year 41 B.C., Arsinoe IV the half-sister of Cleopatra was murdered in Ephesus by Cleopatra and her Roman lover, Marc Antony.
Because the building is dated by its type and decoration to the second half of the first century B.C., this fits quite well.
That clue combined with the fact that in ancient times only special people were buried within cities themselves, the octagonal shape which resembles the Lighthouse of Alexandria, and the fact the bones are female, left her convinced the bones were those of the Egyptian princess.
Curetes was one of the main streets in ancient Ephesus, and the site of the long-destroyed Octagon. This photo has been manipulated to superimpose a facsimile of the Octagon in its location, at left.
The initial opening to the burial chamber was small, and the Austrian team which first excavated took away only the skull, which was lost in Germany during the Second World War.
But then, in 1985, the back side of the chamber became accessible and Dr Thuer rediscovered the rest of the skeleton.
Unfortunately for Dr Thuer, the discovery led to the first major blow to her theory.
Forensic analysis of the bones showed they belonged to a girl no older than 15 or 16 – which seems young for a woman said to have played a big role in ancient geo-politics.
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Read the full article at: dailymail.co.uk
“This is a clip from a TV special on Cleopatra and her half-sister Arsinoe. Forensic Anthropologists who studied a reconstruction of Princess Arsinoes skull confirmed that its anthropometric characteristics suggested mixed European and African ancestry which challenges the myth that Ptolmaic royalty did not intermingle with native Egyptians.”
Cleopatra: Portrait of a Killer
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