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Cleopatra’s impact on Roman women, art and architecture

Cleopatra’s impact on Roman women, art and architecture. Cleopatra’s uraeus (regal insignia) Cleopatra’s melon hairstyle & wisps Roman melon hairstyle & wisps. Livia and Octavia’s counterpunch: Roman pudicitia (modesty), univira (“one-man woman”) & hairstyles.

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Cleopatra’s impact on Roman women, art and architecture

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  1. Cleopatra’s impact on Roman women, art and architecture

  2. Cleopatra’s uraeus (regal insignia) Cleopatra’s melon hairstyle & wisps Roman melon hairstyle & wisps

  3. Livia and Octavia’s counterpunch: Roman pudicitia (modesty), univira (“one-man woman”) & hairstyles Octavia & nodus, 1stBCE:invented by Octavia Livia & nodus, Rome, 1st CE:adopted by Livia, the so-called univira (married when she and Octavian met)

  4. Adoption of pudicitia poses by Roman women (matronae) pudicitia pose, 1st BCE nodushairstyle and pudicitia pose adopted by matronae, 1st BCE

  5. Alexandria: Caesareum (portico)

  6. Porticoes of Rome: Agrippa’s PorticusArgonautarum

  7. Mother and son: Cleopatra and Caesarion, Caesareum, Alexandria

  8. Mother and son: Portico of Livia (PorticusLiviae) with shrine to Concordia, dedicated 7 BCE by Livia and Tiberius

  9. Mother and son: PorticusOctaviaeand Theater of Marcellus, withlibrary, school, gardens & an art collection

  10. Temple of Rome and Augustus, Athens, Acropolis, 27 BCE: Augustus’ “Cleopatran” guise

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