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Berenice II
Berenice II (after 270-221): queen of the Ptolemaic Empire.
Relatives:
- Father: Magas of Cyrene
- Mother: Apame II
- First husband: Demetrius the Fair, the son of Demetrius Poliorcetes
- Second husband: Ptolemy III Euergetes
- Children: Ptolemy IV Philopator, Arsinoe III, Berenice, Magas
Main deeds
- Born after 270
- 250: King Magas of Cyrene and king Ptolemy II Philadelphus agree to marry Berenice to Ptolemy III Euergetes
- 250 or 249: Death of her father, Magas; queen Apame agrees to a marriage between Berenice and Demetrius the Fair, who is made king of Cyrene
- Demetrius the Fair is assassinated; Cyrene recovered for the Ptolemaic empire
- Berenice can marry her fiancé
- January 246: Accession of king Ptolemy III Euergetes
- Summer 246: Outbreak of the Laodicean War; king Ptolemy in Syria and Babylonia. Berenice sacrices her locks, which are believed to have become a new constellation (the subject of a poem by Callimachus)
- 245: Victory at the Nemean Games (horse racing)
- Birth of Ptolemy IV, who soon receives the surname Philopator, 'father-loving'
- February 238: Death of a daughter named Berenice
- Ptolemy IV succeeds father between 5 and 16 February 222; many relatives are killed by his ministers Agathocles and Sosibius
- 221: Ptolemy IV orders the death of his mother and his brother Magas