Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Cleopatra would have been educated in the royal palace by tutors.
Yes, Cleopatra had writing. She was well educated for a woman of her time.
She was educated very long. About one day( 24 hours).
Yes. She was educated, as were all royal children, by tutors.
Cleopatra's childhood was easy. She was educated, she had tutors. And she spoke 6 diffrent languages-Aramaic, Egyptian, Ethiopic, Greek, Hebrew, and Latin.
Cleopatra never went to a school--private or otherwise. As a child of royal birth she was educated by tutors who came to the palace.
Greek teachers educated Cleopatra because she was Greek and all the Ptolemies were educated in the Greek traditions. Which Greek scholars is unknown. The "museo" or museum which was attached to the Library of Alexandria was the source of the greatest knowledge in the ancient world, but there's no evidence that Cleopatra ever studied there. Her teachers would have come to her in the palace. This is not to say that she didn't, at some time take a tour of it, but it is highly unlikely that she would have actually studied there.
We know nothing of Cleopatra's childhood. It can be assumed that she was educated as any other royal child and that she more than likely learned the Egyptian language a a child. That's all we can say about the young Cleopatra. Anything else would be guesswork.
She was tutored at home in Alexandria. Most royal children had private tutors in Egypt, and Alexandria was actually considered a great center for learning. Cleopatra was very likely the most educated woman of her era, spoke several languages, and wrote definitivebooks for several subjects. She was very different from the way Hollywood has portrayed her.
No, the school would have gone to Cleopatra. Although we know nothing of Cleo's childhood, it can be assumed, judging from the customs of royalty, that she would have been educated by tutors along with the other royal children.
She was extremely educated an knew what was expected of her. However, although she was educated in history and ruling, she was not very intelligent. If she were, she would have never of lost her kingdom and her dynasty. She let her greed and ambition overrule common sense.
Cleopatra did not go to school in the way we consider school today. She was a royal princess and she was educated by tutors who came to her.Cleopatra did not go to school in the way we consider school today. She was a royal princess and she was educated by tutors who came to her.Cleopatra did not go to school in the way we consider school today. She was a royal princess and she was educated by tutors who came to her.Cleopatra did not go to school in the way we consider school today. She was a royal princess and she was educated by tutors who came to her.Cleopatra did not go to school in the way we consider school today. She was a royal princess and she was educated by tutors who came to her.Cleopatra did not go to school in the way we consider school today. She was a royal princess and she was educated by tutors who came to her.Cleopatra did not go to school in the way we consider school today. She was a royal princess and she was educated by tutors who came to her.Cleopatra did not go to school in the way we consider school today. She was a royal princess and she was educated by tutors who came to her.Cleopatra did not go to school in the way we consider school today. She was a royal princess and she was educated by tutors who came to her.
Well, yes, afterall they lived over two thousand years ago. But seriously, the only one of Cleopatra's children to die was Caesarion. The twins and little Ptolemy were taken to Rome and raised by Octavia, their father's ex-wife. Cleopatra Selene was married to the king of Numidia. The boys faded out of history. Many historians think that they may have died as children, but according to Seutonius, they were "educated according to their station" and a dead child cannot be educated.