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Berenice (daughter of Herod Agrippa)

Berenice of Cilicia, also known as Julia Berenice and sometimes spelled Bernice (Greek: Βερενίκη or Βερνίκη, Bereníkē or Berníkē; 28 – after 81), was a Jewish client queen of the Roman Empire during the second half of the 1st century. Berenice was a member of the Herodian Dynasty that ruled the Roman province of Judaea between 39 BC and 92 AD. She was the daughter of King Herod Agrippa I and Cypros and a sister of King Herod Agrippa II.

What little is known about her life and background comes mostly from the early historian Flavius Josephus, who detailed a history of the Jewish people and wrote an account of the Jewish Rebellion of 67. Suetonius, Tacitus, Dio Cassius, Aurelius Victor, and Juvenal also write about her. She is also mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles (25:13, 23; 26:30). However, it is for her tumultuous love life that she is primarily known since the Renaissance. Her reputation was based on the bias of the Romans against Eastern princesses like Cleopatra, or later Zenobia. After two marriages in which she was widowed in her 40s, she spent much of the remainder of her life at the court of her brother Herod Agrippa II, amidst rumors the two were carrying on an incestuous relationship, though this was neither proved nor disproved. During the First Jewish-Roman War, she began a love affair with the future emperor Titus Flavius Vespasianus. However, her unpopularity among the Romans compelled Titus to dismiss her on his accession as emperor in 79. When he died two years later, she disappeared from the historical record.

In Rome[edit]

It took four years until Titus and Berenice reunited, when she and her brother Agrippa II came to Rome in 75. The reasons for this long absence are unclear, but have been linked to possible opposition to her presence by Gaius Licinius Mucianus, a political ally of emperor Vespasian who died sometime between 72 and 78.[21] Agrippa II was given the rank of praetor, while Berenice resumed her relationship with Titus, living with him at the palace and reportedly acting in every respect as his wife.[22] The ancient historian Cassius Dio writes that Berenice was at the height of her power during this time,[22] and if it can be any indication as to how influential she was, Quintilian records an anecdote in his Institutio Oratoria where, to his astonishment, he found himself pleading a case on Berenice's behalf where she herself presided as the judge.[23] The Roman populace however perceived the Eastern Queen as an intrusive outsider, and when the pair was publicly denounced by Cynics in the theatre, Titus caved to the pressure and sent her away.[22]


Upon the accession of Titus as emperor in 79, she returned to Rome, but was quickly dismissed amidst a number of popular measures of Titus to restore his reputation with the populace.[24] It is possible that he intended to send for her at a more convenient time.[21] However, after reigning barely two years as emperor, he suddenly died on 13 September 81.[25]


It is not known what happened to Berenice after her final dismissal from Rome.[21] Her brother Agrippa II died around 92, and with him the Herodian Dynasty rule over Judaea came to an end.

Lettres de Bérénice à Titus (1642), a French novel by

Madeleine de Scudéry

Bérénice (1648–50), a French novel by

Jean Regnauld de Segrais

Tite (1660), a French drama by

Jean Magnon

Il Tito (1666), an Italian opera by (mus.) and Nicola Beregani (libr.)

Antonio Cesti

(1670), a French drama by Jean Racine

Bérénice

(1670), a French drama by Pierre Corneille

Tite et Bérénice

(1676), an English drama by Thomas Otway

Titus and Berenice

(1714), an Italian opera by Antonio Caldara (mus.) and Carlo Sigismondo Capace (libr.)

Tito e Berenice

Berenice (1725), an Italian opera by (mus.) and Benedetto Pasqualigo (libr.). Also set to music by Niccolò Vito Piccinni (1766)

Giuseppe Maria Orlandini

La clemenza di Tito

Tito e Berenice (1776), an Italian opera by (mus.) and Carlo Giuseppe Lanfranchi-Rossi (libr.)

Raimondo Mei

Tito e Berenice (1782), a ballet by Paolino Franchi (chor.)

Tito; o, La partenza di Berenice (1790), a ballet by (mus. and chor.)

Domenico Maria Gaspero Angiolini

Tito e Berenice (1793), an Italian opera by (mus.) and Giuseppe Maria Foppa (libr.)

Sebastiano Nasolini

Tito che abbandona Berenice (1828), a painting by

Giuseppe Bezzuoli

Titus et Bérénice (1860), a French opera by (mus.) and Édouard Fournier (libr.)

Leon-Gustave-Cyprien Gastinel

(1876), George Eliot's final novel, in which a set of drawings of Berenice's story is an important symbolic element

Daniel Deronda

Berenice (1890), a German novel by

Heinrich Vollrat Schumacher

Cross Triumphant, The (1898), a historical fiction novel by

Florence Morse Kingsley

(1909), a French opera by Alberic Magnard (mus. and libr.)

Bérénice

Titus und die Jüdin (1911), a German drama by

Hans Kyser

Lost Diaries: From the Diary of Emperor Titus (1913), an English novel by

Maurice Baring

Bérénice, l’Hérodienne (1919), a French drama by

Albert du Bois

Bérénice (1920), incidental music by

Marcel Samuel-Rousseau

Berenice (1922), an English drama by

John Masefield

Bérénice (1934), a French parody by

Noel Ouden

The Jospephus Trilogy (1932 - 1942), historical fiction by , in which Berenice plays a prominent role

Lion Feuchtwanger

Berinikah (1945), a Hebrew drama by and Carl de Haas

Eisig Silberschlag

Le reine de Césarée (1954), a French drama by

Robert Brasillach

Berenice, Princess of Judea (1959), an English novel by

Leon Kolb

Mission to Claudies (1963), an English novel by

Leon Kolb

Agrippa’s Daughter (1964), an English novel by

Howard Melvin Fast

La pourpre de Judée: ou, Les délices du genre humain (1967), a French novel by

Maurice Clavel

Bérénice (1968), a French TV-film by

Piere-Alain Jolivet

Tito y Berenice (1970), a Spanish drama by

Rene Marques

Bérénice (1983), a French TV-film by

Raoul Ruiz

Assassins of Rome (2002) and the Enemies of Jupiter (2003) in 's historical youth fiction series The Roman Mysteries

Caroline Lawrence

's historical fiction Falco series (circa 1990s - 2010s) incorporates Berenice as a minor recurring character

Lindsey Davis

The Last Disciple (2004), a historical novel by and Sigmund Brouwer, includes Berenice

Hank Hanegraff

From the 17th century to contemporary times, there has been a long tradition of works of art (novels, dramas, operas, etc.) devoted to or featuring Berenice and especially her affair with the Roman Emperor Titus.[26] The list includes:


In modern history, her aspirations as a potential empress of Rome have led to her being described as a 'miniature Cleopatra'.[27]

List of biblical figures identified in extra-biblical sources

city with probable palace of Agrippas and Berenice

Paneas (Caesarea Philippi, Neronias, Banias)

Queen Berenice: A Jewish Female Icon of the First Century CE, Brill, 2022.

Tal Ilan

Ilan, Tal (1992). "Julia Crispina, Daughter of Berenicianus, a Herodian Princess in the Babatha Archive: A Case Study in Historical Identification". The Jewish Quarterly Review. 82 (3/4). University of Pennsylvania Press: 361–381. :10.2307/1454863. JSTOR 1454863.

doi

Macurdy, Grace H. (1935). "Julia Berenice". The American Journal of Philology. 56 (3). The Johns Hopkins University Press: 246–253. :10.2307/289676. JSTOR 289676.

doi

Crook, John A. (1951). "Titus and Berenice". The American Journal of Philology. 72 (2). The Johns Hopkins University Press: 162–175. :10.2307/292544. JSTOR 292544.

doi

English translation

Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews

English translation

Josephus, The War of the Jews, Book II

English translation

Tacitus, Histories, Book 2

English translation

Cassius Dio, Roman History, Book 65, Chapter 15

Biblical Archaeology Society

"The 'New Cleopatra' and the Jewish Tax"