Berenice (daughter of Agrippa I)

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Berenice was the daughter of Agrippa I, king of Judaea, and born probably about 28. She was first married to Marcus, son of the Alabarch Alexander of Alexandria. On his early death she was married to her father's brother, Herod of Chalcis, after whose death in 48 she lived for some years with her brother, Agrippa II. Her third husband was Polemon, king of Cilicia, but she soon deserted him, and returned to Agrippa, with whom she was living in 60 when Paul appeared before him at Caesarea (Acts xxvi.). During the devastation of Judaea by the Romans after Great Jewish Revolt, she fascinated Titus Flavius, whom along with Agrippa she followed to Rome as his promised wife in 75. However, when Titus became emperor in 79, he dismissed her finally, though reluctantly, to her own country. Her influence had been exercised vainly on behalf of the Jews in 66, but the burning of her palace alienated her sympathies.

For her influence see Juvenal, Satires, vi., and Tacitus, Histories ii. 2. She is also the subject of Bérénice, a tragedy by the French dramatist Jean Racine (1679), based on the story of her affair with the Roman emperor Titus Flavius.

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