DataGalaxy included in the Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Metadata Management Solutions 2025

Cleopatra And Brother -

They kicked Cleopatra out of the palace. Exiled. Demoted.

But Caesar was a general, and Ptolemy XIII was a boy playing king.

Cleopatra VII (the one we know) was no exception. When her father, Ptolemy XII, died in 51 BCE, he left a shocking legal bomb in his will: Cleopatra, age 18, would rule jointly with her younger brother, . cleopatra and brother

When Caesar arrived in Alexandria chasing his rival Pompey, Ptolemy XIII made a gruesome gesture of loyalty: he had Pompey murdered and presented Caesar with the severed head. It backfired horribly. Caesar was disgusted.

When we think of Cleopatra, we usually picture the glamorous finale: the gold barge, the rolled-up carpet, the snake bite, and the dramatic romance with Rome’s most powerful men (Julius Caesar and Mark Antony). They kicked Cleopatra out of the palace

Ptolemy XIII was not happy. The teenage king stormed out of the palace, threw off his diadem, and rallied the Egyptian mob against the Roman intruders. For nearly six months, Alexandria became a war zone. Caesar’s small force was besieged in the royal quarter, and at one point, he had to swim for his life.

Ptolemy XIII, now a teenager, officially became the sole ruler. But he made a fatal miscalculation: he thought his sister would simply fade away. But Caesar was a general, and Ptolemy XIII

That hammer was Julius Caesar.

Designing data & AI products that deliver business value

To truly derive value from AI, it’s not enough to just have the technology.

Data professionals today also need a clear strategy, reasonable rules for managing data, and a focus on building useful data products.

Read the free white paper