Once again, Netflix "reached out": they made a documentary about Cleopatra's life and turbulent era, in which they changed the ruler's ethnicity, using historical evidence. In the series, Cleopatra is played by an actress of color, going against the accepted fact that the

THE QUEEN OF THE NILE” WAS OF GREEK ORIGIN.

According to the trailer for the Queen Cleopatra series created by Jada Pinkett Smith, the work depicts the life of the "warrior" and "unparalleled power" ruler:

It's possible he was Egyptian," said one of the documentary's commentators.

I imagine she had curly hair like me and a similar skin tone,” agreed another.

I remember my grandmother telling me, I don't care what they tell you at school, Cleopatra was black,” another commenter added.

The change of ethnicity is also supported by the promotional materials.

According to the current state of science, it cannot be proven that Cleopatra was colored. Blood infections were common in his family, but he himself was born from one of his father's unknown concubines. According to historians, the monarch could not have been noticeably dark-skinned, as a result of the political situation at the time - Julius Caesar lived in Rome before his death, when he reached the final stage of the conflict between Octavian and the queen - the propagandists of the time strongly emphasized the queen's foreign origin, but not a single article mocked on the color of his skin, and this suggests that

NO DIFFERENT FROM THE OTHER ROMANS.

A few years ago, specialists reconstructed Cleopatra's face with the help of a computer program, surviving historical documents and coins. There have been several installations of the Queen's appearance, but none of them depicted her with black skin.

In addition, when asked by the Daily Caller, several historians confirmed that VII. Cleopatra was white, as were "all the Ptolemaic rulers."

Civilians Info:

Why is it important for the mainstream media, which obviously has a left-liberal political background, to constantly provoke by saying that one or another historical figure, including Jesus, was of color? Now Cleopatra has been brought up, moreover, as a character in a documentary film. Well, if someone plays a white historical character in a piece of fiction with an actor of color, it's just a matter of luck, although interestingly, the Moorish king Othello is rarely played by a white actor. But in a documentary, the rules of authenticity should still be followed, restraining the ideology of intended positive discrimination.

Otherwise, I don't understand the point of falsifying history. It's this multi-cult, mix-and-match rainbow nonsense again. Why is Elisabeth Taylor not good for them as the icon Cleopatra, why do they need a black pharaoh? Anyone who has seen the pharaoh statues and representations in Egypt knows that there was no black ruler there. Obviously, they were idealized, but they were depicted as special and fantastically beautiful man-gods. (I know they oppressed the blacks even then, if they couldn't have a colored pharaoh now!)

There are black and white things dear liberals, like skin color! It cannot be changed afterwards either!

Source: Origo/888.hu

Featured Image: Wikipedia