Theoxena of Syracuse
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Theoxena (Greek: Θεόξενα; before 317 BC – after 289 BC) was a Greek Macedonian noblewoman. Through her mother's second marriage, she was a member of the Ptolemaic dynasty and through marriage was a queen of Sicily, Magna Graecia.
Theoxena was the second daughter and third child of the noblewoman Berenice and her first husband Philip.[1] She had two older siblings: a brother called Magas and a sister called Antigone.[2]
Her father, Philip, was the son of Amyntas by a mother whose name is unknown.[3] Based on the implying of Plutarch (Pyrrhus 4.4), her father was previously married and had children, including daughters born to him.[4] He served as a military officer in the service of the Greek King Alexander the Great and was known in commanding one division of the Phalanx in Alexander's wars.[5]
Her mother Berenice was a noblewoman from Eordeaea.[6] She was the daughter of local obscure nobleman Magas and noblewoman Antigone.[7] Berenice's mother was the niece of the powerful Regent Antipater[8] and was a distant collateral relative to the Argead dynasty.[9] Her name was either chosen by her parents or she was probably named in honour of a relative either from her mother's or father's family.