Berenice IV (died 55 bc) was the eldest daughter of Ptolemy XII Auletes of Egypt, sister of the great Cleopatra VII, and ruler of Egypt during her father’s absence in 58–55. She was executed by him after his return.
Ptolemy, driven from Egypt by the threat of popular insurrection in 58, went to Rome. When his queen died shortly after his departure, Berenice was proclaimed queen. In 57 Ptolemy, employing bribery and intrigue, succeeded in inducing the Romans to restore him to his kingdom. The Alexandrians, however, resolved to oppose him and dispatched a delegation to Rome to refute Ptolemy’s accusations against them and to present charges of his misrule. After arranging the murder of these delegates and even of some Romans who suspected him, Ptolemy departed for Ephesus, in Asia Minor, late in 57. While other issues obscured his cause in Rome, Ptolemy was able to buy the support of Aulus Gabinius, Roman proconsul of Syria. The Alexandrians, meanwhile, sought a prince for Berenice. Archelaus, reputedly a Pontic prince, appeared in 56 and was married to her. Gabinius, however, marched against Alexandria and the following year restored Ptolemy, who promptly executed Berenice and her supporters.