Category
page 1Ancient Greek queens consort

Jocasta
In Greek mythology, Jocasta (), also rendered as Iocaste ( ) and Epicaste (; ), was Queen of Thebes through her marriages to Laius and her son, Oedipus. She is best known for her role in the myths surrounding Oedipus and her eventual suicide upon the discovery of his identity.

Arsinoe II
Ptolemaic Greek Princess of Ancient Egypt and Queen of Thrace, Asia Minor and Macedonia
Messene
mythical daughter of Triopas
Olympias II of Epirus
ancient Greek queen regnant

Agathoclea
thumb|upright=1.5|Drachm of Agathoclea. The obverse with the queen's portrait and Greek inscription: BAΣIΛIΣΣHΣ ΘEOTPOΠOY AΓAΘOKΛEIAΣ, Basilissēs Theotropou Agathokleias, "Of the Goddess-like queen Agathoclea". Reverse with Strato I standing in armour, and Kharosthi legend: Maharajasa Tratarasa Stratasa Agathukreya, "Of Saviour King Strato and Agathoclea."
thumb|upright=1.5|right|Coin of Strato I and Agathoclea. Obverse with the conjugate busts of Strato and Agathoclea, and Greek legend: ΒΑΣΙΛΕΩΣ ΣΩΤΗΡΟΣ ΣΤΡΑΤΩΝΟΣ ΚΑΙ ΑΓΑΘΟΚΛΕΙΑΣ, Basileōs Sōtēros Stratōnos Kai Agathokleias, "Of Saviour King S
Stratonice
Macedonian wife of Antigonus, king of Asia
Drusilla of Mauretania
1st century AD Mauretanian princess
Pheretime
Spouse of 6th century BC Greek Cyrenaean King Battus III
Stratonice of Pergamon
Princess of Cappadocia and queen of Pergamon (d. ~135 BC)
Nereis of Epirus
queen of Syracuse
Antiochis
The name Antiochis () is the female name of Antiochus.
Eryxo
Eryxo (; flourished 6th century BC) was a Greek woman, who was a Queen of Cyrenaica and was a member of The Battiads dynasty, the family that ruled Cyrenaica and Cyrene. From the ancient Greek sources, she appears to be the first Greek Cyrenaean Queen mentioned from the dynasty.
Philistis
thumb|right|Syracusan coin with portrait of Philistis (left)
Philistis, the wife of Hieron II, was a queen of ancient Syracuse, Magna Graecia, known from her coins, which are numerous, and of fine workmanship, and from the occurrence of her name (bearing the title of queen, as it does also on her coins) in some Greek inscriptions on the stands of the theater of Tauromenium (Taormina). The circumstance that it is here associated with that of Nereis, the wife of Gelon II, as well as the style and fabric of the coins, which closely resemble those of Hieron II and his son, leads to the conclusion