Charlotte Figi, the epileptic child who became an inspiring symbol of the CBD movement, died Tuesday after a battle with a coronavirus-like illness, according to her family. She was 13.

Figi — whose seizure recovery story gave rise to a medical marijuana oil that drew parents of kids with similar health problems to Colorado for treatment — suffered a final seizure and cardiac arrest likely triggered by the sickness, according to her mother, Paige Figi, and family friends.

“Charlotte is no longer suffering. She is seizure-free forever,” a family friend wrote on Paige Figi’s Facebook page, announcing Charlotte’s death. “Thank you so much for all of your love.”

In a statement to the Denver Post, her mother said the Colorado Springs family all got sick in early March with COVID-19-like symptoms and were told to stay at home.

Charlotte was taken to an intensive care unit Friday and treated on a floor for coronavirus patients. A test for the virus that day came back negative, but her mom said she may have been tested too late for a positive result.

The 13-year-old was discharged Sunday, but on Tuesday suffered the final seizure.

“Given our family’s month-long history with illness and despite the negative test results, she was treated as a likely COVID-19 case,” her mom said in the statement. “Her fighting spirit held out as long as it could and she eventually passed in our arms peacefully.”

Charlotte was born with Dravet syndrome, a rare form of epilepsy that couldn’t be controlled with medication. She wasn’t expected to live past age 8.

Her tale of overcoming the catastrophic condition by using the cannabinoid was featured in the documentary “Weed,” which chronicled the ways the drug helped her. Charlotte’s Web, a medical marijuana strain, was eventually named in her honor.

Before she got sick, Charlotte and her parents’ advocacy played a big role in drawing attention to the drug, which is not a psychoactive.

“Some journeys are long and bland and others are short and poignant and meant to revolutionize the world. Such was the path chosen by this little girl with a catastrophic form of epilepsy called Dravet Syndrome,” said Realm of Caring Foundation, a group that advocates using cannabis to treat children’s seizures.

Other marijuana activists also mourned the girl’s untimely death, calling her courageous.

“She was divine,” the Stanley brothers, creators of the Charlotte’s Web strain, wrote on their website. “She grew, cultivated by a community, protected by love, demanding that the world witness her suffering so that they might find a solution. She rose every day, awakening others with her courage, and with that smile that infected your spirit at the cellular level.”

With Post wires