Xerxes I (Persian: خشایارشاه, 'Khashâyâr Shâh'), was a Persian Emperor (Shahanshah) (reigned 485 - 465 BC) of the Achaemenid dynasty. "Xerxēs" (Ξερξης) is the Greek transliteration of the Persian throne name Khshayarsha or Khsha-yar-shah, meaning "King of heroes". In the Book of Ezra and in Book of Esther, the Persian king Axašweroš (אֲחַשְׁוֵרוֹשׁ) (Ahasuerus) probably corresponds to Xerxes I.
Darius had left to his son the task of punishing the Athenians, Naxoans and Erectrians for their interference in the Ionian revolt and the victory of Marathon. From 483 Xerxes prepared his expedition with great care: a channel was dug through the isthmus of the peninsula of Mount Athos; provisions were stored in the stations on the road through Thrace; two bridges were thrown across the Hellespont. Xerxes concluded an alliance with Carthage, and thus deprived Greece of the support of the powerful monarchs of Syracuse and Agrigentum. Many smaller Greek states, moreover, took the side of the Persians, especially Thessaly, Thebes and Argos. A large fleet and a numerous army (Herodotus the Greek historian had claimed that there were over 2,000,000. In the spring of 480 Xerxes set out from Sardis. At first Xerxes was victorious everywhere. The Greek fleet was beaten at Artemisium, Thermopylae stormed, Athens conquered, the Athenians with Sparta driven back to their last line of defence at the Isthmus of Corinth and in the Saronic Gulf. But Xerxes was induced by the astute message of Themistocles (against the advice of Artemisia of Halicarnassus) to attack the Greek fleet under unfavourable conditions, instead of sending a part of his ships to the Peloponnesus and awaiting the dissolution of the Greek armament. The Battle of Salamis (September 28, 480) was won by the Athenians. Having lost his communication by sea with Asia, Xerxes was forced to retire to Sardis; the army which he left in Greece under Mardonius was in 479 beaten at Plataea. The defeat of the Persians at Mycale roused the Greek cities of Asia.
Xerxes is also understood to be Ahasuerus the King in the biblical Book of Esther. In this book, Ahasuerus dismisses his Queen consort Vashti because she refused to obey his command of appearing as 'queen of his empire' at a feast he was having for his princes and then after sending forth a decree to gather the fair young virgins from througout his empire, chooses the Jewish Esther as his queen. The king's minister Haman an Agagite (a nation that was decreed by God to be destroyed), feeling insulted by Esther's cousin Mordecai because he would not bow down to Haman, convinces Ahasuerus to decree the destruction of all the Jews in the Persian Empire, but Mordecai and Esther manage to reverse their fate through their influence with the King.
The works of Josephus suggest that Vashti and Esther existed. However, the works of Herodotus, suggest that Xerxes had a Queen consort named Amestris, daughter to Otanes.
465 BC deaths | Achaemenid dynasty | Monarchs of Persia | Murdered kings | Pharaohs of the Achaemenid dynasty of Egypt | Tanakh people
Xerxés I. | Xerxes 1. af Persien | Xerxes I. | Jerjes I | Kserkso la 1-a (Persio) | خشایارشا | Xerxès Ier | Serse I di Persia | חשיארש הראשון | Xerxes | Xerxes I | クセルクセス1世 | Xerxes I av Persia | Kserkses | Xerxes I da Pérsia | Xerxes I | Ксеркс I | Xerxes I. | Ксеркс I | Kserkses I | Xerxes I | Ксеркс | 泽克西斯一世
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It uses material from the
"Xerxes I of Persia".
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