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Artaxerxes I

Artaxerxes I (/ˌɑːrtəˈzɜːrksz/, Old Persian: 𐎠𐎼𐎫𐎧𐏁𐏂𐎠 Artaxšaçāʰ;[2][3] Greek: Ἀρταξέρξης)[4] was the fifth King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire, from 465 to December 424 BC.[5][6] He was the third son of Xerxes I.

Artaxerxes I
𐎠𐎼𐎫𐎧𐏁𐏂
Relief of Artaxerxes I, from his tomb in Naqsh-e Rustam
King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
Reign465–424 BC
PredecessorXerxes I
SuccessorXerxes II
BornUnknown
Died424 BC, Susa
Burial
SpouseDamaspia
Alogyne of Babylon
Cosmartidene of Babylon
Andia of Babylon
Issue
DynastyAchaemenid
FatherXerxes I
MotherAmestris
ReligionZoroastrianism

nomen or birth name
Artaxerxes[1]
in hieroglyphs
Era: Late Period
(664–332 BC)

He may have been the "Artasyrus" mentioned by Herodotus as being a satrap of the royal satrapy of Bactria.

In Greek sources he is also surnamed "long-handed" (Ancient Greek: μακρόχειρ Makrókheir; Latin: Longimanus), allegedly because his right hand was longer than his left.[7]

Succession to the throne Edit

Artaxerxes was probably born in the reign of his grandfather Darius I, to the emperor's son and heir, Xerxes I. In 465 BC, Xerxes I was murdered by Hazarapat ("commander of thousand") Artabanus, the commander of the royal bodyguard and the most powerful official in the Persian court, with the help of a eunuch, Aspamitres.[8] Greek historians give contradicting accounts of events. According to Ctesias (in Persica 20), Artabanus then accused Crown Prince Darius, Xerxes's eldest son, of the murder, and persuaded Artaxerxes to avenge the patricide by killing Darius. But according to Aristotle (in Politics 5.1311b), Artabanus killed Darius first and then killed Xerxes. After Artaxerxes discovered the murder, he killed Artabanus and his sons.[9][10]

Egyptian revolt Edit

 
Inarus, seized by Artaxerxes I in the Zvenigorodsky seal.[11]
 
The ancient Egyptian god Amun-Min in front of Artaxerxes' cartouche.

Artaxerxes had to face a revolt in Egypt in 460–454 BC led by Inaros II, who was the son of a Libyan prince named Psamtik, presumably descended from the Twenty-sixth Dynasty of Egypt. In 460 BC, Inaros II revolted against the Persians with the help of his Athenian allies, and defeated the Persian army commanded by satrap Akheimenes. The Persians retreated to Memphis, and the Athenians were finally defeated in 454 BC, by the Persian army led by Megabyzus, after a two-year siege. Inaros was captured and carried away to Susa.

Relations with Greece Edit

 
Themistocles stands silently before Artaxerxes

After the Achaemenid Empire had been defeated at the Battle of the Eurymedon (c. 469 BC), military action between Greece and Persia was at a standstill. When Artaxerxes I took power, he introduced a new Persian strategy of weakening the Athenians by funding their enemies in Greece. This indirectly caused the Athenians to move the treasury of the Delian League from the island of Delos to the Athenian acropolis. This funding practice inevitably prompted renewed fighting in 450 BC, where the Greeks attacked at the Battle of Cyprus. After Cimon's failure to attain much in this expedition, hostilities ceased. Later sources argue that the purported Peace of Callias was agreed among Athens, Argos and Persia in 449 BC; however, the existence of a formal treaty between the Greek States and Persia is disputed.

Artaxerxes I offered asylum to Themistocles, who was probably his father Xerxes's greatest enemy for his victory at the Battle of Salamis, after Themistocles was ostracized from Athens. Also, Artaxerxes I gave him Magnesia, Myus, and Lampsacus to maintain him in bread, meat, and wine. In addition, Artaxerxes I gave him Skepsis to provide him with clothes, and he also gave him Percote with bedding for his house.[12] Themistocles would go on to learn and adopt Persian customs, Persian language, and traditions.[13][14]

Portrayal in the Book of Ezra and Nehemiah Edit

A King Artaxerxes (Hebrew: אַרְתַּחְשַׁשְׂתְּא, אַרְתַּחְשַׁ֣סְתְּא, pronounced [artaχʃast(ǝ)], or אַרְתַּחְשַׁ֗שְׂתָּא pronounced [artaχʃasta]) is described in the Bible (Ezra 7) as having commissioned Ezra, a kohen and scribe, by means of a letter of decree to take charge of the ecclesiastical and civil affairs of the Jewish nation.

Ezra thereby left Babylon in the first month of the seventh year[15] of Artaxerxes' reign, at the head of a company of Jews that included priests and Levites. They arrived in Jerusalem on the first day of the fifth month of the seventh year according to the Hebrew calendar. The text does not specify whether the king in the passage refers to Artaxerxes I (465–424 BC) or to Artaxerxes II (404–359 BC).[16][17] Most scholars hold that Ezra lived during the rule of Artaxerxes I, though some have difficulties with this assumption:[18] Nehemiah and Ezra "seem to have no knowledge of each other; their missions do not overlap", however, in Nehemiah 12, both are leading processions on the wall as part of the wall dedication ceremony. So, they clearly were contemporaries working together in Jerusalem at the time the wall and the city of Jerusalem was rebuilt in contrast to the previously stated viewpoint.[19] These difficulties have led many scholars to assume that Ezra arrived in the seventh year of the rule of Artaxerxes II, i.e. some 50 years after Nehemiah. This assumption would imply that the biblical account is not chronological. The last group of scholars regard "the seventh year" as a scribal error and hold that the two men were contemporaries.[18][20] However, Ezra appears for the first time in Nehemiah 8, having probably been at the court for twelve years.[21]

The rebuilding of the Jewish community in Jerusalem had begun under Cyrus the Great, who had permitted Jews held captive in Babylon to return to Jerusalem and rebuild Solomon's Temple. Consequently, a number of Jews returned to Jerusalem in 538 BC, and the foundation of this "Second Temple" was laid in 536 BC, in the second year of their return (Ezra 3:8). After a period of strife, the temple was finally completed in the sixth year of Darius, 516 BC (Ezra 6:15).

In Artaxerxes' twentieth year, Nehemiah, the king's cup-bearer, apparently was also a friend of the king as in that year Artaxerxes inquired after Nehemiah's sadness. Nehemiah related to him the plight of the Jewish people and that the city of Jerusalem was undefended. The king sent Nehemiah to Jerusalem with letters of safe passage to the governors in Trans-Euphrates, and to Asaph, keeper of the royal forests, to make beams for the citadel by the Temple and to rebuild the city walls.[22]

Interpretations of actions Edit

 
Ethnicities of the Empire on the tomb of Artaxerxes I at Naqsh-e Rostam.

Roger Williams, a 17th-century Christian minister and founder of Rhode Island, interpreted several passages in the Old and New Testament to support limiting government interference in religious matters. Williams published The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution for Cause of Conscience, arguing for a separation of church and state based on biblical reasoning. Williams believed that Israel was a unique covenant kingdom and not an appropriate model for New Testament Christians who believed that the Old Testament covenant had been fulfilled. Therefore, the more informative Old Testament examples of civil government were "good" non-covenant kings such as Artaxerxes, who tolerated the Jews and did not insist that they follow his state religion.[23]

Medical analysis Edit

According to a paper published in 2011,[24] the discrepancy in Artaxerxes’ limb lengths may have arisen as a result of the inherited disease neurofibromatosis.

Children Edit

 
Quadrilingual inscription of Artaxerxes on an Egyptian alabaster vase (Old Persian, Elamite, Babylonian and Egyptian).[25][26]

By queen Damaspia

By Alogyne of Babylon

By Cosmartidene of Babylon

By Andia of Babylon

By another(?) unknown wife

  • An unnamed daughter, wife of Hieramenes, mother of Autoboesaces and Mitraeus[27]

By various wives

  • Eleven other children

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Henri Gauthier, Le Livre des rois d'Égypte, IV, Cairo 1916 (=MIFAO 20), p. 152.
  2. ^ Ghias Abadi, R. M. (2004). Achaemenid Inscriptions (کتیبه‌های هخامنشی)‎ (in Persian) (2nd ed.). Tehran: Shiraz Navid Publications. p. 129. ISBN 964-358-015-6.
  3. ^ Artaxerxes at Encyclopædia Iranica
  4. ^ The Greek form of the name is influenced by Xerxes, Artaxerxes at Encyclopædia Iranica
  5. ^ James D. G. Dunn; John William Rogerson (19 November 2003). Eerdmans Commentary on the Bible. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 321. ISBN 978-0-8028-3711-0.
  6. ^ Matthew W. Stolper. The Death of Artaxerxes I in Archaeologische Mitteilungen aus Iran N.F. 16 (1983). Dietrich Reimer Verlag Berlin. p. 231.
  7. ^ Plutarch, Artaxerxes, l. 1. c. 1. 11:129 - cited by Ussher, Annals, para. 1179
  8. ^ Pirnia, Iran-e-Bastan book 1, p 873
  9. ^ Dandamayev
  10. ^ Olmstead, History of the Persian Empire, pp 289–290
  11. ^ Ancient Seals of the Near East. 1940. p. Plaque 17.
  12. ^ Plutarch. . Archived from the original on 2015-10-01.
  13. ^ Thucydides I, 137
  14. ^ Plutarch, Themistocles, 29
  15. ^ The Book of Daniel. Montex Publish Company, By Jim McGuiggan 1978, p. 147.
  16. ^ Porter, J.R. (2000). The Illustrated Guide to the Bible. New York: Barnes & Noble Books. pp. 115–16. ISBN 978-0-7607-2278-7.
  17. ^ Toynbee, Arnold (1961). A Study of History. Vol. 12. Oxford University Press. p. 485. Ever since the beginning of the Babilonish Captivity, the diaspora has been Jewry's citadel and the Artaxerxes in question is Artaxerxes I (imperabat 465-424 B.C.) or Artaxerxes II (imperabat 404-359 B.C.) So we do not know whether the date of Ezra's mission was 458 B.C. or 397 B.C., or whether the date of Nehemia's mission was 445 B.C. or 384 B.C. (see G.F. Moore: Judaism in the First Centuries of the Christian Era, vol. i, p. 5). Nehemiah may have preceded Ezra
  18. ^ a b "Ezra". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007.
  19. ^ Winn Leith, Mary Joan (2001) [1998]. "Israel among the Nations: The Persian Period". In Michael David Coogan (ed.). The Oxford History of the Biblical World (Google Books). Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. p. 281. ISBN 978-0-19-513937-2. LCCN 98016042. OCLC 44650958. Retrieved 13 December 2007.
  20. ^ John Boederman, The Cambridge Ancient History, 2002, p. 272
  21. ^ "Nehemiah 8 Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers".
  22. ^ Nehemiah 2:1–9
  23. ^ James P. Byrd, The challenges of Roger Williams: Religious Liberty, Violent Persecution, and the Bible (Mercer University Press, 2002)[1] (accessed on Google Books on July 20, 2009)
  24. ^ Ashrafian, Hutan. (2011). "Limb gigantism, neurofibromatosis and royal heredity in the Ancient World 2500 years ago: Achaemenids and Parthians". J Plast Reconstr Aesthet Surg. 64 (4): 557. doi:10.1016/j.bjps.2010.08.025. PMID 20832372.
  25. ^ Revue archéologique (in French). Leleux. 1844. p. 444-450.
  26. ^ The vase is now in the Reza Abbasi Museum in Teheran (inv. 53). image inscription
  27. ^ Xenophon, Hellenica, Book II, Chapter 1

External links Edit

  • Encyclopedia Iranica ARTAXERXES
  • Encyclopedia Iranica ARTAXERXES I a son of Xerxes I and Amestris
Artaxerxes I
 Died: 424 BC
Preceded by King of Kings of Persia
464–424 BC
Succeeded by
Pharaoh of Egypt
XXVII Dynasty
465–424 BC

artaxerxes, ɑːr, ɜːr, persian, 𐎠𐎼𐎫𐎧𐏁𐏂𐎠, artaxšaçāʰ, greek, Ἀρταξέρξης, fifth, king, kings, achaemenid, empire, from, december, third, xerxes, 𐎠𐎼𐎫𐎧𐏁𐏂king, kings, great, king, king, persia, king, babylon, pharaoh, egypt, king, countriesrelief, from, tomb, naqsh,. Artaxerxes I ˌ ɑːr t e ˈ z ɜːr k s iː z Old Persian 𐎠𐎼𐎫𐎧𐏁𐏂𐎠 Artaxsacaʰ 2 3 Greek Ἀrta3er3hs 4 was the fifth King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire from 465 to December 424 BC 5 6 He was the third son of Xerxes I Artaxerxes I𐎠𐎼𐎫𐎧𐏁𐏂King of Kings Great King King of Persia King of Babylon Pharaoh of Egypt King of CountriesRelief of Artaxerxes I from his tomb in Naqsh e RustamKing of Kings of the Achaemenid EmpireReign465 424 BCPredecessorXerxes ISuccessorXerxes IIBornUnknownDied424 BC SusaBurialNaqsh e Rustam PersepolisSpouseDamaspiaAlogyne of BabylonCosmartidene of BabylonAndia of BabylonIssueXerxes II Sogdianus Darius II Arsites ParysatisDynastyAchaemenidFatherXerxes IMotherAmestrisReligionZoroastrianismnomen or birth nameArtaxerxes 1 in hieroglyphsEra Late Period 664 332 BC He may have been the Artasyrus mentioned by Herodotus as being a satrap of the royal satrapy of Bactria In Greek sources he is also surnamed long handed Ancient Greek makroxeir Makrokheir Latin Longimanus allegedly because his right hand was longer than his left 7 Contents 1 Succession to the throne 2 Egyptian revolt 3 Relations with Greece 4 Portrayal in the Book of Ezra and Nehemiah 5 Interpretations of actions 6 Medical analysis 7 Children 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksSuccession to the throne EditArtaxerxes was probably born in the reign of his grandfather Darius I to the emperor s son and heir Xerxes I In 465 BC Xerxes I was murdered by Hazarapat commander of thousand Artabanus the commander of the royal bodyguard and the most powerful official in the Persian court with the help of a eunuch Aspamitres 8 Greek historians give contradicting accounts of events According to Ctesias in Persica 20 Artabanus then accused Crown Prince Darius Xerxes s eldest son of the murder and persuaded Artaxerxes to avenge the patricide by killing Darius But according to Aristotle in Politics 5 1311b Artabanus killed Darius first and then killed Xerxes After Artaxerxes discovered the murder he killed Artabanus and his sons 9 10 Egyptian revolt Edit nbsp Inarus seized by Artaxerxes I in the Zvenigorodsky seal 11 nbsp The ancient Egyptian god Amun Min in front of Artaxerxes cartouche Artaxerxes had to face a revolt in Egypt in 460 454 BC led by Inaros II who was the son of a Libyan prince named Psamtik presumably descended from the Twenty sixth Dynasty of Egypt In 460 BC Inaros II revolted against the Persians with the help of his Athenian allies and defeated the Persian army commanded by satrap Akheimenes The Persians retreated to Memphis and the Athenians were finally defeated in 454 BC by the Persian army led by Megabyzus after a two year siege Inaros was captured and carried away to Susa Relations with Greece Edit nbsp Themistocles stands silently before ArtaxerxesAfter the Achaemenid Empire had been defeated at the Battle of the Eurymedon c 469 BC military action between Greece and Persia was at a standstill When Artaxerxes I took power he introduced a new Persian strategy of weakening the Athenians by funding their enemies in Greece This indirectly caused the Athenians to move the treasury of the Delian League from the island of Delos to the Athenian acropolis This funding practice inevitably prompted renewed fighting in 450 BC where the Greeks attacked at the Battle of Cyprus After Cimon s failure to attain much in this expedition hostilities ceased Later sources argue that the purported Peace of Callias was agreed among Athens Argos and Persia in 449 BC however the existence of a formal treaty between the Greek States and Persia is disputed Artaxerxes I offered asylum to Themistocles who was probably his father Xerxes s greatest enemy for his victory at the Battle of Salamis after Themistocles was ostracized from Athens Also Artaxerxes I gave him Magnesia Myus and Lampsacus to maintain him in bread meat and wine In addition Artaxerxes I gave him Skepsis to provide him with clothes and he also gave him Percote with bedding for his house 12 Themistocles would go on to learn and adopt Persian customs Persian language and traditions 13 14 Portrayal in the Book of Ezra and Nehemiah EditA King Artaxerxes Hebrew א ר ת ח ש ש ת א א ר ת ח ש ס ת א pronounced artaxʃast ǝ or א ר ת ח ש ש ת א pronounced artaxʃasta is described in the Bible Ezra 7 as having commissioned Ezra a kohen and scribe by means of a letter of decree to take charge of the ecclesiastical and civil affairs of the Jewish nation Ezra thereby left Babylon in the first month of the seventh year 15 of Artaxerxes reign at the head of a company of Jews that included priests and Levites They arrived in Jerusalem on the first day of the fifth month of the seventh year according to the Hebrew calendar The text does not specify whether the king in the passage refers to Artaxerxes I 465 424 BC or to Artaxerxes II 404 359 BC 16 17 Most scholars hold that Ezra lived during the rule of Artaxerxes I though some have difficulties with this assumption 18 Nehemiah and Ezra seem to have no knowledge of each other their missions do not overlap however in Nehemiah 12 both are leading processions on the wall as part of the wall dedication ceremony So they clearly were contemporaries working together in Jerusalem at the time the wall and the city of Jerusalem was rebuilt in contrast to the previously stated viewpoint 19 These difficulties have led many scholars to assume that Ezra arrived in the seventh year of the rule of Artaxerxes II i e some 50 years after Nehemiah This assumption would imply that the biblical account is not chronological The last group of scholars regard the seventh year as a scribal error and hold that the two men were contemporaries 18 20 However Ezra appears for the first time in Nehemiah 8 having probably been at the court for twelve years 21 The rebuilding of the Jewish community in Jerusalem had begun under Cyrus the Great who had permitted Jews held captive in Babylon to return to Jerusalem and rebuild Solomon s Temple Consequently a number of Jews returned to Jerusalem in 538 BC and the foundation of this Second Temple was laid in 536 BC in the second year of their return Ezra 3 8 After a period of strife the temple was finally completed in the sixth year of Darius 516 BC Ezra 6 15 In Artaxerxes twentieth year Nehemiah the king s cup bearer apparently was also a friend of the king as in that year Artaxerxes inquired after Nehemiah s sadness Nehemiah related to him the plight of the Jewish people and that the city of Jerusalem was undefended The king sent Nehemiah to Jerusalem with letters of safe passage to the governors in Trans Euphrates and to Asaph keeper of the royal forests to make beams for the citadel by the Temple and to rebuild the city walls 22 Interpretations of actions Edit nbsp Ethnicities of the Empire on the tomb of Artaxerxes I at Naqsh e Rostam Roger Williams a 17th century Christian minister and founder of Rhode Island interpreted several passages in the Old and New Testament to support limiting government interference in religious matters Williams published The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution for Cause of Conscience arguing for a separation of church and state based on biblical reasoning Williams believed that Israel was a unique covenant kingdom and not an appropriate model for New Testament Christians who believed that the Old Testament covenant had been fulfilled Therefore the more informative Old Testament examples of civil government were good non covenant kings such as Artaxerxes who tolerated the Jews and did not insist that they follow his state religion 23 Medical analysis EditAccording to a paper published in 2011 24 the discrepancy in Artaxerxes limb lengths may have arisen as a result of the inherited disease neurofibromatosis Children Edit nbsp Quadrilingual inscription of Artaxerxes on an Egyptian alabaster vase Old Persian Elamite Babylonian and Egyptian 25 26 By queen Damaspia Xerxes IIBy Alogyne of Babylon SogdianusBy Cosmartidene of Babylon Darius II ArsitesBy Andia of Babylon Bogapaeus Parysatis wife of Darius II OchusBy another unknown wife An unnamed daughter wife of Hieramenes mother of Autoboesaces and Mitraeus 27 By various wives Eleven other childrenSee also EditArtoxares List of biblical figures identified in extra biblical sourcesReferences Edit Henri Gauthier Le Livre des rois d Egypte IV Cairo 1916 MIFAO 20 p 152 Ghias Abadi R M 2004 Achaemenid Inscriptions کتیبه های هخامنشی in Persian 2nd ed Tehran Shiraz Navid Publications p 129 ISBN 964 358 015 6 Artaxerxes at Encyclopaedia Iranica The Greek form of the name is influenced by Xerxes Artaxerxes at Encyclopaedia Iranica James D G Dunn John William Rogerson 19 November 2003 Eerdmans Commentary on the Bible Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 321 ISBN 978 0 8028 3711 0 Matthew W Stolper The Death of Artaxerxes I in Archaeologische Mitteilungen aus Iran N F 16 1983 Dietrich Reimer Verlag Berlin p 231 Plutarch Artaxerxes l 1 c 1 11 129 cited by Ussher Annals para 1179 Pirnia Iran e Bastan book 1 p 873 Dandamayev Olmstead History of the Persian Empire pp 289 290 Ancient Seals of the Near East 1940 p Plaque 17 Plutarch Themistocles Part II Archived from the original on 2015 10 01 Thucydides I 137 Plutarch Themistocles 29 The Book of Daniel Montex Publish Company By Jim McGuiggan 1978 p 147 Porter J R 2000 The Illustrated Guide to the Bible New York Barnes amp Noble Books pp 115 16 ISBN 978 0 7607 2278 7 Toynbee Arnold 1961 A Study of History Vol 12 Oxford University Press p 485 Ever since the beginning of the Babilonish Captivity the diaspora has been Jewry s citadel and the Artaxerxes in question is Artaxerxes I imperabat 465 424 B C or Artaxerxes II imperabat 404 359 B C So we do not know whether the date of Ezra s mission was 458 B C or 397 B C or whether the date of Nehemia s mission was 445 B C or 384 B C see G F Moore Judaism in the First Centuries of the Christian Era vol i p 5 Nehemiah may have preceded Ezra a b Ezra Encyclopaedia Britannica 2007 Winn Leith Mary Joan 2001 1998 Israel among the Nations The Persian Period In Michael David Coogan ed The Oxford History of the Biblical World Google Books Oxford New York Oxford University Press p 281 ISBN 978 0 19 513937 2 LCCN 98016042 OCLC 44650958 Retrieved 13 December 2007 John Boederman The Cambridge Ancient History 2002 p 272 Nehemiah 8 Ellicott s Commentary for English Readers Nehemiah 2 1 9 James P Byrd The challenges of Roger Williams Religious Liberty Violent Persecution and the Bible Mercer University Press 2002 1 accessed on Google Books on July 20 2009 Ashrafian Hutan 2011 Limb gigantism neurofibromatosis and royal heredity in the Ancient World 2500 years ago Achaemenids and Parthians J Plast Reconstr Aesthet Surg 64 4 557 doi 10 1016 j bjps 2010 08 025 PMID 20832372 Revue archeologique in French Leleux 1844 p 444 450 The vase is now in the Reza Abbasi Museum in Teheran inv 53 image inscription Xenophon Hellenica Book II Chapter 1External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Artaxerxes I Encyclopedia Iranica ARTAXERXES Encyclopedia Iranica ARTAXERXES I a son of Xerxes I and AmestrisArtaxerxes IAchaemenid dynasty Died 424 BCPreceded byXerxes I King of Kings of Persia464 424 BC Succeeded byXerxes IIPharaoh of EgyptXXVII Dynasty465 424 BC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Artaxerxes I amp oldid 1181002208, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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