Monday, May 18, 2020
Biography of Xerxes King of Persia, Enemy of Greece
Xerxes (518 BCEââ¬âAugust 465 BCE) was a king of the Achaemenid dynasty during the Mediterranean late Bronze Age. His rule came at the height of the Persian empire, and he is well-documented by the Greeks, who described him as a passionate, cruel, self-indulgentà womanizerââ¬âbut much of that may well have been slander.à Fast Facts: Biography of Xerxes Known For: King of Persia 486ââ¬â465 BCEAlternative Names: Khshayarsha, Esfandiyar or Isfendiyadh in Arabic records, Ahasuerus in Jewish recordsBorn: ca 518 BCE, Achmaenid EmpireParents: Darius the Great and AtossaDied: August 465 BCE, PersepolisArchitectural Works: PersepolisSpouses: unnamed woman, Amestris, EstherChildren: Darius, Hystaspes, Artaxerxes I, Ratahsia, Megabyzus, Rodogyne Early Life Xerxes was born about 518ââ¬â519 BCE, the eldest son of Darius the Great (550 BCEââ¬â486 BCE) and his second wife Atossa. Darius was the fourth king of the Achaemenid empire, but not directly descended from the founder Cyrus II (~600ââ¬â530 BCE). Darius would take the empire to its greatest extent, but before he could accomplish that, he needed to establish his connection to the family. When it came time to name a successor, he chose Xerxes, because Atossa was a daughter of Cyrus. Scholars know Xerxes primarily from Greek records pertaining to a failed attempt to add Greece to the Persian Empire. Those earliest surviving records include a play by Aeschylus (525ââ¬â456 BCE) called The Persians and Herodotus Histories. There are also some Persian tales of Esfandiyar or Isfendiyadh in the 10th century CE history of Iran known as theà Shahnameh (the Book of Kings, written by Abul-Qà ¢sem Ferdowsi Tusi). And there are Jewish stories about Ahausuerus from as early as the 4th century BCE in the Bible, particularly the Book of Esther. Education There are no surviving records of Xerxesà specific education, but the Greek philosopher Xenophon (431ââ¬â354 BCE), who knew Xerxes great-grandson, described the main features of a noble Persians education. The boys were taught in the court by eunuchs, receiving lessons in riding and archery from a young age.à Tutors drawn from the nobility taught the Persian virtues of wisdom, justice, prudence, and bravery, as well as theà religion of Zoroaster, instilling a reverence to the god Ahura Mazda. No royal student learned to read or write, as literacy was relegated to specialists.à Successionà Darius selected Xerxes as his heir and successor because of Atossas connection to Cyrus, and the fact that Xerxes was the first son born to Darius after he became king. Darius eldest son Artobarzanes (or Ariaramnes) was from his first wife, who was not of royal blood. When Darius died there were other claimantsââ¬âDarius had at least three other wives, including another daughter of Cyrus, but apparently, the transition was not strongly contested. The investiture may have taken place at Zendan-e-Suleiman (Solomons Prison) at Pasargadae, a sanctuary of the goddess Anahita near the hollow cone of an ancient volcano.à Gateway of All Lands, erected by Xerxes in the 5th Cent. BC in the ancient Persian city of Persepolis. Dmitri Kessel / Getty Images Darius had died abruptly, while he was preparing for war with Greece, which had been interrupted by the revolt of the Egyptians. Within the first or second year of Xerxes rule, he had to quell an uprising in Egypt (he invaded Egypt in 484 BCE and left his brother Achaemenes governor before returning to Persia), at least two uprisings in Babylon, and perhaps one in Judah. The Greed for Greece At the time Xerxes achieved the throne, the Persian empire was at its height, with a number of Persian satrapies (governmental provinces) established from India and central Asia to modern Uzbekistan, westward in North Africa to Ethiopia and Libya and the eastern shores of the Mediterranean. Capitals were established at Sardis, Babylon, Memphis, Ecbatana, Pasargadae, Bactra, and Arachoti, all administered by royal princes.à Darius wanted to add Greece as his first step into Europe, but it was also a grudge rematch. Cyrus the Great had earlier tried to capture the prize, but instead lost the Battle of Marathon and suffered the sack of his capital of Sardis during the Ionian Revolt (499ââ¬â493 BCE). Greco-Persian Conflict, 480ââ¬â479 BCE Xerxes followed in his fathers footsteps in what the Greek historians called a classic state of hubris: he was aggressively certain that the Zoroastrian gods of the mighty Persian empire were on his side and laughed at Greek preparations for battle.à After three years of preparation, Xerxes invaded Greece in August of 480 BCE. Estimates of his forces are ridiculously overblown. Herodotus estimated a military force of some 1.7 million, while modern scholars estimate a more reasonable 200,000, still a formidable army and navy.à Leonidas at the Battle of Thermopylae. Jacques-Louis David (1748-1825), Musee du Louvre. G. DAGLI ORTI / De Agostini Picture Library / Getty Images Plus The Persians crossed the Hellespont using a pontoon bridge and met a small group of Spartans led by Leonidas on the plain at Thermopylae. Vastly outnumbered, the Greeks lost. A naval battle at Artemision proved indecisive; the Persians technically won but took heavy losses. At the naval battle of Salamis, though, the Greeks were victorious under the leadership of Themistocles (524ââ¬â459 BCE), but in the meantime, Xerxes sacked Athens and torched the Acropolis.à After the disaster at Salamis, Xerxes installed a governor in Thessalyââ¬âMardonius, with an army of 300,000 menââ¬âand returned to his capital at Sardis. At the Battle of Plataea in 479 BCE, however, Mardonius was defeated and killed, effectively ending the Persian invasion of Greece.à Building Persepolisà In addition to the complete failure to win Greece, Xerxes is famous for building Persepolis. Founded by Darius about 515 BCE, the city was the focus of new building projects for the length of the Persian empire, still expanding when Alexander the Great (356ââ¬â323 BCE) set upon it in 330 BCE.à Buildings constructed by Xerxes were specifically targeted for destruction by Alexander, whose writers nevertheless represent the best descriptions of the damaged buildings. The citadel included a walled palace area and a colossal statue of Xerxes. There were lush gardens fed by an extensive canal systemââ¬âthe drains still work. Palaces, the apadana (audience hall), a treasury and entrance gates all graced the city. The terrace at Persepolis is carved with figures bringing tributes to the Achaemenid king and large tables which depict a lion attacking a bull. Corbis / Getty Images Marriage and Familyà Xerxes was married to his first wife Amestris for a very long time, although theres no record of when the marriage began. Some historians argue that his wife was chosen for him by his mother Atossa, who selected Amestris because she was the daughter of Otanes and had money and political connections. Together they had at least six children: Darius, Hystapes, Artaxerxes I, Ratahsah, Ameytis, and Rodogyne. Artaxerxes I would reign for 45 years after Xerxes death (r. 465ââ¬â424 BCE). They stayed married, but Xerxes built an enormous harem, and while he was in Sardis after the Battle of Salamis, he fell in love with the wife of his full brother Masistes. She resisted him, so he arranged a marriage between Masistes daughter Artayne and his own eldest son Darius. After the party returned to Susa, Xerxes turned his attention to his niece.à Ametris learned of the intrigue and, assuming it had been arranged by Masistes wife, she mutilated her and sent her back to her husband. Masistes fled to Bactria to raise an insurrection, but Xerxes sent an army and they killed him.à Queen Esther standing in the court of Ahasuerus: the king holds out to Esther the golden scepter that was in his hand. (Esther 5, 2). Wood engraving, published in 1886. DigitalVision Vectors / Getty Images The book of Esther, which may be a work of fiction, is set in Xerxes rule and was written about 400 BCE. In it, Esther (Asturya), the daughter of Mordecai, marries Xerxes (called Ahasuerus), in order to foil a plot by the wicked Haman who seeks to organize a pogrom against the Jews.à à Death of Xerxesà Xerxes was slain in his bed at Persepolis in August 465 BCE. The Greek historians generally agree that the murderer was a prefect named Artabanus, who aspired to assume Xerxes kingship. Bribing the eunuch chamberlain, Artabanus entered the chamber one night and stabbed Xerxes to death.à After killing Xerxes, Artabanus went to Xerxes son Artaxerxes and told him that his brother Darius was the murderer. Artaxerxes headed straight to his brothers bedchamber and killed him.à The plot was eventually discovered, Artaxerxes was acknowledged as king and successor to Xerxes, and Artabanus and his sons were arrested and killed.à The Achaemenid Tombs of Naqsh-e Rostam including that of Xerxes, Marvdascht, Fars, Iran, Asia. Gilles Barbier / Getty Images Legacyà Despite his fatal errors, Xerxes left the Achaemenid empire intact for his son Artaxerxes. It would not be until Alexander the Great that the empire was disassembled into pieces ruled by Alexanders generals, the Seleucid kings, who ruled unevenly until the Romans began their ascendancy in the region.à Sources and Further Readingà Bridges, Emma. Imagining Xerxes: Ancient Perspectives on a Persian King. London: Bloomsbury, 2015.Munson, Rosaria Vignolo. Who Are Herodotus Persians? Classical World 102 (2009): 457ââ¬â70.Sancisi-Weerdenburg, Heleen. The Personality of Xerxes, King of Kings. Brills Companion to Herodotus. Brills Companions to Classical Studies. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 2002. 549ââ¬â60.à Smith, William, and G.E. Marindon, eds. A Classical Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography, Mythology, and Geography. London: John Murray, 1904.Stoneman, Richard. Xerxes: A Persian Life. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015.Waerzeggers, Caroline. The Babylonian Revolts against Xerxes and the End of Archives. Archiv fà ¼r Orientforschung 50 (2003): 150ââ¬â73. Print.
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