Xerxes I of Persia (Persian: خشايارشا , Khashayar Shah) (; Old Persian: Xšayaršā IPA: [xʃajaːrʃaː] meaning "ruling over heroes", Greek: Ξέρξης, Hebrew: אֲחַשְׁוֵרוֹשׁ, Modern Aẖashverosh Tiberian ʼĂḥašwērôš), also known as Xerxes the Great (519 BC-465 BC), was the fourth king of the Achaemenid Empire.
Immediately after seizing the kingship, Darius I of Persia (son of Hystaspes) married Atossa (daughter of Cyrus the Great). They were both descendants of Achaemenes from different Achaemenid lines. Marrying a daughter of Cyrus strengthened Darius's position as king. Darius was an active emperor, busy with building programs in Persepolis, Susa, Egypt,
and elsewhere. Toward the end of his reign he moved to punish Athens,
but a new revolt in Egypt (probably led by the Persian satrap) had to be
suppressed. Under Persian law, the Achaemenian kings were required to
choose a successor before setting out on such serious expeditions. Upon
his great decision to leave (487-486 BC), Darius prepared his tomb at Naqsh-e Rostam
and appointed Xerxes, his eldest son by Atossa, as his successor.
Darius's failing health then prevented him from leading the campaigns, and he died in October 486 BC.
Artabazanes
claimed the crown as the eldest of all the children, because it was an
established custom all over the world for the eldest to have the
pre-eminence; while Xerxes, on the other hand, urged that he was sprung
from Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, and that it was Cyrus who had won
the Persians their freedom. Some modern scholars also view the unusual
decision of Darius to give the throne to Xerxes to be a result of his
consideration of the unique positions that Cyrus the Great and his
daughter Atossa have had. Artobazan was born to "Darius the subject", while Xerxes was the eldest son born in the purple
after Darius's rise to the throne, and Artobazan's mother was a
commoner while Xerxes's mother was the daughter of the founder of the
empire.
Xerxes was crowned and succeeded his father in October–December 486 BC when he was about 36 years old. The transition of power to Xerxes was smooth due again in part to the great authority of Atossa\ and his accession of royal power was not challenged by any person at court or in the Achaemenian family, or any subject nation.
Almost immediately, he suppressed the revolts in Egypt and Babylon that had broken out the year before, and appointed his brother Achaemenes as governor or satrap (Old Persian: khshathrapavan) over Egypt. In 484 BC, he outraged the Babylonians by violently confiscating and melting down the golden statue of Bel (Marduk,
Merodach), the hands of which the rightful king of Babylon had to clasp
each New Year's Day. This sacrilege led the Babylonians to rebel in 484
BC and 482 BC, so that in contemporary Babylonian documents, Xerxes
refused his father's title of King of Babylon, being named rather as
King of Persia and Media, Great King, King of Kings (Shahanshah) and King of Nations (i.e. of the world).
Even though Herodotus's report in the Histories has created certain problems concerning Xerxes's religious beliefs, modern scholars consider him a Zoroastrian.
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