<html>
<body>
From
<a href="http://tinyurl.com/bblfpzm" eudora="autourl">
http://tinyurl.com/bblfpzm</a><br><br>
<font size=3>In this article, we will explain how scholars were finally
able to identify Achashverosh in secular sources. We will also show that
Esther can be identified in secular sources as well. Finally, we will
utilize these sources to shed light on the story of the
Megillah.<br><br>
Before we get to these sources, we have to point out that an important
clue to the identity of Achashverosh is found in the book of Ezra.
Achashverosh is mentioned at Ezra 4:6 in the context of other Persian
kings. The simplest understanding of Ezra 4:6 and its surrounding verses
is that Achashverosh is the Persian king who reigned after the Daryavesh
who rebuilt the Temple,<a name="_ftnref1"></a>[1] but before
Artachshasta. But what about the secular sources? Was there any Persian
king known as Achashverosh or something close to that in these
sources?<br>
Until the 19<sup>th</sup> century, a search in
secular sources for a Persian king named Achashverosh or something close
to that would have been an unsuccessful one. Our knowledge of the Persian
kings from the Biblical period was coming entirely from the writings of
Greek historians, and none of the names that they recorded were close to
Achashverosh. The Greek historians (Herodotus, mid-5<sup>th</sup> cent.
BCE, and the others who came after him) described the following Persian
kings from the Biblical period: Cyrus, Cambyses, Darius, Xerxes, and
Artaxerxes.<br><br>
See the above URL for more. YL<br>
</font></body>
<br>
</html>