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- Babylonian revolts (484 BC) - Wikipedia
Furthermore, the title king of Babylon was not abruptly dropped by Xerxes, who continued to use it (albeit less often) in the years after the Babylonian revolts There is even evidence that Xerxes's successor, Artaxerxes I, used the title at times [24]
- Introduction: Debating Xerxes’ Rule in Babylonia
How did the debate about Xerxes’ Babylonian policy develop? The ortho-doxy, most clearly expressed by Cameron (1941) and de Liagre Böhl (1962), held that Xerxes punished Babylon severely after the uprisings of Šamaš-erība and Bēl-šimânni, by taking away the statue of Marduk from its sanctuary, by
- What was the immediate aftermath of the Babylonian Revolts . . .
Prior to Xerxes, Babylonian records identified the Persian kings as "King of Babylon, King of Lands " From 484 onwards, those titles were no longer used and the Akitu Festival fell out of significance for 150 years ( pdf )
- Xerxes and the Esagila Temple in Babylon - JSTOR
In contrast to the king of the country after Xerxes had removed chives of the Eanna and Ebabbarra temples, Marduk's statue, since a ruler was obliged to possess only occasional texts from Esagila from legitimize his rule by taking the hands of the the Chaldean and Achaemenid periods While
- ANCIENT HISTORY - TSFX
Thus, Xerxes dropped the title of Pharaoh and the King of Babylon from his list of official titles and appointed his brother Achaemenes as Satrap of Egypt In Babylon Xerxes appointed the general Megabyxus to lead the suppression and some temples and fortifications were destroyed
- Xerxes the Great – The God King of Persia - Biographics
Since then, he also no longer used the title of “King of Babylon” in inscriptions, instead referring to himself as the “King of the Persians and the Medes ” Now that all the internal strife was dealt with, it was finally time to take on the Greeks
- (PDF) Dating the reigns of Xerxes and Artaxerxes - ResearchGate
Xerxes' death is unanimously dated in 465 BCE by mainstream historians, it comes mainly from the official Babylonian chronology, recorded in the King List such as the tablet BM 34576 (copy dated
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