Cyrus in Easton's Bible Dictionary
(Heb. Ko'resh), the celebrated "King of Persia" (Elam) who
was
conqueror of Babylon, and issued the decree of
liberation to the
Jews (Ezra 1:1, 2). He was the son of Cambyses, the
prince of
Persia, and was born about B.C. 599. In the year
B.C. 559 he
became king of Persia, the kingdom of Media being
added to it
partly by conquest. Cyrus was a great military
leader, bent on
universal conquest. Babylon fell before his army
(B.C. 538) on
the night of Belshazzar's feast (Dan. 5:30), and
then the
ancient dominion of Assyria was also added to his
empire (cf.,
"Go up, O Elam", Isa.21:2).
Hitherto the great kings of the earth had only
oppressed the
Jews. Cyrus was to them as a "shepherd" (Isa. 44:28;
45:1). God
employed him in doing service to his ancient people.
He may
posibly have gained, through contact with the Jews,
some
knowledge of their religion.
The "first year of Cyrus" (Ezra 1:1) is not the year
of his
elevation to power over the Medes, nor over the
Persians, nor
the year of the fall of Babylon, but the year
succeeding the two
years during which "Darius the Mede" was viceroy in
Babylon
after its fall. At this time only (B.C. 536) Cyrus
became actual
king over Israel, which became a part of his
Babylonian
empire. The edict of Cyrus for the rebuilding of
Jerusalem
marked a great epoch in the history of the Jewish
people (2 Chr.
36:22, 23; Ezra 1:1-4; 4:3; 5:13-17; 6:3-5).
This decree was discovered "at Achmetha [R.V. marg.,
"Ecbatana"], in the palace that is in the province
of the Medes"
(Ezra 6:2). A chronicle drawn up just after the
conquest of
Babylonia by Cyrus, gives the history of the reign
of Nabonidus
(Nabunahid), the last king of Babylon, and of the
fall of the
Babylonian empire. In B.C. 538 there was a revolt in
Southern
Babylonia, while the army of Cyrus entered the
country from the
north. In June the Babylonian army was completely
defeated at
Opis, and immediately afterwards Sippara opened its
gates to the
conqueror. Gobryas (Ugbaru), the governor of
Kurdistan, was then
sent to Babylon, which surrendered "without
fighting," and the
daily services in the temples continued without a
break. In
October, Cyrus himself arrived, and proclaimed a
general
amnesty, which was communicated by Gobryas to "all
the province
of Babylon," of which he had been made governor.
Meanwhile,
Nabonidus, who had concealed himself, was captured,
but treated
honourably; and when his wife died, Cambyses, the
son of Cyrus,
conducted the funeral. Cyrus now assumed the title
of "king of
Babylon," claimed to be the descendant of the
ancient kings, and
made rich offerings to the temples. At the same time
he allowed
the foreign populations who had been deported to
Babylonia to
return to their old homes, carrying with them the
images of
their gods. Among these populations were the Jews,
who, as they
had no images, took with them the sacred vessels of
the temple.
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