Ezra was from the priestly tribe.
No, Ezra did not build the new temple in Jerusalem. The temple was rebuilt by Zerubbabel, a governor of the Persian Empire, around 515 BC. Ezra was a scribe and priest who played a role in the restoration of Jewish laws and religious practices after the temple was rebuilt.
Which city did you have in mind.Answer:The answer you're looking for is Ezra. Ezra, with the participation of Nehemiah and others, rebuilt the Holy Temple in Jerusalem and the city's walls.
Ezra was a descendant of the priestly tribe of Aaron from the tribe of Levi.
The Temple in Jerusalem, which had been built by Ezra after the Babylonians had destroyed Solomon's Temple. In addition, each family celebrated Hanukkah in their homes (and still do).
Two Jewish temples have been constructed in Jerusalem, historically. Both stood at the same location. It's the raised ground immediately to the east of the "Wailing Wall" in modern Jerusalem. That wall is a section of the perimeter boundary of the area on which both Temples stood, and is the only remaining relic of the physical structure of either Temple.
King Solomon oversaw the building of the First Great Temple in Jerusalem.Priest Ezra and Prophet Nehemiah oversaw the construction of the Second Great Temple in Jerusalem and King Herod enlarged and remodeled it substantially around four centuries later.
Solomon oversaw the building of the first Temple. Ezra, Nehemiah, and Zerrubabel oversaw the building of the second Temple; and Herod oversaw massive renovations to the second Temple several decades before it was destroyed by the Romans.
Ezra was to rebuild the destroyed temple.
The return of several tens of thousands of Jews from the Babylonian exile and the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the Temple.
Ezra was a priest and scribe in the Bible who played a significant role in the restoration of the Jewish community in Jerusalem after the Babylonian exile. He is known for leading a group of exiles back to Jerusalem and for helping to rebuild the temple and reestablishing the Mosaic law among the returning exiles.
Ezra was presumably active during the time of Persian king Artaxerxes II, but some think he was active during the reign of Artaxerxes I which would make him a contemporary of Nehemiah. The Book of Ezra (7:1ff) gives Ezra the same genealogy as 1 Chronicles (5:34ff) gave Jesus ben Yehozedek 100 years earlier, apparently making them brothers in spite of the difference of so many years. There must at the very least have been some confusion about the historicity of Ezra. With the many parallels between the actions of Ezra and Nehemiah, some believe it is possible that Ezra was a priestly fiction. Ezra 5:2 says that Zerubbabel began to build the Temple, completing it (Ezra 6:15) in the sixth year of the reign of Darius, obviously before the time of Nehemiah or Ezra. Nehemiah 6:15 says the city wall was completed by Nehemiah in 52 days.
It was built by Ezra and the Jews who returned from the Babylonian exile. The usual date quoted is 516 BCE, but our tradition places it in 352 BCE.