No. Mordechai told her to keep it a secret until she learned about Haman's plot to destroy the Jews.
She did not want to tell she was a Jew, and save them even as she was a Jew.
ESTHER WAS A WOMAN OF GOD AND GOD SAW FAVOR IN HER. SHE WAS THE ONLY ONE THAT WENT TO THE KING IN HER ROYAL APPAREL . SHE ASK THE KING FOR FAVOR FOR THE Jew. THE KING GRANT HER FAVOR SHE WAS A WOMAN OF GOG.
why the heck would i know
Queen Esthers main achivement was to have courage and go before the King , even at the cost of her life to save the the Jews , as she was a Jew by birth.
In the King James version, in Psalms 99:5,9. Also, in Proverbs 4:8. These verses don't actually start with the letter x, but the reference to the letter is used in the words "except" and "exhault".
1. Esther, a Jew, becomes Queen in Persia [Esther 2:1-17] 2. Jews are threatened [Esther 3:8-4:4] 3. At risk to her own life, Esther intercedes for the Jews [Esther 5-8] 4. Haman's plot is revealed and he is hanged on the gallows he built for Mordecai [Esther 6] 5. Jews are delivered [Esther 9-10] 6. Mordecai, Esther's Uncle, becomes the prime minister with authority next to that of the King [Esther 10:3]
In the Book of Esther, Vashti, wife of King Xerxes, showed disrespect to him and was replaced by the beautiful Jew, Esther. Historians say that the wife of Xerxes I was really Amestris and that she was not replaced, so this is not a historical account.
The Esther in the Bible married the King Ahasuerus.
King Ahasuerus
The first time the word 'Jew' appears in the Bible is Esther chapter 2 verse 5:-Est 2:5 Now in Shushan the palace there was a certain Jew, whose name was Mordecai, the son of Jair, the son of Shimei, the son of Kish, a Benjamite;(The term 'Jew' is a contraction of the word 'Judah").
Not sure. Did Esther love Xerxes? There is NO reference in the book of Esther that Esther loved the King of Persia - Xerxes.
Queen Esther went to the king ,after she and her servants fasted for a week. Even though the king did not call for Esther orhad he extended the royal sceptre. She walked boldly to the king.