Coresh (the Persian King Cyrus).
The Judeans did not defeat Persia, the Persians under their king Cyrus the Great took control of Judah which was already under control of the Babylonians whom Persia replaced as ruler. The Babylonians had already deported the entire aristocracy of Judea. Persian king Cyrus the Great allowed them to return and try to reclaim their ancestral estates.
The Persian Empire, under Cyrus the Great.
Alexander the Great took Judah over in passing and incorporated it as a minor part of his empire.No Jewish king defeated the Persians, the Persians took over Judah as part of their empire.
The Judeans did not defeat Persia, the Persians under their king Cyrus the Great took control of Judah which was already under control of the Babylonians whom Persia replaced as ruler. The Babylonians had already deported the entire aristocracy of Judea. Persian king Cyrus the Great allowed them to return and try to reclaim their ancestral estates.
Egypt and Libya were part of the Persian Empire.
The exiled aristocracy from Judah was permitted to return to try to reclain their estates. Half did, but the remainder had become entrenched in Babylon that they declined. Both communities prospered.
AnswerYes. Biblical tradition says that Judah was formed as a nation separate from Israel late in the tenth century BCE. In fact, Judah and Israel were probably always separate, and thus the sate of Judah may be somewhat older than the Bible tells. It continued, mainly under foreign domination, until the sixth century BCE, when Babylon overrran Judah and destroyed its capital, Jerusalem. Later, the Jews were allowed to return to Judah, which had come under Persian rule.During Roman times, the name was changed to Judea.
The wording of this question is confusing. "Judah" was the name of the country and after Judah was conquered by the Assyrians, it never asserted independence again under that name. "Israel" is also confusing because Israel was the kingdom to the North of Judah whose inhabitants stopped associating themselves with that State by the time of the Persian Empire. If your question means to say "When were the Judeans allowed to return to Canaan following the Babylonian Exile?" the answer is the 520s-510s BCE.
In 50 BCE, when Cyrus the Great began expansion after incorporating Media under Persian control.
mostly the maccabees
From 415 BC to 355 BC, the Greeks and the Romans were at war with each other. The Greeks finally were overtaken and the Roman Empire began.
yes