Yes, Vashti was executed for disobeying King Achashverosh.
Esther replaced Queen Vashti as queen after Queen Vashti refused to come to the King's banquet.
Vashti disobeyed Asahuruers during the part.
The name Vashti is of Persian origin and means "beautiful" or "best". It is a name that conveys qualities of elegance, grace, and excellence.
The name Vashti appears as the name of the first queen of the Persian king Achashverosh, in the apocryphal book of Esther. The name Vashti came from an Elamite goddess. The king has been identified by some as Xerxes. Some important contemporary women with that name include Vashti McKenzie, the first female Bishop of the AME church, Vashti McCollum, who won a landmark US Supreme Court case in 1948, and folk singer Vashti Bunyan.
Yes. For not coming to the King's party upon his orders she was ordered executed by her husband.
A:The Book of Esther only says that the king was advised that Vashti should be relieved of her position and no longer be brought before him, and the king did according to that advice. As this is not a historical situation, there not having really been a Queen Vashti, no more detailed answer can be provided.
No it is not likely that queen Vashti ,was pregnant when she was sent into exile.Or the king would take a more lenient view on her.
Vashti refused the summons of King Xerxes to appear before him and his guests because she did not want to be put on display as an object to be looked at and judged solely based on her physical beauty. She valued her dignity and autonomy as a queen and did not want to be degraded in front of the king's drunken guests.
The record of ('Queen') Vashti is in the book of Esther. She was the King's first wife, or queen consort, or most prominent/leading wife, but was deposed for disobedience to her husband, the King. She was replaced by Esther, a Jewess. The book of Esther does not say that Vashti had any children by the King. As she had incited the King's disfavor and been dismissed from the household, whatever happened to her after that was not considered significant enough to include in the bible record.
Esth:1:15: What shall we do unto the queen Vashti according to law, because she hath not performed the commandment of the king Ahasuerus by the chamberlains?
No such event is recorded in the Scroll of Esther. It was Queen Vashti, not the king, who was killed by royal decree.