answersLogoWhite

0

Many remained in Babylon, having established themselves there. About 40,000 of the Jewish aristocracy exiled there, their family and slaves, migrated to Judah on the promise of regaining the ancestral lands they claimed there.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

In what year did the Persians allow the Jews to return to Judah?

538 b.C.e.


Why Did Jews return to Judah?

it was there promised land


Who is cabees?

he is the persian king who allowed the Jews to return to Judah


What year did the Persian allow the Jews to return to Judah?

The date often quoted is around 538 BCE. Tradition puts this event around 373 BCE.


Who was the Persian king who defeated the Chaldean's and allowed the exiled Jews to return to Judah?

Cyrus.


Did the Jews return in 539 BCE?

A:Yes. In 539 BCE, Cyrus of Persia permitted Jewish exiles to return to Judah.


Who was the Persian king who defeated the Chaldeans and allowed the exiled Jews to return to Judah?

KING CYRUS THE GREAT conquered the Babylonian or Chaldean Empire and gave the Babylonian Jews permission to return to their homeland of Judah and rebuild their sacred Temple.


Who let Jews return to judah under Persian control?

Coresh (the Persian King Cyrus).


What is the scripture of King Cyrus decreed that the Jews return to Judah to rebuild the Temple?

This event is discussed in the Book of Ezra or in the non-Biblical Cyrus Cylinder.


Who was the Persian king who defeated the Chaldean's and allowed exiled Jews to return to Judah?

Cyrus II (Cyrus the Great) freed the Jewish Exiles from captivity


What has the author Judah ben Yakar written?

Judah ben Yakar has written: 'Perush ha-tefilot veha-berakhot' -- subject(s): Jews, Jews. Liturgy and ritual, Jews. Liturgy and ritual. Benedictions, Jews. Liturgy and ritual. Hagadah


Did Cyrus enslave Jews?

A:No, very much the other way around. Cyrus the Great (c. 560-530 BCE) defeated the Babylonians in 539 BCE and ordered that the enslaved Jews be allowed to return to Judah if they wished to do so.