A:
No one knows who wrote the Book of Esther, but some who consider it to be an accurate account do say that the author could have been Mordecai, one of the characters in the book. However, there are enough historical errors in Esther to demonstrate that the book was written centuries after the events portrayed and therefore could not have been written by Mordecai.
The consensus of biblical scholars is that the Book of Esther is a second-century-BCE novel. The discovery of the Dead Sea Scroll fragments now known as proto-Esther,with several parallels to the Book of Esther suggests, but does not prove, that the Book of Esther was inspired by proto-Esther. In other words, Mordecai played no part in writing this book, and he would seem to have been a literary creation.
The king was sending his orders to each nation in their language. This means that at least one person was Jewish who knew to write in Hebrew. Only one person did not bow to Haman and that person, Mordecai, claim that this is because he was Jewish. It is clear that there was no other known Jewish that did bow. So Mordecai was the Jewish representative in the King's court that represent his Jewish nation and translated the King's orders to the Jews.
The Bible does not say who her father was. Her uncle's name was Mordecai.
It is believed that Mordecai (Esther's cousin) wrote Esther. The author's central purpose was to record the institution of the annual festival of Purim and to keep alive for later generations the memory of the great deliverance of the Jewish people during the reign of King Xerxes (a.k.a. King Ahasuerus). The book accounts for both the initiation of that observation and the obligation for its perpetual commemoration.
Mordecai, Esther's uncle, came from the tribe of Benjamin (Esther 2:5). While not directly mentioned, it can be inferred from this that Esther was also from the tribe of Benjamin.
No not likely as the bible says she was a orphan.
He might've not had one at all - nothing was mentioned about Mordecai's wife in the Bible (rather, Esther).
Mordecai, one of the Jews exiled to Babylonia after the First Destruction, was the cousin of Queen Esther. He was one of the leading Jewish sages of the time. His deeds are recounted at length in the Book of Esther (and are too many to list here). By the end of the reign of King Ahaseurus, Mordecai had become viceroy to the King.
Haman the Agagite was angry at Mordecai for not bowing down to him.
Mordecai, in the Book of Esther.
Haman. Check out the book of Esther. (:
The book of Esther. See related link.
Mordecai is the one cousin whose name is recorded.See also:More about Esther and Mordecai
Mordecai was Esther's cousin.See also:More about Esther
Esther was Mordecai's cousin in the story of Purim.
The Scripture does not mention his name. It only mentions her older cousin Mordecai and her father Abihail in Esther 2:15:Esther 2:7New King James Version (NKJV)7AndMordecaihad brought up Hadassah, thatis,Esther, his uncle’s daughter, for she had neither father nor mother. The young womanwaslovely and beautiful. When her father and mother died, Mordecai took her as his own daughter.
Mordecai is Esther's cousin in the biblical story of Purim.
The king was sending his orders to each nation in their language. This means that at least one person was Jewish who knew to write in Hebrew. Only one person did not bow to Haman and that person, Mordecai, claim that this is because he was Jewish. It is clear that there was no other known Jewish that did bow. So Mordecai was the Jewish representative in the King's court that represent his Jewish nation and translated the King's orders to the Jews.