Ezra
Related Category: Old Testament
book of the Bible, combined with
Nehemiah in the
Septuagint to form the book 2 Esdras. In the
Vulgate, Ezra and Nehemiah are called 1 and 2 Esdras respectively. Ezra, like Nehemiah, is the work of the Chronicler (see
Chronicles) and narrates the history of the Jews from 538 B.C. to c.458 B.C. as follows: the decree of the Persian king Cyrus permitting the Jews to return to Palestine from captivity under the leadership of
Sheshbazzar; the return of Zerubbabel with a certain number to Jerusalem in c.520 B.C. where they complete the task of rebuilding the Temple despite opposition; and the return of Ezra, priest and scribe, to Jerusalem in c.458 B.C. with orders from King Artaxerxes I to restore the Jewish law. It is possible, however, that Ezra might have returned after Nehemiah in c.398 B.C. during the reign of Artaxerxes II. The text is not clear which Artaxerxes is meant. A substantial passage of Ezra is in Aramaic. See also
Esdras for books purportedly written by Ezra in the
Apocrypha and
Pseudepigrapha.
See F. C. Fensham, Ezra and Nehemiah (1982); M. A. Thronveit, EzraNehemiah (1992).