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Xerxes I of Persia: Difference between revisions

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He was succeeded by his son [[Artaxerxes I of Persia|Artaxerxes I]].<ref name="ACOd" />
He was succeeded by his son [[Artaxerxes I of Persia|Artaxerxes I]].<ref name="ACOd" />
==Personality and characteristics==
According to the story he was a cruel, ruthless, sadistic, ambitious and dictatorial man obsessed with conquering Greece to avenge his own father. He did not tolerate the resistance of his enemies against his giant Persian army, considering the resistance as useless. He was also a puppet of the [[Order of The Ancients]] from which almost all his evil came.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==

Revision as of 08:30, 23 December 2018


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Xerxes I of Persia (c. 519 BCE – c. 465 BCE), also known as Xerxes the Great, was the son of Darius I, the Emperor of Achaemenid Empire, during the Greco-Persian Wars. Like his father, Xerxes I was a strong ally[1][2] of the Order of the Ancients.[3]

Additionally, the Cult of Kosmos supported Xerxes in his attempted conquest of Greece, unsuccessfully trying to sway King Leonidas of Sparta to allow Xerxes to conquer the land through their puppet, the Oracle of Delphi. In 480 BCE, Xerxes led a Second Persian invasion of Greece, where his armies clashed with that of Leonidas in Malis.[3]

In 465 BCE, Xerxes was killed by Darius, later considered to be one of the first proto-Assassins, marking the first recorded use of the Hidden Blade.[4][5]

He was succeeded by his son Artaxerxes I.[3]

Personality and characteristics

According to the story he was a cruel, ruthless, sadistic, ambitious and dictatorial man obsessed with conquering Greece to avenge his own father. He did not tolerate the resistance of his enemies against his giant Persian army, considering the resistance as useless. He was also a puppet of the Order of The Ancients from which almost all his evil came.

Gallery

Appearances

References

pt-br:Xerxes I da Pérsia