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Nabonidus was the last King of Babylon, who reigned from 556 BC to 539 BC. His reign was characterized by his
lack of interest in the politics and religion of his kingdom.
Nabonidus, whose relationship with the previous Chaldean Kings of Babylon is
unclear, came to the throne in 556 BC by overthrowing the youthful king Labashi-Marduk. In 549 BC he left Babylon to live in Arabia leaving his
son Belshazzar behind to rule the empire in his stead.
In 539 BC, according to the Hebrew
Bible, while Belshazzar and the nobles of the empire were feasting and drinking from the chalices from the Hebrew Temple of Jerusalem, a hand wrote an unknown Aramaic text on
the wall: mene, mene, tekel, ufarsin.
None of Belshazzar's soothsayers could translate the words written and then the Jew Daniel, known for his accurate prophecies was called to translate the text and he said: "God has
numbered your kingdom and brought it to an end. You are weighed in the balances and are found
wanting. Your kingdom is divided and given to the Medes and Persians." These words indicated the arrival of the
Persian king Cyrus the Great who rode out to conquer Babylon
King Nabonidus returned to save his kingdom but he came too late. The Persians
took the city and the kingdom without resistance (they even got support from Gobryas, a local provincial governor) and King
Cyrus was greeted as a liberator.
The fate of Nabonidus is uncertain. King Cyrus was known for sparing the lives of the kings whom he had defeated, King
Croesus of Lydia lived after his defeat at
King Cyrus's court as an advisor. But it is presumed that Cyrus made an exception in Nabonidus's case.
see also: Kings of Babylon, Babylonia
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