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English Dictionary: Darius by the DICT Development Group
2 results for Darius
From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:
   Darius
      the holder or supporter, the name of several Persian kings. (1.)
      Darius the Mede (Dan. 11:1), "the son of Ahasuerus, of the seed
      of the Medes" (9:1). On the death of Belshazzar the Chaldean he
      "received the kingdom" of Babylon as viceroy from Cyrus. During
      his brief reign (B.C. 538-536) Daniel was promoted to the
      highest dignity (Dan. 6:1, 2); but on account of the malice of
      his enemies he was cast into the den of lions. After his
      miraculous escape, a decree was issued by Darius enjoining
      "reverence for the God of Daniel" (6:26). This king was probably
      the "Astyages" of the Greek historians. Nothing can, however, be
      with certainty affirmed regarding him. Some are of opinion that
      the name "Darius" is simply a name of office, equivalent to
      "governor," and that the "Gobryas" of the inscriptions was the
      person intended by the name.
     
         (2.) Darius, king of Persia, was the son of Hystaspes, of the
      royal family of the Achaemenidae. He did not immediately succeed
      Cyrus on the throne. There were two intermediate kings, viz.,
      Cambyses (the Ahasuerus of Ezra), the son of Cyrus, who reigned
      from B.C. 529-522, and was succeeded by a usurper named Smerdis,
      who occupied the throne only ten months, and was succeeded by
      this Darius (B.C. 521-486). Smerdis was a Margian, and therefore
      had no sympathy with Cyrus and Cambyses in the manner in which
      they had treated the Jews. He issued a decree prohibiting the
      restoration of the temple and of Jerusalem (Ezra 4:17-22). But
      soon after his death and the accession of Darius, the Jews
      resumed their work, thinking that the edict of Smerdis would be
      now null and void, as Darius was in known harmony with the
      religious policy of Cyrus. The enemies of the Jews lost no time
      in bringing the matter under the notice of Darius, who caused
      search to be made for the decree of Cyrus (q.v.). It was not
      found at Babylon, but at Achmetha (Ezra 6:2); and Darius
      forthwith issued a new decree, giving the Jews full liberty to
      prosecute their work, at the same time requiring the Syrian
      satrap and his subordinates to give them all needed help. It was
      with the army of this king that the Greeks fought the famous
      battle of Marathon (B.C. 490). During his reign the Jews enjoyed
      much peace and prosperity. He was succeeded by Ahasuerus, known
      to the Greeks as Xerxes, who reigned for twenty-one years.
     
         (3.) Darius the Persian (Neh. 12:22) was probably the Darius
      II. (Ochus or Nothus) of profane history, the son of Artaxerxes
      Longimanus, who was the son and successor of Ahasuerus (Xerxes).
      There are some, however, who think that the king here meant was
      Darius III. (Codomannus), the antagonist of Alexander the Great
      (B.C. 336-331).
     

From Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's) [hitchcock]:
   Darius, he that informs himself
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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