Haman and sons
Esther 7:9-10
9 Then Harbona, one of the eunuchs attending the king, said,
“A gallows seventy-five feet high stands by Haman's house. He had it made for
Mordecai, who spoke up to help the king.” The king said, “Hang him on it!”
10 So they hanged Haman on the gallows he had prepared for
Mordecai. Then the king's fury subsided.
Esther 8:7
King Xerxes replied to Queen Esther and to Mordecai the Jew,
“Because Haman attacked the Jews, I have given his estate to Esther, and they
have hanged him on the gallows.
Esther 9:13-25
13 “If it pleases the king,” Esther answered, “give the Jews
in Susa permission to carry out this day's edict tomorrow also, and let Haman's
ten sons be hanged on gallows.”
14 So the king commanded that this be done. An edict was
issued in Susa, and they hanged the ten sons of Haman.
15 The Jews in Susa came together on the fourteenth day of
the month of Adar, and they put to death in Susa three hundred men, but they
did not lay their hands on the plunder.
16 Meanwhile, the remainder of the Jews who were in the
king's provinces also assembled to protect themselves and get relief from their
enemies. They killed seventy-five thousand of them but did not lay their hands
on the plunder.
17 This happened on the thirteenth day of the month of Adar,
and on the fourteenth they rested and made it a day of feasting and joy.
18 The Jews in Susa, however, had assembled on the thirteenth
and fourteenth, and then on the fifteenth they rested and made it a day of
feasting and joy.
19 That is why rural Jews—those living in villages—observe
the fourteenth of the month of Adar as a day of joy and feasting, a day for
giving presents to each other.
20 Mordecai recorded these events, and he sent letters to all
the Jews throughout the provinces of King Xerxes, near and far,
21 to have them celebrate annually the fourteenth and
fifteenth days of the month of Adar
22 as the time when the Jews got relief from their enemies,
and as the month when their sorrow was turned into joy and their mourning into
a day of celebration. He wrote them to observe the days as days of feasting and
joy and giving presents of food to one another and gifts to the poor.
23 So the Jews agreed to continue the celebration they had
begun, doing what Mordecai had written to them.
24 For Haman son of Hammedatha, the Agagite, the enemy of all
the Jews, had plotted against the Jews to destroy them and had cast the pur
(that is, the lot) for their ruin and destruction.
25 But when the plot came to the king's attention, he issued
written orders that the evil scheme Haman had devised against the Jews should
come back onto his own head, and that he and his sons should be hanged on the
gallows.
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