No, Ezra did not build the new temple in Jerusalem. The temple was rebuilt by Zerubbabel, a governor of the Persian Empire, around 515 BC. Ezra was a scribe and priest who played a role in the restoration of Jewish laws and religious practices after the temple was rebuilt.
Zerubbabel, a governor appointed by the Persian king Cyrus, led the first return of the exiles back to Jerusalem after the Babylonian captivity.
Zerubbabel led the first group of Jews from the Babylonian captivity back to Jerusalem and rebuild the Temple. This was in the first year of King Cyrus of Persia (as described in book of Ezra) which was 538 BC.
Ezra was a priest and scribe in the Bible who played a significant role in the restoration of the Jewish community in Jerusalem after the Babylonian exile. He is known for leading a group of exiles back to Jerusalem and for helping to rebuild the temple and reestablishing the Mosaic law among the returning exiles.
Ezra is a book in the bible about a priest who led Judean people from Babylon back to their home in Jerusalem. He is a highly respected figure in Judaism known for enforcing the Torah.
Ezra was a priest and a descendant of Aaron, the brother of Moses. He was also called a scribe, which was a person who studied, wrote, and taught the scriptures a great deal. Ezra led the second major group of Jews back to Jerusalem sometime around 465-425 B.C. Some have called Ezra the "father" of modern Judaism because of his emphasis on studying the law (the scriptures). He led the Jews at a time when they began focusing more on becoming a church rather than a nation. Ezra apparently either wrote some of the book of Ezra or the original writer quoted directly from a record Ezra wrote because in the last four chapters Ezra spoke in the first person ("I said," "I sent them," and so on).
Two Jewish temples have been constructed in Jerusalem, historically. Both stood at the same location. It's the raised ground immediately to the east of the "Wailing Wall" in modern Jerusalem. That wall is a section of the perimeter boundary of the area on which both Temples stood, and is the only remaining relic of the physical structure of either Temple.
In the Old Testament, Ezra was a Jewish priest and scribe who played a significant role in leading the Israelites back to Jerusalem after their exile in Babylon. He is credited with reintroducing the Torah and religious practices to the returned exiles and is known for his emphasis on religious reform and obedience to God's laws.
No, King Xerxes was the Persian king who reigned in the 5th century BCE. Nebuchadnezzar was a Babylonian king who conquered Jerusalem and exiled the Jews to Babylonia in the 6th century BCE. So Nebuchadnezzar was not sent back to Jerusalem by King Xerxes.
The year 1099
Jeshua in the book of Ezra in the Bible was the high priest with Zerubabel in Babylon and they went back to the land of Israel together with some of the people of Israel to rebuild the temple in Jerusalem
No unfortanetly not.