(present-day Turkey) Xerxes' presentation in Greek and Roman sources is largely negative and this set the tone for most subsequent depictions of him within the western tradition. Xerxes is a central character of
Aeschylus' play
The Persians, first performed in Athens in 472 BC, only seven years after his invasion of Greece. The play presents him as an effeminate figure and his hubristic effort to bring both Asia and Europe under his control leads to the ruin of both himself and his kingdom.
Herodotus's
Histories, written later in the fifth century BC, centre on the Persian Wars, with Xerxes as a major figure. Some of Herodotus' information is spurious. Pierre Briant has accused him of presenting a stereotyped and biased portrayal of the Persians. Richard Stoneman regards his portrayal of Xerxes as nuanced and tragic, compared to the vilification that he suffered at the hands of the
Macedonian king
Alexander the Great (). Xerxes is identified with the king
Ahasuerus in the biblical
Book of Esther, which some scholars, including
Eduard Schwartz,
William Rainey Harper, and
Michael V. Fox, consider to be historical romance. There is nothing close to a consensus, however, as to what historical event provided the basis for the story. Xerxes is the protagonist of the opera
Serse by the German-English
Baroque composer
George Frideric Handel. It was first performed in the
King's Theatre London on 15 April 1738. The famous
aria opens the opera. The murder of Xerxes by Artabanus (
Artabano), execution of crown prince Darius (
Dario), revolt by Megabyzus (
Megabise), and subsequent succession of
Artaxerxes I is romanticised by the Italian poet
Metastasio in his opera libretto
Artaserse (1730), which was first set to music by
Leonardo Vinci, and subsequently by other composers such as
Johann Adolf Hasse and
Johann Christian Bach. The historical novel
Xerxes of de Hoogmoed (1919) by Dutch writer
Louis Couperus describes the Persian wars from the perspective of Xerxes. Though the account is fictionalised, Couperus nevertheless based himself on an extensive study of Herodotus. The English translation
Arrogance: The Conquests of Xerxes by Frederick H. Martens appeared in 1930. is commonly thought to be Xerxes. Later generations' fascination with ancient Sparta, particularly the
Battle of Thermopylae, has led to Xerxes' portrayal in works of
popular culture. He was played by
David Farrar in the film
The 300 Spartans (1962), where he is portrayed as a cruel, power-crazed despot and an inept commander. He also features prominently in the graphic novels
300 and
Xerxes: The Fall of the House of Darius and the Rise of Alexander by
Frank Miller, as well as the film adaptation
300 (2007) and its sequel
300: Rise of an Empire (2014), as portrayed by
Brazilian actor
Rodrigo Santoro, in which he is represented as a giant man with androgynous qualities, who claims to be a god-king. This portrayal attracted controversy, especially in
Iran.
Ken Davitian plays Xerxes in
Meet the Spartans, a parody of the first
300 movie replete with sophomoric humour and deliberate
anachronisms. Similarly, a highly satirized depiction of Xerxes based on his portrayal in
300 appears in the
South Park episode "
D-Yikes!". ) by
Ernest Normand, 1888 (detail)
Gore Vidal, in his historical fiction novel
Creation (1981), describes at length the rise of the Achaemenids, especially Darius I, and presents the life and death circumstances of Xerxes. Vidal's version of the Persian Wars, which diverges from the orthodoxy of the Greek histories, is told through the invented character of Cyrus Spitama, a half-Greek, half-Persian, and grandson of the prophet
Zoroaster. Thanks to his family connection, Cyrus is brought up in the Persian court after the murder of Zoroaster, becoming the boyhood friend of Xerxes, and later a diplomat who is sent to India, and later to Greece, and who is thereby able to gain privileged access to many leading historical figures of the period. Xerxes (
Ahasuerus) is portrayed by
Richard Egan in the 1960 film
Esther and the King and by
Joel Smallbone in the 2013 film,
The Book of Esther. Xerxes plays an important background role (never making an appearance) in two short works of
alternate history taking place generations after his complete victory over Greece. These are: "Counting Potsherds" by
Harry Turtledove in his anthology
Departures and "The Craft of War" by
Lois Tilton in
Alternate Generals volume 1 (edited by Turtledove). ==See also==