Nehemiah, The Book Of
like the preceding one of Ezra, is clearly and certainly not all by the same hand. [Ezra, Book Of, BOOK OF] By far the most important portion, indeed is the work of Nehemiah but other portions are either extracts from various
chronicles and registers or supplementary narratives and reflections, some apparently by Ezra, others, perhaps the work of
the same person who inserted the latest, genealogical extracts from the public chronicles. The main history contained in the
book of Nehemiah covers about twelve years, viz., from the twentieth to the thirty-second year of Artaxerxes Langimanus i.e.
from B.C. 445 to 433. The whole narrative gives us a graphic and interesting account of the state of Jerusalem and the returned
captives in the writer’s times, and, incidentally, of the nature of the Persian government and the condition of its remote
provinces, The book of Nehemiah has always had an undisputed place in the Canon, being included by the Hebrews under the general
head of the book of Ezra, and, as Jerome tells us in the Prolog. Gal., by the Greeks and Latins under the name of the second
book of Ezra.