expelled from home or country by authority voluntarily absent from home or country
The forced removal of the Judean elite to Babylon in the wake of the Babylonian conquest of Jerusalem in 587 B C E , and the period of approximately 50 years during which these people lived in servitude in the Tigris-Euphrates Valley
expel from a country; "The poet was exiled because he signed a letter protesting the government's actions"
The person expelled from his country by authority; also, one who separates himself from his home
exclusion from ones usual place of residence; usually means that one is forced from ones native land
Forced separation from one's native country; expulsion from one's home by the civil authority; banishment; sometimes, voluntary separation from one's native country
If you say that someone has been exiled from a particular place or situation, you mean that they have been sent away from it or removed from it against their will. He has been exiled from the first team and forced to play in third team matches = banish Exile is also a noun. Rovers lost 4-1 and began their long exile from the First Division. to force someone to leave their country, especially for political reasons exile sb to sth
If someone is exiled, they are living in a foreign country because they cannot live in their own country, usually for political reasons. His second wife, Hilary, had been widowed, then exiled from South Africa They threatened to exile her in southern Spain. Haiti's exiled president
Banishment forever from land under the control of Sarbreenar Tarring and feathering is an optional extra
(also called the Babylonian exile) The Babylonian exile was the period in the middle of the 6th century B C E when Judeans were taken as captives to Babylonia and resettled there; it officially ended in 539 B C E , but many Judeans nontheless remained there See Biblical Story