Isaiah, again after a time of silence, …
Years: 705BCE - 694BCE
Isaiah, again after a time of silence, addresses Hezekiah's second attempt, from 705 to 701, to establish political independence.
Compiled as the first part of the “Book of Isaiah,” the writings from these periods fall into seven collections of sayings on themes of sin, judgment, and deliverance from the judgment. (Christians will interpret Isaiah’s Immanuel prophecies in Chapters 6—12 as references to Christ.)
At the accession of the Assyrian king Sennacherib in 705 BCE, further rebellions break out all over the empire.
Hezekiah, according to 2 Kings 20:20, 2 Chronicles 32:30, may be the leader of the rebellion in Palestine, which includes the city-states of Ascalon and Ekron and gains the support of Egypt.
In preparing for the inevitable Assyrian campaign to retake Palestine, Hezekiah strengthens the defenses of his capital and digs out the famous Siloam tunnel, which brings the water of the Gihon springs to a reservoir inside the city wall.
Hezekiah succumbs, however, to the might of Sennacherib, who in 701 overruns Judah, takes forty-six of its walled cities and places much conquered Judaean territory under the control of neighboring states.
While Sennacherib is besieging the city of Lachish, Hezekiah seeks to spare Jerusalem itself from capture by paying a heavy tribute of gold and silver to the Assyrian king, who nevertheless demands the city's unconditional surrender.
According to 2 Kings, Jerusalem is saved by a miraculous plague that decimates the Assyrian army (”smitten by the angel of the Lord”) felling one hundred and eighty-five thousand men. (Contradictory dates for Sennacherib's invasion are given in the Book of Kings, and he may possibly have invaded Judah a second time near the close of Hezekiah's reign.)
Though forced to withdraw, Sennacherib compels Hezekiah to renew his tribute payments to Assyria.
Locations
People
Groups
- Phoenicians
- Tyre, Kingdom of (Phoenicia)
- Philistines
- Hebrews
- Egypt (Ancient), Third Intermediate Period of
- Judah, Kingdom of
- Assyrian people
- Assyria, (New) Kingdom of (Neo-Assyrian Empire)
Topics
- Younger Subboreal Period
- Iron Age, Near and Middle East
- Iron Age Cold Epoch
- Classical antiquity
- Assyrian Wars of c. 745-609 BCE
