Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago
References
-
[1]
[PDF] THE ENIGMATIC RABSHAKEH - Jewish Bible QuarterlyOne of three high-ranking officers, this messenger bore the. Assyrian title of Rabshakeh. ASSYRIA'S HIGH OFFICIALS. There are two accounts of the Rabshakeh's ap ...
-
[2]
The Rabshakeh Comes to Jerusalem - The BAS LibraryThe king of Assyria sent the Tartan, the Rab-saris, and the Rabshakeh [Assyrian officials] with a great army from Lachish to King Hezekiah at Jerusalem.Missing: figure primary sources
-
[3]
[PDF] The Institute of Archaeology & Siegfried H. Horn Museum Newsletter ...ed by a man, whose title was the. Rabshakeh, an Assyrian court official. (likely meaning “chief cupbearer”), not a military man, who surprisingly spoke in.
-
[4]
[PDF] Download PDF version of article (13.4 MB) - OraccMay 27, 2011 · ) and 'chief cupbearer' ( rab šāqê) (Mattila ), who in actuality were the most senior Assyrian state offi cials, these governors and ...
-
[5]
[PDF] Published by the Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project - Oraccturtānu, rab šāqê, masennu,¼ šakin māti and governors of various cities.15. The king held the office at some point of his reign, although at present the.
- [6]
-
[7]
Isaiah 36 Brenton's Septuagint Translation### Summary of Isaiah 36 (Brenton's Septuagint Translation)
-
[8]
a study of the highest officials of the Neo-Assyrian empire119 The other three are the Cupbearer (rab šaqê), the Treasurer (masennu), the Palace Herald (nagir ekalli); see Mattila (2000) and Liverani (2004). 120 ...
-
[9]
From Chief Cupbearer to Chief of the Guard - SciELO South AfricaOn the prism, his Akkadian name is presented as Nabû-zër-iddinam, which literally means "Nabu [the deity] has given me offspring." Remarkably, this prism not ...
-
[10]
A Neo-Assyrian Sale Contract from the Province of the Chief ...Nov 27, 2020 · A Neo-Assyrian Sale Contract from the Province of the Chief Cupbearer (rab-šāqê) kept at the Hasankeyf Museum (Batman) · Koray Toptaş, Faruk ...
-
[11]
Assyrian Empire Builders - Technical terms - OraccLiterally "great one": a designation for one of the Assyrian king's senior political or military advisors. See Chief Cupbearer TT , Commander-in-Chief TT and ...
-
[12]
Assyria: Nimrud | British MuseumThe detailed reliefs on display in Rooms 7–8 originally stood in the palace throne-room and in other royal apartments. They depict the king and his subjects ...
-
[13]
The Rabshakeh Stela | ArmstrongInstitute.orgDec 11, 2019 · In 2 Kings 18, a later rabshakeh was sent by Assyrian King Sennacherib from Lachish with a contingent of soldiers to deliver a warning message ...Missing: figure primary sources
-
[14]
Introducing the Assyrians | British MuseumJun 19, 2018 · By the mid-8th century BC, Assyrian kings commanded a professional standing army with chariots, cavalry and infantry. This massive army was ...
-
[15]
Assyrian Empire Builders - Countries and peoples - OraccSep 17, 2024 · In the 8th century BC the Philistine region consisted of several independent kingdoms centred around four cities: Gaza, Ashkelon, Ashdod and ...
-
[16]
[PDF] Annals of Sennacherib - Institute for the Study of Ancient CulturesIn his Preface the author is, I believe, supposed to justify his infliction of another book upon a long-suffering world, and, having mollified the righteous ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[17]
[PDF] The Royal Inscriptions of Sennacherib, King of Assyria (704–681 BC ...Sennacherib, King of Assyria, d. 681 B.C.. The royal inscriptions of Sennacherib, king of Assyria (704–681 BC), Part 2 / [edited by] A. Kirk ...
-
[18]
prism | British MuseumDescription: Hexagonal clay prism, foundation record lists campaigns of Sennacherib until the start of his final war against Babylon, and includes a description ...
-
[19]
Sennacherib and Jerusalem | The Metropolitan Museum of ArtNov 24, 2014 · In 701 B.C. the king turned toward rebellions in the west. With Phoenicia attacked first, Sidon fell and its king fled across the sea. Soon ...
-
[20]
The Experience of Israelite Refugees | Religious Studies Center - BYUThis paper examines the textual and archaeological evidence for Israelite refugees in the kingdom of Judah in the eighth century BC
-
[21]
[PDF] Jerusalem under Hezekiah: an Assyriological Perspective18 As Tadmor points out, the campaign of Sennacherib against Judah and Jerusalem in the reign of Hezekiah is the longest account in the Bible of any encounter ...
-
[22]
[PDF] Grisly Assyrian Record of Torture and DeathIn the eighth century B.C., Tiglath-pileser III held center stage. Of one city he conquered, he says: “Nabû-ushabshi, their king, I hung up in front of the ...
-
[23]
From the subtle to the sublime: How Archaeology Benefits the ChurchFeb 15, 2018 · It was during the reign of Hezekiah that Sennacherib, the Assyrian king, attacked Judah and built the siege ramp at Lachish. You can read ...
-
[24]
[PDF] Archaeology and the Bible at Hezekiah's Lachishreliefs from Sennacherib's palace in Nineveh. The capture of Lachish was followed by Sennacherib's attack on Libnah (19:8) and then the notice of Tirhakah (19: ...
-
[25]
[PDF] NEWSLETTER - Southern Adventist UniversityDetail from the Assyrian reliefs of Sennacherib's palace in Niniveh depicting the Assyrian victory over Judah during the siege of Lachish in 701 BC. The Lachish ...
-
[26]
Bible Gateway passage: Isaiah 36-37 - New International Version### Summary of Isaiah 36-37: Account Involving the Rabshakeh
-
[27]
NoneBelow is a merged and comprehensive summary of the differences in Rabshakeh's portrayal and the Assyrian invasion accounts across Isaiah 36-37, 2 Kings 18-19, and 2 Chronicles 32. To retain all information in a dense and organized manner, I will use a table in CSV format for key details, followed by a narrative summary that integrates additional insights. This approach ensures all textual differences, emphases, preparations, and literary/theological purposes are captured efficiently.
- [28]
- [29]
-
[30]
Bible Gateway passage: 2 Chronicles 32 - New International Version### Summary of Sennacherib's Invasion (2 Chronicles 32, NIV)
-
[31]
(PDF) The Rabshakeh in Late Biblical and Post-Biblical Tradition... Assyrian officer, whose title means "Chief Cupbearer".' The brief but fiery speeches attributed to this figure in the Hebrew Bible have received ...
-
[32]
[PDF] How Did Rabshakeh Know the Language of Judah?The Assyrian Account. Of the three primary Assyrian sources for Sennacherib's “third campaign,” the Lachish reliefs and the “Azekah” inscription deal with ...Missing: figure | Show results with:figure
- [33]
-
[34]
A Reading of 2 Kings 18:17–19:9a, 36–37 as a Trauma NarrativeOct 30, 2024 · The narrative includes the advance of the Assyrian army, the Rabshakeh's speeches, Hezekiah's response, Isaiah's prophecy, the withdrawal of the ...Missing: Akkadian | Show results with:Akkadian
-
[35]
[PDF] SENNACHERIB'S ATTACK ON HEZEKIAH By A. R. MillardFor more than a century biblical scholars have drawn information about Israelite history from the. Assyrian monuments. Although the passages naming kings.