World at War / Conflicts / Wars of Scripture
Wars of Scripture
Sennacherib's Siege of Jerusalem
701 BC
Judah
Status: ended
Casualties: 185,000 of the Assyrian host slain in a single night
Sennacherib took the fenced cities of Judah and shut up Hezekiah 'like a bird in a cage' (his own annals). Rabshakeh blasphemed the God of Israel beneath the walls. That night the angel of the Lord went out and smote the camp; in the morning they were all dead corpses. Sennacherib returned to Nineveh and was slain by his own sons. 2 Kings 18–19, Isaiah 36–37.
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Belligerents
- Sennacherib of Assyria & Rabshakeh
- Hezekiah of Judah & Isaiah
Casualties
185,000 of the Assyrian host slain in a single night
Key events
- Rabshakeh stands at the conduit of the upper pool and blasphemes in Hebrew
- Hezekiah spreads the letter before the Lord in the Temple
- Isaiah: 'I will defend this city to save it for mine own sake, and for my servant David's sake'
- 185,000 dead in the Assyrian camp in a single night
- Sennacherib returns to Nineveh; slain by his sons Adrammelech and Sharezer
Aftermath
Jerusalem stood. Hezekiah's tunnel still carries water under the City of David; Sennacherib's prism still boasts of shutting up the king 'like a bird in a cage' — but the prism does not boast of taking the cage.
Weapons & matériel
- Assyrian siege engines, ramps, sappers
- The angel of the Lord
Sources
- 2 Kings 18–19
- Isaiah 36–37
- 2 Chronicles 32
- Sennacherib's Prism
- Herodotus II.141
From World at War, an interactive atlas by Jairus Pereira.
Figures are approximate, drawn from Wikipedia, UCDP, ACLED and academic sources — a design
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