Maximum Extent
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Data

Name: Kingdom of Judah

Type: Polity

Start: 929 BC

End: 587 BC

Nation: kingdom of judah

Statistics

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Icon Kingdom of Judah

This article is about the specific polity Kingdom of Judah and therefore only includes events related to its territory and not to its possessions or colonies. If you are interested in the possession, this is the link to the article about the nation which includes all possessions as well as all the different incarnations of the nation.

If you are looking for the page with the statistics about this polity you can find it here:All Statistics

Was an Israelite kingdom in the Southern Levant during the Iron Age. The kingdom controlled Judea and its capital was Jerusalem. It emerged form the United Monarchy of Israel when it was divided between in israel and Judah. It was later conquered by the Assyrian Empire.

Establishment


  • January 929 BC: Following Solomon's death in c. 926 BC, tensions between the northern part of Israel, containing the ten northern tribes, and the southern section, dominated by Jerusalem and the southern tribes, reached a boiling point. In about the year 930 BC the Kingdom of Israel and Judah split into two kingdoms: the northern Kingdom of Israel, which included the cities of Shechem and Samaria.
  • Chronology


    Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation

    1. Campaigns of Tiglath-Pileser III


    Military campaigns of Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser III.

    1.1.Syro-Ephraimite War

    Was a war between the Neo-Assyrian Empire and its tributary states Aram-Damascus and Israel that decided to break away from the empire.

  • January 731 BC: Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser III made the Kingdom of Judah dependent on him as tributary vassal state.

  • 2. Jewish-Babylonian war


    Was a revolt of the Kingdom of Judah against the Neo-Babylonian Empire.

  • January 586 BC: In July 587 BC, Zedekiah rebelled against Babylonia.
  • January 586 BC: The Babylonian troops managed to get inside the walls and conquer the city. On the seventh of Av, Nebuzaradan, a Babylonian executioner, burned down Solomon's Temple, destroyed the walls of Jerusalem, and exiled the rest of the Jews to Babylonia. He appointed Gedalia as the administrator of the Jews that weren't exiled from Judah.

  • Disestablishment


  • January 586 BC: In July 587 BC, Zedekiah rebelled against Babylonia.
  • January 586 BC: The Babylonian troops managed to get inside the walls and conquer the city. On the seventh of Av, Nebuzaradan, a Babylonian executioner, burned down Solomon's Temple, destroyed the walls of Jerusalem, and exiled the rest of the Jews to Babylonia. He appointed Gedalia as the administrator of the Jews that weren't exiled from Judah.
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