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Jeconiah (Biblical Hebrew: יְכָנְיָה, romanized: Yəḵonəyā [jəxonjɔː]
meaning "Yahweh has established"; Gr****: Ἰεχονίας; Latin: Iechonias, Jechonias), also...
- of his
successor Jeconiah,
Jeconiah's court, and many others. In 587 BCE,
Nebuchadnezzar II destro****
Jerusalem and
exiled Jeconiah's successor Zedekiah...
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After the
siege of
Jerusalem in 597 BC,
Nebuchadnezzar II
deposed king
Jeconiah and
installed his
uncle Mattaniah instead,
changing his name to Zedekiah...
- then
capital of the
Kingdom of Judah. The city surrendered, and its king
Jeconiah was
deported to
Babylon and
replaced by his Babylonian-appointed uncle...
- says, "Josiah
begot Jeconiah and his
brothers at the time of the exile," he
appears to
conflate the two,
because Jehoiakim, not
Jeconiah, had brothers, but...
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After the conspiracy, Amel-Marduk was imprisoned,
possibly together with
Jeconiah, the
captured king of Judah. Nabu-shum-ukin
changed his name to Amel-Marduk...
- son,
Jeconiah. In 597 BC, the
Babylonians besieged Jerusalem, and the city surrendered.
Nebuchadnezzar pillaged Jerusalem and
deported Jeconiah and other...
- the
Achaemenid Empire's
province of
Yehud Medinata and the
grandson of
Jeconiah,
penultimate king of Judah. He is not do****ented in extra-biblical do****ents...
-
Gospel of
Matthew 1:12 also list
Shealtiel as the son of
Jeconiah (line of Solomon).
Jeconiah, Shealtiel, as well as most of the
royal house and elite...
- was a
prominent monarch who
reigned from 641 BC or 640 BC
until 609 BC.
Jeconiah came two
monarchs later and is best
known for
being defeated and brought...