Baladan in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
bal'-a-dan bal'adhan, "He (i.e. Merodach) has given a son":
Baladan is said in 2 Ki 20:12 and Isa 39:1 to have been the
father of Berodach (Merodach)-Baladan, king of Babylon. Some
have thought that the Biblical. writer was wrong here,
inasmuch as it is said in the inscriptions of Sargon
(Annals, 228, 315; Pt., 122), that Merodach-Baladan was the
son of Yakin. It is evident, however, from the analogy of
Jehu, who is called by the Assyrian kings the son of Omri,
that Yakin is to be looked upon as the founder of the
dynasty or kingdom, rather than as the father of Merodach-
Baladan. The Bith Yakin, over which Merodach-Baladan is said
to have been king, corresponds exactly to the phrase Bith
Khumria, or House of Omri, over which Jehu is said to have
ruled. There is no reason, then, for supposing that there is
an error in either case. There is, however, good reason for
believing that the Merodach-Baladan of the Book of Kings was
the son of another king of the same name. That only the
latter part of the father's name is here mentioned may be
compared with the Shalman of Hos 10:14 for the more fully-
written Shalmaneser of 2 Ki 17:3; and with the Jareb of Hos
5:13 and 10:6, probably for Sennacherib. Such abbreviation
of proper names was usual among the Assyrians and
Babylonians. See Tallquist, Namenbuch, xiv-xix.
R. Dick Wilson
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