Esarhaddon in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(victor), one of the greatest of the kings of Assyria, was the
son of Sennacherib, 2Ki 19:37 and the grandson of Sargon, who
succeeded Shalmaneser. He appears by his monuments to have
been one of the most powerful, if not the most powerful, of
all the Assyrian monarchs. He is the only one of them whom we
find to have actually reigned at Babylon, where he built
himself a palace, bricks from which have been recently
recovered bearing his name. His Babylonian reign lasted
thirteen years, from B.C. 680 to B.C. 667; and it was
doubtless within this space of time that Manasseh king of
Judah, having been seized by his captains at Jerusalem on a
charge of rebellion, was brought before him at Babylon, 2Ch
33:11 and detained for a time as prisoner there. As a builder
of great works Esar-haddon is particularly distinguished.
Besides his palace at Babylon, he built at least three others
in different parts of his dominions, either for himself or his
sons, and thirty temples.
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