Jeconiah in Wikipedia
(Hebrew: יְכָנְיָה [jəχonjoː], meaning "God will fortify (his
people)"; Greek: Ιεχονιας; Latin: Joachin), also known as
Coniah and as Jehoiachin (Hebrew: יְהֹויָכִין [jəhoːjɔːxiːn];
Greek: Ιεχονιας; Latin: Joachin), was a king of Judah.
According to 2 Kings 24:8, he became king upon the death of
his father, Jehoiakim, at the age of eighteen and reigned
for only three months and ten days.[1] However, most Hebrew
versions, some Septuagint manuscripts and Syriac versions of
2 Chronicles 36:9 give the age when he became king as eight,
compared with other versions which give it as eighteen
(e.g., 2 Chronicles 36:9). The Vulgate has the discrepancy,
which the Challenor note in the Douay-Rheims Bible
reconciles the discrepancy: "He was associated by his father
to the kingdom, when he was but eight years old; but after
his father's death, when he reigned alone, he was eighteen
years old."[2] Edwin Thiele dates Jeconiah's short reign to
598/597 BC.[3] He was deposed by the Babylonians at the end
of the first siege of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar II in 597
BC, after which Jeconiah, his household, and many of the
elite and craftsmen of Judah were exiled to Babylon.
Babylonian records, called Jehoiachin's Rations Tablets,
written in Cuneiform and dating to 592 BC mention him and
his five sons as recipients of food ration in Babylon,[4]
though it would have been difficult for him to have had five
sons in the time frame attributed to him.
Jeconiah was a contemporary of the prophets Jeremiah and
Ezekiel...
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