Jehoiachin in Easton's Bible Dictionary
succeeded his father Jehoiakin (B.C. 599) when only eight
years
of age, and reigned for one hundred days (2 Chr.
36:9). He is
also called Jeconiah (Jer. 24:1; 27:20, etc.), and
Coniah
(22:24; 37:1). He was succeeded by his uncle,
Mattaniah =
Zedekiah (q.v.). He was the last direct heir to the
Jewish
crown. He was carried captive to Babylon by
Nebuchadnezzar,
along with the flower of the nobility, all the
leading men in
Jerusalem, and a great body of the general
population, some
thirteen thousand in all (2 Kings 24:12-16; Jer.
52:28). After
an imprisonment of thirty-seven years (Jer. 52:31,
33), he was
liberated by Evil-merodach, and permitted to occupy
a place in
the king's household and sit at his table, receiving
"every day
a portion until the day of his death, all the days
of his life"
(52:32-34).
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