Nergal-sharezer in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(prince of fire) occurs only in Jer 39:3 and Jere 39:13
There appear to have been two persons in the name
among the "princes of the king of Babylon" who accompanied
Nebuchadnezzar on his last expedition against Jerusalem. One
of these is not marked by any additional title; but the other
has the honorable distinction of Rab-mag, probably meaning
chief of the Magi [see RAB-MAG], and it is to him alone that
any particular interest attaches. In sacred Scripture he
appears among the persons who, by command of Nebuchadnezzar,
released Jeremiah from prison. Profane history gives us reason
to believe that he was a personage of great importance, who
not long afterward mounted the Babylonian throne. He is the
same as the monarch called Neriglissar or Neriglissor, who
murdered Evil-merodach, the son of Nebuchadnezzar and
succeeded him upon the throne. His reign lasted from B.C. 559,
to B.C. 556.
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