Omri in Easton's Bible Dictionary
servant of Jehovah. When Elah was murdered by Zimri at
Tirzah (1
Kings 16:15-27), Omri, his captain, was made king
(B.C. 931).
For four years there was continued opposition to his
reign,
Tibni, another claimant to the throne, leading the
opposing
party; but at the close of that period all his
rivals were
defeated, and he became king of Israel, "Tibni died
and Omri
reigned" (B.C. 927). By his vigour and power he
gained great
eminence and consolidated the kingdom. He fixed his
dynasty on
the throne so firmly that it continued during four
succeeding
reigns. Tirza was for six years the seat of his
government. He
then removed the capital to Samaria (q.v.), where he
died, and
was succeeded by his son Ahab. "He wrought evil in
the eyes of
the Lord, and did worse than all that were before
him."
Beth-omri, "the house" or "city of Omri," is the
name usually
found on Assyrian inscriptions for Samaria. In the
stele of
Mesha (the "Moabite stone"), which was erected in
Moab about
twenty or thirty years after Omri's death, it is
recorded that
Omri oppressed Moab till Mesha delivered the land:
"Omri, king
of Israel, oppressed Moab many days, for Chemosh was
angry with
his land. His son succeeded him, and he also said, I
will
oppress Moab" (comp. 2 Kings 1:1; 3:4, 5). The
"Moabite stone"
also records that "Omri took the land of Medeba, and
occupied it
in his day and in the days of his son forty years."
Read More about Omri in Easton's Bible Dictionary