Pul in Easton's Bible Dictionary
            (1.) An Assyrian king. It has been a question whether he 
was
 identical with Tiglath-pileser III. (q.v.), or was 
his
 predecessor. The weight of evidence is certainly in 
favour of
 their identity. Pul was the throne-name he bore in 
Babylonia as
 king of Babylon, and Tiglath-pileser the throne-name 
he bore as
 king of Assyria. He was the founder of what is 
called the second
 Assyrian empire. He consolidated and organized his 
conquests on
 a large scale. He subdued Northern Syria and Hamath, 
and the
 kings of Syria rendered him homage and paid him 
tribute. His
 ambition was to found in Western Asia a kingdom 
which should
 embrace the whole civilized world, having Nineveh as 
its centre.
 Menahem, king of Israel, gave him the enormous 
tribute of a
 thousand talents of silver, "that his hand might be 
with him" (2
 Kings 15:19; 1 Chr. 5:26). The fact that this 
tribute could be
 paid showed the wealthy condition of the little 
kingdom of
 Israel even in this age of disorder and 
misgovernment. Having
 reduced Syria, he turned his arms against Babylon, 
which he
 subdued. The Babylonian king was slain, and Babylon 
and other
 Chaldean cities were taken, and Pul assumed the 
title of "King
 of Sumer [i.e., Shinar] and Accad." He was succeeded 
by
 Shalmanezer IV.
 (2.) A geographical name in Isa. 66:19. Probably = 
Phut (Gen.
 10:6; Jer. 46:9, R.V. "Put;" Ezek. 27:10).
                          
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