Sargon in Easton's Bible Dictionary
            (In the inscriptions, "Sarra-yukin" [the god] has appointed 
the
 king; also "Sarru-kinu," the legitimate king.) On 
the death of
 Shalmaneser (B.C. 723), one of the Assyrian generals 
established
 himself on the vacant throne, taking the name of 
"Sargon," after
 that of the famous monarch, the Sargon of Accad, 
founder of the
 first Semitic empire, as well as of one of the most 
famous
 libraries of Chaldea. He forthwith began a 
conquering career,
 and became one of the most powerful of the Assyrian 
monarchs. He
 is mentioned by name in the Bible only in connection 
with the
 siege of Ashdod (Isa. 20:1).
 At the very beginning of his reign he besieged and 
took the
 city of Samaria (2 Kings 17:6; 18:9-12). On an 
inscription found
 in the palace he built at Khorsabad, near Nieveh, he 
says, "The
 city of Samaria I besieged, I took; 27,280 of its 
inhabitants I
 carried away; fifty chariots that were among them I 
collected,"
 etc. The northern kingdom he changed into an 
Assyrian satrapy.
 He afterwards drove Merodach-baladan (q.v.), who 
kept him at bay
 for twelve years, out of Babylon, which he entered 
in triumph.
 By a succession of victories he gradually enlarged 
and
 consolidated the empire, which now extended from the 
frontiers
 of Egypt in the west to the mountains of Elam in the 
east, and
 thus carried almost to completion the ambitious 
designs of
 Tiglath-pileser (q.v.). He was murdered by one of 
his own
 soldiers (B.C. 705) in his palace at Khorsabad, 
after a reign of
 sixteen years, and was succeeded by his son 
Sennacherib.
                          
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