Zimri (king) in Wikipedia
Zimri or Zambri (Hebrew: זִמְרִי, Zimrī ; praiseworthy; Latin:
Zambri) was a king of Israel for seven days. William F.
Albright has dated his reign to 876 BCE, while E. R. Thiele
offers the date 885 BCE.[1] His story is told in 1 Kings,
Chapter 16.
He was a commander who murdered king Elah at Tirzah, and
succeeded him as king. However, Zimri reigned only seven days,
because the army elected Omri as king, and with their support
laid siege to Tirzah. Finding his position untenable, Zimri
set fire to the palace and perished.
Omri became king only after four years of war with Tibni,
another claimant to the throne of Israel.
The name Zimri became a byword for a traitor who murdered his
master. When Jehu led a bloody military revolt to seize the
throne of Israel, killed both Jehoram king of Israel and
Ahaziah king of Judah, and entered the citadel of Jezreel to
execute Queen Jezebel, she greeted him with the words: "Is it
peace, Zimri, you murderer of your master?" (2 Kings 9:31). In
John Dryden's Absalom and Achitophel, the character of Zimri
stands for the Duke of Buckingham.
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