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Julian Spriggs
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Dates of Kings of Judah / Israel and nations

 

Julian Spriggs, M.A.

 


This is a helpful reference giving suggested dates for the reigns of the kings of the nations from the reign of Saul, through the time of the divided monarchy in Israel and Judah, and into the inter-testamental period.


Setting dates for the kings of the divided kingdom is very difficult, so dates will vary in different
reference books. An initial reading of the Books of I and II Kings would give the impression that it should be easy to construct a time-line of the period of the divided kingdom, as each king is introduced in relation to the king reigning in the other kingdom. However, on further study, setting a chronology of the kings is found to be difficult. There are three main reasons for this:

1. The accession year

The question is whether the first year of the reign of the king is counted, as Hebrews often counted time inclusively. In modern terms, if a king ruled from December 2004 to January 2006, we would say he ruled for one year and two months. However if the accession year is counted, he ruled for three years. This would mean that the year with a change in king can easily be counted twice, if not three times. During the early years of the divided monarchy, Israel counted the accession year, but Judah did not.

2. The time of New Year

During this period, Judah started their New Year in the month of Tishri (September or October), but Israel’s New Year was in Nisan (March or April). Because the reigns of kings are normally dated by the king in the other kingdom, confusion of years would be easy.

3. Regencies

Regencies occurred particularly in Judah, but not in Israel. This is when the son of the current king began his reign when his father reached old age and was not capable of ruling the kingdom effectively. This system brought stability to the monarchy at a time of potential weakness. When David reached old age, Solomon was anointed king before David had died (1 Kg 1). Jotham acted as regent when his father Uzziah was struck down with leprosy (2 Chr 26:21). There may have been regencies between several other kings, including Asa and Jehoshaphat, Ahaz and Hezekiah, and Hezkiah and Manasseh. The Book of Kings does not always indicate whether the period of regency has been counted in the length of a king’s reign. So when constructing the chronology, it would be easy to count the period of regency twice, thus making the chronology inaccurate.

4. Competing kings

The history of the northern kingdom of Israel was often turbulent, with frequent changes in king and dynasty involving violence. Often there were two rival claimants to the throne, normally ruling from different centres, bringing civil war to the nation. Before Omri became sole king, the nation was divided between him and another claimant to the throne called Tibni (1 Kg 16:21-22). This situation can also bring confusion to the dates.

The dates suggested below are not perfect, but those which are normally accepted in Biblical studies:

United Kingdom:

1. Saul                      1050/45? - 1011/10
2. David                    1011/10 - 971/70
3. Solomon                971/70 - 931/30

Kings of Judah:

1. Rehoboam            931/30 - 913
2. Abijam                  913 - 911/10
3. Asa                       911/10 - 870-69
4. Jehoshaphat          870/69 - 848                 Regent 873/2
5. Jehoram                848 - 841
6. Ahaziah                 841
7. Athaliah                 841 - 835
8. Joash                    835 - 796
9. Amaziah               796 - 767
10. Uzziah                 767 - 740/39                Regent 791/90
11. Jotham                740/39 - 732/31           Regent 750
12. Ahaz                   732/31 - 716/15           Regent 744/43
13. Hezekiah             716/15 - 687/86           Regent 729
14. Manasseh            687/86 - 642/41           Regent 696/95
15. Amon                  642/41 - 640/39
16. Josiah                  640/39 - 609
17. Jehoahaz              609
18. Jehoiakim             609 - 598
19. Jehoiachin            597
20. Zedekiah             597 - 587

Deportations from Judah

1. Nobility, including Daniel        605
2. Jehoiachin & Ezekiel              598
3. Fall of Jerusalem, Zedekiah    586

 

Kings of Israel:

The horizontal lines show a change of dynasty:

1. Jeroboam I           931/30 - 910/09            House of Jeroboam
2. Nadab                  910/09 - 909/08
---------------------------
3. Baasha                  909/08 - 886/85            House of Baasha
4. Elah                      886/85 - 885/84
---------------------------
5. Zimri                     885/84
---------------------------
6. Omri                     885/84 - 874/73            House of Omri
          (Tibni 885/84)
7. Ahab                    874/73 - 853
8. Ahaziah                853 - 852
9. Jehoram               852 - 841
---------------------------
10. Jehu                   841 - 814/13                  House of Jehu
11. Jehoahaz            814/13 - 798
12. Jehoash              798 - 782/81
13. Jeroboam II       782/81 - 753, Regent 793/92
14. Zechariah           753 - 752
---------------------------
15. Shallum              752
---------------------------
16. Menahem           752 - 742/41
17. Pekahiah            742/41 - 740/39
---------------------------
18. Pekah                740/39 - 732/31
---------------------------
19. Hoshea              732/31 - 723/22

Returns from exile:

1. Zerubbabel          536
2. Ezra                    458
3. Nehemiah            445

Significant dates:

Division of the kingdom         931
Battle of Qarqar                    853
Fall of Damascus (Syria)       732
Fall of Samaria (Israel)          722
Fall of Nineveh (Assyria)       612
Battle of Carchemish             605
Fall of Jerusalem (Judah)       587 / 586
Fall of Babylon                      539

 

Syrian Kings

Ben-hadad                900 - 860, 860 - 843
Hazael                      843 - 796
Ben-hadad               796 - 770
Rezin                        750 - 732

Assyrian Kings

Tiglath - pileser III    747 - 727
Shalmaneser IV        727 - 722
Sargon II                  722 - 705
Sennacherib              705 - 681
Esarhaddon               681 - 668
Ashurbanipal             668 - 626

Babylonian Kings

Nebuchadnezzar        605 - 562
Nabonidus                 556 - 534
Belshazzar                 553 - 539 (regent)

Median Kings

Cyaxares                  625 - 585
Astyages                  585 - 550

Persian Kings

Cyrus II                  550 - 530
Cambyses               530 - 521
Smerdis                   521
Darius I                   521 - 486
Xerxes                    486 - 464
Artaxerxes I            464 - 423
Darius II                  423 - 404
Artaxerxes II           404 -

Greek Kings

Philip II of Macedonia        ? - 336
Alexander the Great            333 - 323

Fourfold division of Alexander's empire

1. Greece (Macedonia)     Cassander
2. Asia Minor                    Lysimachus
3. Syria & East                  Seleucus “The king of the north”
4. Egypt                            Ptolemy “The king of the south”

Ptolemies of Egypt

Ptolemy I - Soter I               323-282 BC (Dan 11:5)
Ptolemy II - Philadelphus      284-246 BC (Dan 11:6)
Ptolemy III - Euergetes I       246-222 BC (Dan 11:7)
Ptolemy IV - Philopator        222-205 BC (Dan 11:11-12)
Ptolemy V - Epiphanes         204-180 BC (Dan 11:17)
Ptolemy VI - Philometer       180-145 BC

Seleucid Kings of Syria

Seleucus I - Nicator             312-281 BC (Dan 11:5)
Antiochus I - Soter              293/2-261 BC
Antiochus II - Theos            261-246 BC (Dan 11:6)
Seleucus II - Callinius          246-226 BC (Dan 11:9)
Seleucus III - Soter              226-223 BC (Dan 11:10-19)
Antiochus III - the Great      222-187 BC (Dan 11:10-19)
Seleucus IV - Philopator      187-175 BC
Antiochus IV - Epiphanes     175-163 BC (Dan 11:21-35)