-
Hadadezer (Imperial Aramaic: הַדִדעֶזֶר, romanized: Haḏiḏ-ʿezer /ˌhædəˈdiːzər/; "[the god]
Hadad is help"); also
known as Adad-Idri (Akkadian: 𒀭𒅎𒀉𒊑...
-
Hadadezer (Biblical Hebrew: חדדעזר, romanized:
Ḥăḏaḏʿezer, lit. 'Hadad helps';), son of Rehob, was king of
Zobah or Sova (Imperial
Aramaic Ṣoḇā), a Syrian...
- Syria; he
returns to
Damascus the next day and
tells Hadadezer he will
recover but
suffocates Hadadezer and
seizes power himself.
During his
reign (c. 842–800...
-
battles a
Syrian coalition (including king Ahab of
Kingdom of
Israel and
Hadadezer) in the
battle of Qarqar. 850 BC—Takelot II
succeeds Osorkon II as King...
-
Shalmaneser III
encountered an
allied army of
eleven kings at
Qarqar led by
Hadadezer,
called in ****yrian Adad-idir and
possibly to be
identified with King...
- chiefs", but by the time of David,
there was a
single king,
Hadadezer bar Rehob. Later, King
Hadadezer bar
Rehob allied with
Ammon against King David, who defeated...
- romanized: Naʿmān, lit. 'pleasantness') was a
commander of the
armies of
Hadadezer, the king of Aram-Damascus, in the time of Jehoram, King of
Northern Israel...
- over the Philistines, Moabites, Edomites, Amalekites,
Ammonites and king
Hadadezer of Aram-Zobah,
after which they
become tributaries. His fame increases...
-
compound name "Hamath-Zobah", an idea
supported by
mention of wars
between Hadadezer of
Zobah and Toi of
Hamath in 2
Samuel 8:9-10.
According to
Martin J....
- was
attempting to
expand into the
Mediterranean coast. In 853 BC, King
Hadadezer of
Damascus led a
Levantine coalition, that
included forces from the northern...