- disputed. He may also be
mentioned in the
Second Book of
Kings under the name
Nisroch. In the
nineteenth century, ****yrian
stone reliefs of winged, eagle-headed...
-
Nisroch (Hebrew: נִסְרֹךְ, Nīsrōḵ; Koinē Gr****: Νεσεραχ; Latin: Nesroch) was,
according to the
Hebrew Bible, a god of ****yria in
whose temple King Sennacherib...
-
murder of
Sennacherib by two of his own sons
while praying to the god
Nisroch was
considered an act of atonement. Consequently, his successor, Esarhaddon...
-
Nicolas Nicolaitanes Nicopolis Niger Nimrah Nimrod Nimshi Nineveh Nisan Nisroch No
Noadiah Noah Noam,
pleasant Nob
Nobah Nod
Nodab Noe
Nogah Noha Non Noph...
- Chamos,
Grand Chambelain,
Knight of the Fly. Melchom,
payer treasurer.
Nisroch,
chief of the kitchen. Behemoth,
chief cupbearer. Dagon,
grand pantler...
- sea
goddess Samnuha Kubaba Marduk (classical Syriac: ܒܹܝܠ)
Enlil Ninlil Nisroch Hanbi:
father of
Pazuzu Anu,
supreme divinity of the
Heavens Ea, Sumerian...
-
greater devils Armaros, Azazel, Cahor, Dagon, Duskur, Kochbiel, Malarea,
Nisroch, Rumjal, and the arch-devil Gargoth.
Baalphegor appeared as the ultimate...
- to the
region and
largely destroying the city.
While praying to the god
Nisroch in
Nineveh in 681 BC,
Sennacherib was soon
murdered by his own sons. The...
- well as
temples to Sîn, Ashur, Nergal, Shamash, Ninurta, Ishtar, Tammuz,
Nisroch and Nabu. It was
Sennacherib who made
Nineveh a
truly influential city...
- Sennacherib's
being murdered by his own sons
while he was
praying to the god
Nisroch in Nineveh.
Esarhaddon (681–669 BC)
succeeded Sennacherib as
ruler of the...