| 1. Now when Zachariah, the son of Jeroboam, had reigned six months over Israel, he was slain by the treachery of a certain friend of his, whose name was Shallum, the son of Jabesh, who took the kingdom afterward, but kept it no longer than thirty days; for Menahem, the general of his army, who was at that time in the city Tirzah and heard of what had befallen Zachariah, removed thereupon with all his forces to Samaria and joining battle with Shallum, slew him; and when he had made himself king, he went thence and came to the city Tiphsah; but the citizens that were in it shut their gates and barred them against the king and would not admit him: but in order to be avenged on them, he burnt the country round about it and took the city by force, upon a siege; and being very much displeased at what the inhabitants of Tiphsah had done, he slew them all and spared not so much as the infants, without omitting the utmost instances of cruelty and barbarity; for he used such severity upon his own countrymen, as would not be pardonable with regard to strangers who had been conquered by him. And after this manner it was that this Menahem continued to reign with cruelty and barbarity for ten years. But when Pul, king of Assyria, had made an expedition against him, he did not think meet to fight or engage in battle with the Assyrians, but he persuaded him to accept of a thousand talents of silver and to go away and so put an end to the war. This sum the multitude collected for Menahem, by exacting fifty drachme as poll-money for every head; after which he died and was buried in Samaria and left his son Pekahiah his successor in the kingdom, who followed the barbarity of his father and so ruled but two years only, after which he was slain with his friends at a feast, by the treachery of one Pekah, the general of his horse and the son of Remaliah, who laid snares for him. Now this Pekah held the government twenty years and proved a wicked man and a transgressor. But the king of Assyria, whose name was Tiglath-Pileser, when he had made an expedition against the Israelites and had overrun all the land of Gilead and the region beyond Jordan and the adjoining country, which is called Galilee and Kadesh and Hazor, he made the inhabitants prisoners and transplanted them into his own kingdom. And so much shall suffice to have related here concerning the king of Assyria. | |