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Examples
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Merodach-Baladan, a prince of Babylon, arrived in town bearing a gift for the newly recovered king of Judah.
Puzzlements & Predicaments of the Bible Linda Washington 2007
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Merodach-Baladan, a prince of Babylon, arrived in town bearing a gift for the newly recovered king of Judah.
Puzzlements & Predicaments of the Bible Linda Washington 2007
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Merodach-Baladan II, king of Babylon and the Chaldeans
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See Merodach-Baladan II, king of Babylon and the Chaldeans.
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Finally, in 709, the revolt in Babylon was suppressed, and Merodach-Baladan went into exile in Elam.
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The Assyrians conquered Babylon in 728, but the Chaldean King Merodach-Baladan II (Marduk-apal-iddina) drove them out.
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In 703 Merodach-Baladan II again seized power in Babylon, and though Sennacherib quickly put down the revolt, resistance continued for the next 13 years.
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When Sargon II (721705) mounted the throne, another revolt broke out in Babylon under Merodach-Baladan II, which Sargon failed to quell initially.
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We gather from them that, in the third year of his reign, Sennacherib turned his arms against Merodach-Baladan, king of Babylon, whom he entirely defeated, capturing his cities and a large amount of spoil.
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Withal, he won the hearts of the natives by expelling Chaldaeans from the private estates which they had seized during the Merodach-Baladan regime, and restoring them to the rightful heirs.
Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Donald Alexander Mackenzie 1904
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