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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Davidic_lineDavidic line - Wikipedia

    The Davidic line or House of David (Hebrew: בֵּית דָּוִד‎, romanized: Bēt Dāvīḏ) is the lineage of the Israelite king David. In Judaism it is based on texts from the Hebrew Bible and through the succeeding centuries based on later traditions.

  2. The Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem in 586 B.C.E. and the exile of the last Davidic kings, Jehoiakin and Zedekiah, ended the Davidic monarchy. In several places, the Hebrew Bible ties the health and fate of the kingdom of Judah to the religious conduct of its leaders, David’s descendants.

  3. Judah was the fourth son of Jacob and Leah. Compared to a lion, Judah was the ancestor of the royal House of David. He made mistakes and rectified them, blazing a path for others to follow.

  4. 5. Sept. 2023 · The Tel Dan inscription, or “House of David” inscription, was discovered in 1993 at the site of Tel Dan in northern Israel in an excavation directed by Israeli archaeologist Avraham Biran.

  5. The Kings of Judah were the monarchs who ruled over the ancient Kingdom of Judah, which was formed in about 930 BCE, according to the Hebrew Bible, when the United Kingdom of Israel split, with the people of the northern Kingdom of Israel rejecting Rehoboam as their monarch, leaving him as solely the King of Judah.

    Common/biblical Name
    Albright
    Thiele
    Galil
    Rehoboam Reigned for 17 years.
    922–915
    931–913
    931–914
    AbijahReigned for 3 years.
    915–913
    913–911
    914–911
    AsaReigned for 41 years.
    913–873
    911–870
    911–870
    JehoshaphatReigned for 25 years.
    873–849
    870–848
    870–845
  6. At first, only the tribe of Judah remained loyal to the House of David, but the tribe of Benjamin soon joined Judah. Both kingdoms, Judah in the south and Israel in the north, co-existed uneasily after the split until the destruction of the Kingdom of Israel by Assyria in 722/721.

  7. According to the Hebrew Bible, David was the first king of Judah, and Judean kings ruled from about 1000 B.C.E. until 586 B.C.E., when the Neo-Babylonians destroyed Judah, its capital Jerusalem, and the temple and forced most Judeans to relocate to Babylon.