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Tiglath-Pileser III (or Tilgath-Pil-neser), was the Assyrian throne-name of Pul, king of Assyria (744 - 727 BC). His origins are unknown but he may have been a usurper; his name means "my confidence is the son of
Esarra."
Under his rule, Assyrian power in the Near East greatly increased as the
result of campaigns of conquest mounted against western kingdoms. Assyrian inscriptions record, in the fifth year of his reign
(739 BC), a victory over Azariah (Uzziah), king of Judah, whose achievements
are described in 2 Chronicles 26:6-15. In 733 BC his armies conquered Philistia (modern
Lebanon) on the Mediterranean
coast, destroyed Damascus and occupied most of Israel, with its northern regions becoming Assyrian provinces. Many of the inhabitants were enslaved and deported to
other parts of the Assyrian empire.
These events were recorded in the Bible, which describes how Tiglath-Pileser III defeated Pekah, king of Israel, and Rezin, king of the Arameans, who had allied against him. He executed Rezin and Pekah was murdered by Hoshea, who took control of the rump Israelite kingdom as a vassal paying tribute to the Assyrians. (2 Kings 15:29; 16:5-9; 1 Chronicles 5:6, 26) Ahaz (known to the Assyrians as
Yahu-khazi), the king of Judea, was also forced to pay tribute to the Assyrian conqueror (2 Kings 16:10-16).
Tiglath-Pileser III's conquests paved the way for the establishment of the Second Assyrian Empire. On his death, the Assyrian throne was seized by Ululai, the governor of
Babylon, who assumed the name Shalmaneser V.
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