Sennacherib's campaign in the Levant

Sennacherib's campaign in the Levant
Part of Sennacherib's campaigns

Lachish relief showing the Siege of Lachish. Assyrian siege-engine attacking the city wall of Lachish, part of the ascending assaulting wave. Detail of a wall relief dating back to the reign of Sennacherib, 700-692 BCE. From Nineveh, Iraq, currently housed in the British Museum.
Date701 BCE
Location
Result Assyrian victory
Belligerents

Kingdom of Judah

Supported by
Kushite Egypt
Neo-Assyrian Empire
Commanders and leaders
King Hezekiah
Isaiah Ben-Amotz
Eliakim Ben-Hilkiah
Joahe Ben-Asaph
Shebna
Supported by
Taharqa
Sennacherib
Rabshakeh
Rabsaris
Tartan
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
Many killed
200,150 Judeans exiled,
46 walled cities and many other towns destroyed
Unknown

In 701 BCE, the Neo-Assyrian Empire under Sennacherib launched a military campaign to re-conquer the Levant, which had fallen out of Assyrian hands due to a localized rebellion following the death of Sennacherib's predecessor Sargon II in 705 BCE. The rebellion involved several small states: Sidon and Ashkelon, which were taken by force; and Byblos, Ashdod, Ammon, Moab, and Edom, which subsequently submitted to paying tribute to the Assyrians. Assyrian armies also invaded the Kingdom of Judah, which had participated in the rebellion under Hezekiah after being encouraged by the Egyptians. Having captured most of Judah's settlements, the Assyrians trapped Hezekiah in Jerusalem, but did not take the city itself—Hezekiah was allowed to remain in power as King of Judah in exchange for paying a large tribute to the Assyrians and also surrendering adjacent lands, which were then redistributed to Assyrian vassals in Ekron, Gaza, and Ashdod.

The events of the Assyrian campaign in Judah are famously storied in the Hebrew Bible (2 Kings 1819; Isaiah 3637; and 2 Chronicles 32), wherein they culminate in the "Angel of the Lord" striking down 185,000 Assyrian soldiers outside of Jerusalem's gates, prompting Sennacherib's retreat to Nineveh.