
Text -- 2 Chronicles 26:15 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB: 2Ch 26:11-15 - -- He raised a strong body of militia, divided into companies or regiments of uniform size, which served in rotation. The enumeration was performed by tw...
He raised a strong body of militia, divided into companies or regiments of uniform size, which served in rotation. The enumeration was performed by two functionaries expert in the drawing up of military muster-rolls, under the superintendence of Hananiah, one of the high officers of the crown. The army consisted of 307,500 picked men, under the command of two thousand gallant officers, chiefs or heads of fathers' houses, so that each father's house formed a distinct band. They were fully equipped with every kind of military accoutrements, from brazen helmets, a habergeon or coat of mail, to a sling for stones.

JFB: 2Ch 26:15 - -- This is the first notice that occurs in history of the use of machines for throwing projectiles. The invention is apparently ascribed to the reign of ...
This is the first notice that occurs in history of the use of machines for throwing projectiles. The invention is apparently ascribed to the reign of Uzziah, and PLINY expressly says they originated in Syria.

He conducted himself as became the viceroy of the Divine King, and prospered.
Clarke -> 2Ch 26:15
Clarke: 2Ch 26:15 - -- Engines - to shoot arrows and great stones - The Targum says, "He made in Jerusalem ingenious instruments, and little hollow towers, to stand upon t...
Engines - to shoot arrows and great stones - The Targum says, "He made in Jerusalem ingenious instruments, and little hollow towers, to stand upon the towers and upon the bastions, for the shooting of arrows, and projecting of great stones.
This is the very first intimation on record of any warlike engines for the attack or defense of besieged places; and this account is long prior to any thing of the kind among either the Greeks or Romans. Previously to such inventions, the besieged could only be starved out, and hence sieges were very long and tedious. Shalmaneser consumed three years before such an inconsiderable place as Samaria, 2Ki 17:5, 2Ki 17:6; Sardanapalus maintained himself in Nineveh for seven years, because the besiegers had no engines proper for the attack and destruction of walls, etc., and it is well known that Troy sustained a siege of ten years, the Greeks not possessing any machine of the kind here referred to. The Jews alone were the inventors of such engines; and the invention took place in the reign of Uzziah, about eight hundred years before the Christian era. It is no wonder that, in consequence of this, his name spread far abroad, and struck terror into his enemies.
TSK -> 2Ch 26:15
TSK: 2Ch 26:15 - -- cunning men : 2Ch 2:7, 2Ch 2:14; Exo 31:4
to shoot arrows : These engines, it is probable, bore some resemblance to the baliste and catapulte of t...
cunning men : 2Ch 2:7, 2Ch 2:14; Exo 31:4
to shoot arrows : These engines, it is probable, bore some resemblance to the baliste and catapulte of the Romans, which were employed for throwing stones and arrows, and were in reality the mortars and carcasses of antiquity. With respect to the towers which Uzziah built in the wilderness (2Ch 26:10), Mr. Harmer appears to have given a truer view of the subject than commentators in general have done, who suppose that they were conveniences made only for sheltering the shepherds from bad weather, or to defend them from incursions of enemies; for they might rather be designed to keep the nations that pastured there in awe, and also to induce them quietly to pay the tribute to which the 2Ch 26:8 seems to refer. William of Tyre describes a country not far from the Euphrates as inhabited by Syrian and Armenian Christians, who fed great flocks and herds there, but were kept in subjection to the Turks, in consequence of their living among them in strong places.
spread far : Heb. went forth, Mat 4:24

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Ch 26:15
Barnes: 2Ch 26:15 - -- Uzziah’ s engines seem to have corresponded respectively to the Roman balista and catapulta. The balista, which threw stones, was known to the ...
Uzziah’ s engines seem to have corresponded respectively to the Roman balista and catapulta. The balista, which threw stones, was known to the Assyrians as early as the time of Sardanapalus I, the contemporary of Jehoshaphat. The catapult is not represented either on the Assyrian or the Egyptian sculptures. It would seem on the whole most probable that both kinds of engines were invented in Assyria and introduced from thence into Palestine.
Haydock -> 2Ch 26:15
Haydock: 2Ch 26:15 - -- Engines. They are here mentioned for the first time. C. ---
For the. Heb. "for he was wonderfully helped till he was established." H. ---
He i...
Engines. They are here mentioned for the first time. C. ---
For the. Heb. "for he was wonderfully helped till he was established." H. ---
He invented may things for the defence of his kingdom. C.
Gill -> 2Ch 26:15
Gill: 2Ch 26:15 - -- And he made in Jerusalem engines, invented by cunning men, to be on the towers, and upon the bulwarks, to shoot arrows and great stones withal,.... Su...
And he made in Jerusalem engines, invented by cunning men, to be on the towers, and upon the bulwarks, to shoot arrows and great stones withal,.... Such as with the Romans were called "catapultae", "ballistae" u, "scorpiones" w, &c. and by this it appears that these were not first invented in Greece and Rome, but in Judea. It is said x, that the Romans received the machine to batter cities from the Greeks, and that the Trojan horse was no other than a battering ram; but if they did, the invention of them must be ascribed, not to them, but rather to the Syrians and Phoenicians, according to Pliny y; though others z suppose the Carthaginians, who were a colony of theirs, to be the inventors of them; yet, after all, they seem to be the device of some skilful men among the Jews, in the times of Uzziah; according to Diodorus Siculus a, they were not found out when Nineveh was besieged in the times of Sardanapalus:
and his name spread far abroad; in distant countries, for his warlike dispositions and preparations, which made them stand in fear of him:
for he was helped until he was strong; he was wonderfully helped by the Lord to build fortified places, raise a numerous army, and provide all sorts of armour for them, and invent such machines as would greatly annoy the enemy, whereby he became very potent, and injected dread round about him.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Ch 26:1-23
TSK Synopsis: 2Ch 26:1-23 - --1 Uzziah succeeding, and reigning well in the days of Zechariah, prospers.16 Waxing proud, he invades the priest's office, and is smitten with leprosy...
MHCC -> 2Ch 26:1-15
MHCC: 2Ch 26:1-15 - --As long as Uzziah sought the Lord, and minded religion, God made him to prosper. Those only prosper whom God makes to prosper; for prosperity is his g...
Matthew Henry -> 2Ch 26:1-15
Matthew Henry: 2Ch 26:1-15 - -- We have here an account of two things concerning Uzziah: - I. His piety. In this he was not very eminent or zealous; yet he did that which was rig...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 2Ch 26:15
Keil-Delitzsch: 2Ch 26:15 - --
Besides this, he provided Jerusalem with machines for defence on the towers and battlements. חשּׁבנות from השּׁבון , literally excog...
Constable -> 2Ch 10:1--36:23; 2Ch 26:1-23
Constable: 2Ch 10:1--36:23 - --IV. THE REIGNS OF SOLOMON'S SUCCESSORS chs. 10--36
"With the close of Solomon's reign we embark upon a new phase...
