2 Chronicles 1:2
Context1:2 Solomon addressed all Israel, including those who commanded units of a thousand and a hundred, the judges, and all the leaders of all Israel who were heads of families.
2 Chronicles 2:18
Context2:18 He designated 1 70,000 as common laborers, 2 80,000 as stonecutters 3 in the hills, and 3,600 as supervisors to make sure the people completed the work. 4
2 Chronicles 3:4
Context3:4 The porch in front of the main hall was 30 feet long, corresponding to the width of the temple, 5 and its height was 30 feet. 6 He plated the inside with pure gold.
2 Chronicles 4:8
Context4:8 He made ten tables and set them in the temple, five on the right and five on the left. He also made one hundred gold bowls.
2 Chronicles 9:13
Context9:13 Solomon received 666 talents 7 of gold per year, 8
2 Chronicles 12:3
Context12:3 He had 1,200 chariots, 60,000 horsemen, and an innumerable number of soldiers who accompanied him from Egypt, including Libyans, Sukkites, and Cushites.
2 Chronicles 13:17
Context13:17 Abijah and his army thoroughly defeated them; 9 500,000 well-trained Israelite men fell dead. 10
2 Chronicles 14:9
Context14:9 Zerah the Cushite marched against them with an army of 1,000,000 11 men and 300 chariots. He arrived at Mareshah,
2 Chronicles 15:11
Context15:11 At that time 12 they sacrificed to the Lord some of the plunder they had brought back, including 700 head of cattle and 7,000 sheep. 13
2 Chronicles 17:14
Context17:14 These were their divisions by families:
There were a thousand officers from Judah. 14 Adnah the commander led 300,000 skilled warriors,
2 Chronicles 23:9
Context23:9 Jehoiada the priest gave to the officers of the units of hundreds King David’s spears and shields 15 that were kept in God’s temple.
2 Chronicles 28:6
Context28:6 In one day King Pekah son of Remaliah of Israel killed 120,000 warriors in Judah, because they had abandoned the Lord God of their ancestors. 16
2 Chronicles 28:8
Context28:8 The Israelites seized from their brothers 200,000 wives, sons, and daughters. They also carried off a huge amount of plunder and took it 17 back to Samaria. 18
2 Chronicles 35:9
Context35:9 Konaniah and his brothers Shemaiah and Nethanel, along with Hashabiah, Jeiel, and Jozabad, the officials of the Levites, supplied the Levites with 5,000 Passover sacrifices and 500 cattle.


[2:18] 2 tn Heb “carriers of loads.”
[2:18] 3 tn Or “quarry workers”; Heb “cutters” (probably referring to stonecutters).
[2:18] 4 tn Heb “and thirty-six hundred [as] supervisors to compel the people to work.”
[3:4] 1 tc Heb “and the porch which was in front of the length corresponding to the width of the house, twenty cubits.” The phrase הֵיכַל הַבַּיִת (heykhal habbayit, “the main hall of the temple,” which appears in the parallel account in 1 Kgs 6:3) has been accidentally omitted by homoioarcton after עַל־פְּנֵי (’al-pÿney, “in front of”). Note that the following form, הָאֹרֶךְ (ha’orekh, “the length”), also begins with the Hebrew letter he (ה). A scribe’s eye probably jumped from the initial he on הֵיכַל to the initial he on הָאֹרֶךְ, leaving out the intervening letters in the process.
[3:4] 2 tc The Hebrew text has “one hundred and twenty cubits,” i.e. (assuming a cubit of 18 inches) 180 feet (54 m). An ancient Greek witness and the Syriac version read “twenty cubits,” i.e., 30 feet (9 m). It is likely that מֵאָה (me’ah, “a hundred”), is a corruption of an original אַמּוֹת (’ammot, “cubits”).
[9:13] 1 tn The Hebrew word כִּכַּר (kikar, “circle”) refers generally to something that is round. When used of metals it can refer to a disk-shaped weight made of the metal or, by extension, to a standard unit of weight. According to the older (Babylonian) standard the “talent” weighed 130 lbs. (58.9 kg), but later this was lowered to 108.3 lbs. (49.1 kg). More recent research suggests the “light” standard talent was 67.3 lbs. (30.6 kg). Using this as the standard for calculation, the weight of the gold Solomon received annually was 44,822 lbs. (20,380 kg).
[9:13] 2 tn Heb “the weight of the gold which came to Solomon in one year was 666 units of gold.”
[13:17] 1 tn Heb “struck them down with a great striking down.”
[13:17] 2 tn Heb “and [the] slain from Israel fell, five hundred thousand chosen men.”
[14:9] 1 tn Heb “a thousand thousands.”
[15:11] 1 tn Or “In that day.”
[15:11] 2 tn The Hebrew term צֹאן (tso’n) denotes smaller livestock in general; depending on context it can refer to sheep only or goats only, but their is nothing in the immediate context here to specify one or the other.
[17:14] 1 tn Or perhaps “from Judah, commanders of the thousands.”
[23:9] 1 tn The Hebrew text lists two different types of shields here. Most translations render “the large and small shields” (so NASB, NIV, NRSV; NEB “King David’s spears, shields, and bucklers”).
[28:6] 1 tn Heb “fathers” (also in vv. 9, 25).
[28:8] 1 tn Heb “the loot.” The pronoun (“it”) has been used in the translation for stylistic reasons, to avoid redundancy.
[28:8] 2 map For location see Map2 B1; Map4 D3; Map5 E2; Map6 A4; Map7 C1.