1 Kings 14:26

And he took away the treasures of the house of the Lord, and the treasures of the king’s house; he even took away all: and he took away all the shields of gold which Solomon had made.

Cross-reference

1 Kings 7:51 records Solomon storing the gold shields in the temple; verse 26 shows Shishak taking them—a stark reversal.

1 Kings 10:16 Historical context

In 1 Kings 10:16, we learn Solomon made 200 large gold shields — the very items Shishak later plundered, showing the origin of what was lost.

1 Kings 10:17 Historical context

In 1 Kings 10:17, we read about 300 smaller gold shields also carried off by Shishak, completing the inventory of what was taken.

1 Kings 11:40 Historical context

In 1 Kings 11:40, Jeroboam fled to Shishak — the same Egyptian king who later plunders Jerusalem here, explaining the historical motive.

1 Kings 15:18 Historical context

1 Kings 15:18 shows Asa later using the remaining temple treasuries for a treaty, continuing the story of depleted wealth.

2 Kings 24:13 describes Nebuchadnezzar plundering the temple treasures, echoing Shishak's earlier desecration as judgment repeats.

2 Chronicles 9:15 is the parallel account confirming Solomon's 200 large shields, the same ones Shishak later seized.

2 Chronicles 12:9-11 adds that Rehoboam replaced the gold shields with bronze ones, showing the diminished glory after Shishak's raid.

In 2 Kings 14:14, Jehoash similarly plunders the temple and palace — a parallel act of foreign invasion and loss of treasures.

2 Samuel 8:7 records David capturing gold shields for Jerusalem — later, Shishak takes shields from Jerusalem, reversing David's gain.

Joshua 6:19 Contrast

Joshua 6:19 consecrates gold to the Lord's treasury — Shishak plundering that treasury shows a tragic contrast due to disobedience.

In 1 Chronicles 18:7, David captured gold shields from Hadadezer — the same type later made by Solomon and taken by Shishak here.

1 Chronicles 26:20 Historical context

In 1 Chronicles 26:20, Levites are appointed over temple treasuries — the treasuries that Shishak later plundered here.