2 Kings 18:9
And it came to pass in the fourth year of king Hezekiah, which was the seventh year of Hoshea son of Elah king of Israel, that Shalmaneser king of Assyria came up against Samaria, and besieged it.
Cross-reference
2 Kings 18:1 dates the start of Hezekiah's reign, anchoring the fourth year mentioned here.
2 Kings 17:3-23 expands on the fall of Samaria and its reasons, adding context to this verse.
2 Kings 17:4-6 gives the full account of Shalmaneser's siege of Samaria, the same event introduced here.
2 Kings 17:1 introduces Hoshea's reign, setting the stage for the same Assyrian siege of Samaria recounted here.
2 Kings 17:5 gives the identical account of Shalmaneser besieging Samaria for three years — the very event here.
2 Kings 17:20 explains why God rejected Israel and gave them to plunderers — the theological reason for the exile.
Isaiah 10:9 lists Samaria among cities Assyria conquered — referencing this fall as a past event.
In Isaiah 37:4, Hezekiah prays for the remnant after Assyria's conquest of Samaria — the same army now threatens Jerusalem.
Jeremiah 3:8 explains Samaria's fall as God's divorce of faithless Israel — the theological reason for the exile.
Jeremiah 50:17 explicitly says the king of Assyria devoured Israel — a direct reference to the fall of Samaria.
Ezekiel 23:9 describes God handing Samaria over to the Assyrians — the same event recounted here.
Isaiah 8:7 prophesies the Assyrian invasion as a flood — broader context of the threat including Samaria's fall.
Amos 3:11 prophesied an adversary pulling down Israel's strongholds — likely the Assyrian siege of Samaria.
Ezra 9:7 confesses that Israel was given to Assyrian kings due to sin — a later reflection on this judgment.