2 Kings 20:20
And the rest of the acts of Hezekiah, and all his might, and how he made a pool, and a conduit, and brought water into the city, are they not written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?
Cross-reference
In 2 Kings 16:19, the same formulaic conclusion ('rest of the acts...') is used for Ahaz, another king of Judah, showing a standard historical summary.
In 2 Kings 18:17, this same conduit and pool are the location where Assyrian officials confront Hezekiah, linking his water project to the siege.
In 2 Kings 21:17, the same concluding formula ('rest of the acts...') is used for Manasseh, Hezekiah's son, continuing the historical pattern.
In 2 Kings 21:25, this formula is used for Amon, another Judahite king, maintaining the same summary style across reigns.
In 2 Kings 23:28, the same formula appears for Josiah, showing the consistent closure for later kings of Judah.
2 Kings 8:23 uses the identical 'Book of Chronicles' formula for Joram — showing this is a standard scribal conclusion for kings.
2 Kings 15:6 repeats the same 'rest of the acts' formula for Azariah — a standard concluding phrase for Judah's kings.
Isaiah 22:9-11 describes Hezekiah's water reservoir construction — the same event referenced in Kings, adding prophetic context.
2 Chronicles 32:32 matches the formula 'rest of the acts' — cross-referencing the same source for Hezekiah's full record.
2 Chronicles 32:30 specifies the Gihon waterworks — the same conduit Hezekiah built, confirming the source of the water supply.
2 Chronicles 32:4 details the same water-sealing project against Assyria — providing the full context of Hezekiah's defensive preparations.
In 1 Kings 15:23, this formula appears for Asa, a king of Judah, showing consistent summary language for Hezekiah's predecessors.
In 1 Kings 15:7, the same formula ('rest of the acts...') is used for Abijam, another Judahite king, reinforcing the chronicler's method.
In 2 Chronicles 35:27, the same formula is used for Josiah in the Chronicler's account, parallel to the Kings narrative.
In Nehemiah 2:14, Nehemiah inspects the 'king's pool'—likely the same water system Hezekiah built, showing its lasting importance.
Isaiah 7:3 mentions the Upper Pool, likely a precursor to Hezekiah's tunnel. Both involve Jerusalem's water infrastructure.
In 1 Kings 14:19, this same concluding formula appears for Jeroboam of Israel, extending the pattern across both kingdoms.