2 Kings 24:10
At that time the servants of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came up against Jerusalem, and the city was besieged.
Cross-reference
2 Kings 25:1 recounts the beginning of the later siege under Zedekiah, contrasting with this earlier one.
2 Kings 25:2 describes the final siege under Zedekiah, a later and more devastating event than this first siege.
Deuteronomy 28:52 pronounces the covenant curse of siege—the siege here fulfills that prophetic warning.
2 Chronicles 36:10 records the deportation of Jehoiachin and temple treasures, the direct result of this siege.
Ezra 5:12 attributes this same siege and deportation to God's wrath for the fathers' provocation.
Jeremiah 6:3 prophesies shepherds (enemy armies) besieging Jerusalem—this siege fulfills that oracle.
Ezekiel 17:3 uses the allegory of a great eagle taking a cedar branch, symbolizing Nebuchadnezzar taking Jehoiachin into exile.
Ezekiel 17:12 explicitly interprets the allegory: the king of Babylon took Jerusalem's king and princes to Babylon—the very event here.
Obadiah 1:11 condemns Edom for standing by while foreigners entered Jerusalem's gates — exactly the scene of this siege.
Daniel 1:1 records a similar Babylonian siege under Jehoiakim, while this verse describes the siege under Jehoiachin; both involve Nebuchadnezzar.