Ezekiel 26:6

And her daughters which are in the field shall be slain by the sword; and they shall know that I am the Lord.

Cross-reference

Ezekiel 26:8 specifies the sword killing Tyre's daughters, reiterating the judgment in Ezekiel 26:6 with more detail.

Ezekiel 25:5 uses the same 'know that I am the LORD' judgment formula against Ammon, extending this pattern to Tyre's neighbors.

Ezekiel 25:7 repeats the 'know that I am the LORD' verdict against Ammon, mirroring the judgment formula applied to Tyre.

Ezekiel 25:11 closes Moab's judgment with 'they shall know that I am the LORD,' the same recognition clause used in Tyre's oracle.

Ezekiel 25:17 concludes Philistia's judgment with 'they shall know that I am the LORD,' exactly echoing Tyre's judgment formula.

Ezekiel 6:7 Parallel

Ezekiel 6:7 delivers the same 'know that I am the LORD' verdict against idolatrous Israel, linking the recognition theme across nations.

Ezekiel 12:15 uses the same 'know that I am the LORD' phrase for Israel's exile, showing the formula applies to covenant people too.

Ezekiel 28:23 against Sidon combines sword and plague with 'they shall know that I am the LORD,' a close parallel to Tyre's judgment.

Ezekiel 16:46 uses 'daughters' for satellite towns of Samaria, same idiom as Tyre's daughters in Ezekiel 26:6.

Jeremiah 49:2 uses the 'daughters' idiom for Ammon's villages being destroyed, paralleling the judgment on Tyre's daughters.