Ezekiel 27:35

All the inhabitants of the isles shall be astonished at thee, and their kings shall be sore afraid, they shall be troubled in their countenance.

Cross-reference

In Ezekiel 26:15-18, the coastlands and kings react with terror and lament—identical imagery to the horror described here over Tyre's fall.

In Ezekiel 28:17-19, nations are appalled at Tyre's king—extending the horror reaction to the ruler as cause of the city's doom.

Ezekiel 26:16 shows princes of the sea trembling and mourning—a near‑identical reaction to the kings and islands here.

Ezekiel 28:19 uses identical phrases 'astonished at you', 'horror', 'no more forever' about Tyre's king, mirroring the judgment on Tyre itself.

Ezekiel 32:10 uses the same phrase of kings shuddering, but over Egypt's fall—repeating the judgment pattern on a different nation.

Isaiah 23:6 Parallel

Isaiah 23:6 calls the coastlands to wail over Tyre's destruction, echoing the same stunned reaction from maritime peoples seen here.

Revelation 18:9 shows kings weeping over Babylon's fall, directly mirroring the horrified kings' reaction to Tyre's destruction here.

Revelation 18:10 records a similar lament—“Alas, alas”—as onlookers witness Babylon's sudden judgment, echoing Tyre's fate.

Jeremiah 51:41 laments Babylon's desolation, using the same sorrowful tone as the coastlands' horror over Tyre's fall here.

Isaiah 23:11 Historical context

Isaiah 23:11 describes God stretching His hand against Tyre—the divine action that causes the appalled reaction seen here.