Ezekiel 32:23
Whose graves are set in the sides of the pit, and her company is round about her grave: all of them slain, fallen by the sword, which caused terror in the land of the living.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 32:24-27 continues the Sheol vision with other nations like Elam and Meshech, all slain like Assyria here.
Ezekiel 32:20 announces Egypt delivered to the sword — the immediate context leading to the grave scene in verse 23.
Ezekiel 32:26 describes Meshech and Tubal with identical phrasing — graves around them, slain by the sword, terror in the land.
Ezekiel 26:17 laments a fallen city that spread terror, paralleling the terror-spreading dead here.
In Ezekiel 26:20, Tyre is also brought down to the pit with the slain, using the same Sheol imagery as this verse about Assyria.
Isaiah 14:15 describes the king of Babylon brought down to Sheol, paralleling the fate of Assyria cast into the pit here.
Isaiah 14:16 shows onlookers marveling at the fallen tyrant in Sheol, similar to the terror-spreading dead.
Isaiah 14:19 depicts the king of Babylon cast into the pit among the slain — identical imagery of disgrace and the pit of the sword-slain.