Genesis 14:7
And they returned, and came to En–mishpat, which is Kadesh, and smote all the country of the Amalekites, and also the Amorites, that dwelt in Hazezon–tamar.
Cross-reference
In Genesis 36:12, Amalek's birth to Eliphaz reveals the Edomite origins of the Amalekites whose territory is conquered here.
In Genesis 36:16, Amalek is named as one of Eliphaz's chieftains — tracing the tribal lineage of the Amalekites mentioned here.
2 Chronicles 20:2 explicitly identifies Hazezon-tamar as En-gedi, clarifying the exact location of the battle described here.
In Exodus 17:8-16, Israel faces the Amalekites in battle — the same people whose land was conquered here by eastern kings generations earlier.
In Numbers 14:43, the Amalekites and Canaanites confront Israel near Kadesh — the same region (En-mishpat) where their territory is first noted.
In Numbers 24:20, Balaam prophesies Amalek's eventual destruction — giving divine weight to the long history of conflict with this people first noted here.
In Deuteronomy 1:46, Israel abides at Kadesh, the very place identified as En-mishpat here — a site of repeated significance.
Joshua 15:3 traces Judah's southern border through Kadesh-barnea — the same place called En-mishpat here.
Numbers 13:29 places the Amalekites in the Negev and the Amorites in the hill country — the same peoples defeated here near Kadesh.
In Numbers 14:45, Amalekites join Canaanites to defeat Israel at Hormah — the same tribal people whose land was earlier conquered by eastern kings.
Judges 11:16 references Israel's arrival at Kadesh during the Exodus, the same location identified as En-mishpat in this verse.