Isaiah 10:28
He is come to Aiath, he is passed to Migron; at Michmash he hath laid up his carriages:
Cross-reference
In Isaiah 36:1, Sennacherib's invasion fulfills the march described here—the same historical campaign.
In Isaiah 8:8, the Assyrian flood reaches Judah—here the specific route through these towns fulfills that sweeping advance.
In Isaiah 17:14, the plunderers face sudden destruction—a reversal of the confident advance described here.
1 Samuel 13:5 has Philistines encamping at Michmash, mirroring the Assyrian army's stop at the same location.
2 Kings 19:32 records the same Assyrian campaign's failure against Jerusalem, directly continuing the narrative context.
In Micah 1:9, the wound reaches Judah's gate—mirroring the Assyrian advance towards Jerusalem here.
1 Samuel 13:2 places Saul's troops at Michmash, the same strategic site where Assyria stores baggage in Isaiah.
1 Samuel 13:23 mentions the pass of Michmash, the same strategic defile the Assyrian army traverses.
1 Samuel 14:5 describes the crags near Michmash, providing the topography behind the Assyrian march route.
1 Samuel 14:31 mentions a battle from Michmash to Aijalon, showing this corridor was used in earlier warfare.