Isaiah 14:9
Hell from beneath is moved for thee to meet thee at thy coming: it stirreth up the dead for thee, even all the chief ones of the earth; it hath raised up from their thrones all the kings of the nations.
Cross-references
In Isaiah 5:14, Sheol enlarges its appetite — same personification of Sheol as a hungry entity receiving the dead.
Ezekiel 32:21-32 depicts the dead in Sheol greeting the fallen Pharaoh—strong parallel to Sheol stirring up the dead for Babylon's king.
Ezekiel 26:16 shows princes stepping down from thrones in mourning — mirroring the shades rising from thrones in Isaiah 14:9.
Ezekiel 31:17 uses the same Sheol imagery of fallen rulers meeting the dead — echoing the taunt against Babylon's king.
Jeremiah 50:46 describes Babylon's fall with trembling — the same event that Isaiah 14:9 depicts from the underworld's perspective.
Psalm 16:10 expresses confidence of not being abandoned to Sheol — contrasting with the king's descent into Sheol in Isaiah 14:9.
Ezekiel 32:19 calls Egypt to go down to the pit — another taunt using descent to Sheol, similar to Isaiah's scene.
Luke 16:23 depicts Hades as a place of conscious torment — a NT development of the Sheol concept, different from Isaiah's passive dead.
Psalm 63:9 speaks of enemies going into the depths of the earth — a similar fate to the king of Babylon in Isaiah 14:9.
Psalm 88:5 describes being counted among those who go down to the pit — echoing the dead residents stirred in Isaiah 14:9.