Isaiah 36:1

Now it came to pass in the fourteenth year of king Hezekiah, that Sennacherib king of Assyria came up against all the defenced cities of Judah, and took them.

Cross-reference

Isaiah 1:8 Prophetic fulfillment

Isaiah 1:8 depicted daughter Zion left like a besieged city — exactly the situation when Sennacherib took all but Jerusalem.

Isaiah 7:17 Prophetic fulfillment

Isaiah 7:17 foretold the king of Assyria being brought against Judah — now realized in Sennacherib's campaign.

Isaiah 8:7 Prophetic fulfillment

Isaiah 8:7 prophesied the Lord bringing the Assyrian king like flooding waters — fulfilled as Sennacherib overruns Judah.

Isaiah 8:8 Prophetic fulfillment

Isaiah 8:8 specified the Assyrian would reach to the neck of Judah — Sennacherib takes all cities but cannot take Jerusalem.

Isaiah 10:28–32 Prophetic fulfillment

Isaiah 10:28-32 detailed the Assyrian march route through Judah's cities — Sennacherib's advance matches this itinerary.

Isaiah 22:8 Historical context

Isaiah 22:8 describes Judah's defensive preparations during the same Assyrian siege — uncovering armor in response to the invasion.

Isaiah 52:4 Parallel

Isaiah 52:4 explicitly recalls Assyrian oppression of Israel, echoing the invasion here.

Isaiah 33:7 Historical context

Isaiah 33:7 laments the ambassadors of peace weeping, reflecting the distress caused by the Assyrian invasion.

Isaiah 33:8 Historical context

Isaiah 33:8 describes highways waste and covenant broken — the aftermath of Sennacherib's invasion.

2 Kings 18:13 records the same historical event — Sennacherib's invasion of Judah — providing the parallel account.

2 Kings 18:17 continues the narrative with the Rabshakeh's mission — the same siege story that begins here.

2 Chronicles 32:1 gives another parallel account of Sennacherib's invasion, confirming the historical context.

Jeremiah 50:17 cites the king of Assyria as the first lion that devoured Israel, referencing the same Assyrian conquest.

Hosea 1:7 Prophetic fulfillment

Hosea 1:7 promises salvation for Judah without military means — fulfilled in the angelic deliverance from Sennacherib's siege.