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The Assyrian king whose deportations ended the northern kingdom and produced the Samaritans
Also known as Sargon II
Sargons own royal annals from the palace at Khorsabad (Dur-Sharrukin) preserve his name and his account of deporting 27,290 from Samaria; cuneiform clay prisms and stone reliefs housed at the Louvre, British Museum, and Oriental Institute Chicago
The Assyrian king (722-705 BCE) who completed the conquest of Samaria begun by his predecessor Shalmaneser V, deporting the ten northern tribes of Israel and resettling the land with foreign colonists from Babylon, Cuth, Avva, Hamath, and Sepharvaim (2 Kings 17:6, 17:24-41). The biblical text names him directly only once — in Isaiah 20:1, where his Tartan (commander) captures Ashdod — but his policies of mass deportation and forced population transfer reshape the entire religious and ethnic landscape of the northern kingdom, producing the mixed people later known as the Samaritans. The Khorsabad annals and reliefs preserve Sargons own boast that he deported 27,290 inhabitants from Samaria; his name appears throughout the Assyrian record as one of the most aggressive expansionists of the neo-Assyrian era.
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