Took what? Nebuchadnezzar took the Judeans (Jews) from the land of Judah into exile in his land.
See also:
nebuchadnezzar?
the Assyrians
605 BC
AnswerNo. Nebuchadnezzar was king of Babylon. He destroyed Jerusalem.
Yes, Nebuchadnezzar destroyed Jerusalem and enslaved the Hebrews.
The destruction of Solomon's Temple by Nebuchadnezzar is described in the Bible in the book of 2 Kings 25:8-10 and in 2 Chronicles 36:19. Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, captured Jerusalem and burned down the temple around 586 BC.
In 601 BC, Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, attempted an invasion of Egypt, that turned out to be an extremely costly failure. In response, several regional states previously conquered by Babylon began to entertain thoughts of breaking away, emboldened by Babylon's weakened position. Among these was the kingdom of Judah, which stopped paying tribute to king Nebuchadnezzar, believing the Babylonians had become too weak to respond. In the years following the failed incursion into Egypt, Nebuchadnezzar regrouped his forces and began to reassert his control over the upstart states. In 599 BC, the Babylonians began a siege of Jerusalem, capital of Judah, and by 597 BC, they had conquered the city. Nebuchadnezzar installed a new king named Zedekiah, believing that Judah would afterward remain a puppet-state. However, Zedekiah made a secret alliance with Egypt, and eventually openly rebelled against Nebuchadnezzar. In response, the Babylonians returned to again lay siege to Jerusalem in 589 BC, and after a thirty-month campaign, they again conquered the city. This time, Nebuchadnezzar had apparently had enough of dealing with Jerusalem. Many of the citizens were taken into captivity and transported to Babylon itself. Nebuchadnezzar ordered one of his generals, a man named Nebuzaraddan, to completely destroy the city. Every building in the area was razed, including Solomon's Temple.
Destroy Babylon was created in 2001.
Babylon was destroyed in the early 6785 BC Nope - it persisted until for thousands of years after that, until it gradually disintegrated between 500 BC and 1 AD. In fact, it didn't even exist that far back. (Probably)
The Babylonians under KingNebuchadnezzardestroyed Jerusalem includingSolomon's Temple, which wasaround587 BCE.2 Kings 25:9 --He [Nebuchadnezzar] set fire to the temple of the Lord, the royal palace and all the houses of Jerusalem. Every important building he burned down.
A:In ancient times, conquering empires tended to leave subject nations intact and viable so that they could pay taxes and contribute to the central treasury. However, from the time the kingdom of Judah first submitted to Babylon in 605 BCE until 586 BCE, the tiny nation had been a source of rebellion against Babylonian control. King Nebuchadnezzar at first tried to destroy opposition by dispersing some of the elite members of the Jerusalem population, but this had failed. He then exiled more of the population of Jerusalem into Babylon and destroyed the Temple in Jerusalem, as a warning against further insurrection. Leaderless and cowed, the remaining population submitted to Babylonian rule. Many descendants of those who were exiled returned in triumph after Cyrus of Persia defeated the Babylonians, and considered those who had not been exiled to be their inferiors.
destroy it
Their Tlaxcalan allies
The answer is vanquish/destroy. These are part of analogies, so you would have to know them to be able to answer this question. Conquer means to be "over" something, or stronger.
It was the 'final solution' to their struggle for control of the Western Mediterranean.