Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Necho II. An Egyptian king, the son and successor of Psammetichus (B.C. 610-594), the contemporary of Josiah, king of Judah. For some reason he proclaimed war against the king of Assyria. He led forth a powerful army and marched northward, but was met by the king of Judah at Megiddo, who refused him a passage through his territory.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › NechoNecho - Wikipedia

    Necho may refer to: Necho I (died 664 BC), Egyptian pharaoh of the 26th Dynasty; Necho II (died 595 BC), Egyptian pharaoh of the 26th Dynasty; Necho (crater), a crater on the Moon; See also. Neco (1895–1977), Brazilian footballer; Neco (name), including a list of people; Necco, a candy manufacturer; Northern Essex Community College, or NECCO

  3. www.livius.org › articles › personNecho II - Livius

    Aug 10, 2020 · Necho's names are sometimes erazed from his monuments, which may signify that his foreign policy was seen as a failure; his successor refrained from foreign interventions; Buildings. According to Herodotus, note.] Necho started to build a canal between the Nile and the Red Sea (finished by Darius I the Great)

  4. Necho definition: chief of the Egyptian delta lords (father of Psamtik I).. See examples of NECHO used in a sentence.

  5. Necho soon after died, and was succeeded by Psammetichus II (Wilkinson's Anc. Egyptians, 1:157 sq.). SEE EGYPT. According to Manetho (Euseb. Chronicles Arzen. 1:219), Necho was the sixth king in the twenty-sixth dynasty, successor of Psammetichus, and as there had been another of the same name, he was properly Necho the Second.

  6. Location within present-day Israel. This Battle of Megiddo is recorded as having taken place in 609 BC, when Pharaoh Necho II of Egypt led his army to Carchemish (northern Syria) to join with his allies, the fading Neo-Assyrian Empire, against the surging Neo-Babylonian Empire. This required passing through territory controlled by the Kingdom ...

  7. In Necho II. …Neo-Babylonians, but at the great Battle of Carchemish (a Syrian city on the middle Euphrates River) in 605 the Neo-Babylonian crown prince, Nebuchadrezzar, soundly defeated Necho’s troops and forced their withdrawal from Syria and Palestine. Egypt itself was threatened in 601, but Necho repelled the enemy and continued to ...

  1. People also search for