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Baladan

Old TestamentDivided MonarchyMaleKingFather

Baladan was the father of Merodach-baladan, king of Babylon.

Baladan illustration
Baladan

Biography

Baladan is known in Scripture solely as the father of Merodach-baladan, king of Babylon (2 Kings 20:12; Isaiah 39:1). His son's full name, Merodach-baladan (Marduk-apla-iddina in Akkadian records), was a powerful Chaldean chieftain who twice seized the throne of Babylon, first from 721 to 710 BC, and briefly again around 703 BC, making him a significant challenger to Assyrian dominance. Baladan himself is not credited with any reign in the biblical text; he is mentioned purely to establish the dynastic identity of his son. Historical Assyrian records confirm a figure named Yakin as father to Marduk-apla-iddina, suggesting Baladan may have been a throne name or that the biblical tradition preserves a variant genealogical reference to the same Chaldean chieftain's lineage.

Significance

Though Baladan himself plays no active role in the biblical narrative, his identification as the progenitor of Merodach-baladan places him within a pivotal geopolitical moment. His son's embassy to Hezekiah (2 Kings 20:12–19), ostensibly congratulating the Judean king on his recovery, became the occasion for Hezekiah's fatal display of his treasuries. Isaiah's subsequent prophecy that those very treasures would one day be carried to Babylon (Isaiah 39:6) marks a watershed moment in prophetic history, introducing Babylon as the coming instrument of judgment. Baladan thus stands at the ancestral root of the Babylonian threat that would define so much of later Old Testament theology.

Verse Appearances (2)

References

  1. Orr, J. (ed.) (1915) The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Chicago: Howard-Severance Company. [Public Domain]
  2. Tyndale House, Cambridge (n.d.) Translators Individualised Proper Names with all References (TIPNR). STEPBible. Available at: https://www.stepbible.org. [CC BY 4.0]
  3. Church of England (1769) The Holy Bible, Authorized (King James) Version. [Public Domain]

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Content compiled from public domain scholarship, academic sources, and verified references. Editorial standards · View all sources