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Thursday, July 9, 2026

Adad-Nirari III favoured by some for the Book of Jonah’s ‘king of Nineveh’

 



by

Damien F. Mackey

  

“Although, other candidates for Jonah’s “king of Nineveh” do exist,

Adad-Nirari III seems to be an interesting fit due to his little-known

monotheistic revolution. For reasons unknown Adad-Nirari III chose Nabu,

the Assyrian god of literacy, scribes and wisdom, as the sole god to be worshipped”.

 Marc Madrigal

 

Introduction

 

The one clear piece of chronological evidence with which the Old Testament has availed us concerning the prophet Jonah is that he prophesied regarding the military success of King Jeroboam (II) of Israel (2 Kings 14:25): “[Jeroboam] was the one who restored the boundaries of Israel from Lebo Hamath to the Dead Sea, in accordance with the word of the Lord, the God of Israel, spoken through his servant Jonah son of Amittai, the prophet from Gath Hepher”.

 

This crucial piece of information has encouraged biblical scholars, in search of an historical identification for the “king of Nineveh” of Jonah 3:6, to investigate whatever Assyrian kings were contemporaneous with the lengthy reign of Jeroboam II.

 

Proposed figures for the reign of Jeroboam II have ranged from 793 BC to 746 BC:

Jeroboam II - Wikipedia

William F. Albright has dated his reign to 786–746 BC, while E. R. Thiele says he was coregent with Jehoash 793 to 782 BC and sole ruler 782 to 753 BC. …”.

 

Basically, then, the reign of Jeroboam II is thought to have spanned the greater part of the first half of the C8th BC.

 

Scholars, turning next to the conventional neo-Assyrian king lists, will encounter these following Assyrian kings who might qualify as being contemporaries of Jeroboam II: List of Assyrian Kings. A list of the kings in the Neo-Assyrian… | by Zack Duncan | Medium

 

  • Adad-nirari III (811–783 BC), Babylon became independent again during his reign.
  • Shalmaneser IV (783–773 BC), son of Adad-nirari III.
  • Ashur-dan III (773–755 BC), son of Adad-nirari III. ….
  • Ashur-nirari V (755–745 BC), may have been deposed and killed by his successor.

 

Creationist Bill Cooper, on the other hand, would mount a most enthusiastic case for:

 

  • Tiglath-Pileser III (745–727 BC), Assyria became the supreme power in the Near East under his reign. He successfully invaded Israel as recorded in 2 Kings 15:29.

 

for Jonah 3:6’s “king of Nineveh” (“The Historic Jonah”, EN Tech. J., vol. 2, 1986, pp. 105–116).

 

In conventional terms, this mighty king would be chronologically too late to qualify.

 

Gerard Gertoux uniquely dates the Jonah incident to 824 BC, when (as he thinks) Shalmaneser III lay dying and there was an insurrection against him in Assyria:

(8) Jonah vs King of Nineveh: Chronological, Historical and Archaeological Evidence

 

Whereas Bill Cooper’s reconstruction was too late for Jonah, conventionally speaking, Gerard Gertoux’s albeit original effort sets the scene far too early.

Moreover, according to my reconstructions, Shalmaneser so-called III reigned significantly later than during the conventional dates that have been assigned to him.

See my Bibliography at the end of this article.

 

Of the first four listed neo-Assyrian kings above, the two popular choices for Jonah’s “the king of Nineveh” appear to be Adad-nirari III and Ashur-dan III.

 

Zack Duncan, for example, who compiled this succession of Assyrian kings (2024), had interestingly added to his listing of Ashur-dan III (emphasis added):

 

  • Ashur-dan III (773–755 BC), son of Adad-nirari III. The prophet Jonah served during the time of King Jeroboam II in Israel (783–743 BC) and likely visited Nineveh during this time.

 

Marc Madrigal, on the other hand, is one who has favoured, for the Book of Jonah’s converted Ninevite king, Adad-nirari III.

 

Since I shall be coming to the same conclusion as has Marc Madrigal, but via entirely different historical paths, I give here what he has written about king Adad-nirari III: Adad-Nirari III: Jonah’s Assyrian King?

 

Adad-Nirari III: Jonah’s Assyrian King?

 

It is possible that the unnamed deliverer who saved the kingdom of Israel from the oppression and threat of the Arameans is none other than Adad-Nirari III himself.

 

Adad-Nirari III was king of the Assyrian Empire and reigning roughly from 805-782 BCE. The Saba'a Stele of Adad-Nirari III recording some of Adad-Nirari’s campaigns was discovered in 1905 in the Sinjar Mountains of Syria.

 

The Stele dates from around 800 BCE and provides one of the earliest archaeological records of the name Palestine (Pa-la-áš-tu). The inscription mentions an Assyrian raid against the king of Aram and the details of the eventual tribute received. The translation of the stele is as follows:

 

“In (my) fifth year of reign, when I took my seat on the royal throne in might, I mobilized (the forces of my) land. (To) the wide spreading armies of Assyria I gave the order to advance against Palashtu (Palestine). I crossed the Euphrates at its flood. The wide-spreading, hostile kings, who in the time of Shamshi-Adad, my father, had rebelled and withheld their tribute. At the command of the gods Assur, Sin, Shamash, Adad, and Ishtar my allies [terror] overwhelmed them and they laid hold of my feet and I received tribute. I gave the command [to march against Aram] to Mari’ [Ishutup] in Damascus, [his royal city].  I received 100 talents of gold and 1,000 talents of silver talents.”

 

The date and content of this Stele contains some interesting parallels with 2 Kings 13. The events recorded in this stele coincide with the reign Jehoahaz of Israel. William F. Albright dates his reign to 815–801 BCE. E. R. Thiele suggests 814–798 BCE. 

 

Saba'a Stele. Istanbul Archaeology Museum. / Marc Madrigal

 

In 2 Kings 13:1-5 we read, “In the twenty-third year of Joash the son of Ahaziah, king of Judah, Jehoahaz the son of Jehu became king over Israel at Samaria, and he reigned seventeen years. He did evil in the sight of the Lord, and followed the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, with which he made Israel sin; he did not turn from them. So the anger of the Lord was kindled against Israel, and He gave them continually into the hand of Hazael king of Aram, and into the hand of Ben-hadad the son of Hazael. Then Jehoahaz entreated the favor of the Lord, and the Lord listened to him; for He saw the oppression of Israel, how the king of Aram oppressed them. The Lord gave Israel a deliverer, so that they escaped from under the hand of the Arameans; and the sons of Israel lived in their tents as formerly.” (NASB)

 

It is possible that the unnamed deliverer who saved the kingdom of Israel from the oppression and threat of the Arameans is none other than Adad-Nirari III himself.

 

The parallelisms between the Biblical text and the reign of Adad-Nirari III do not end here. In 2 Kings 14 we have the first mention of the prophet Jonah, the son of Amittai. The story of Jonah is considered by some scholars as an allegory. Some even reject the historical figure of Jonah himself. Certainly it seems from the text of 2 Kings 14 that Jonah was understood to be a historical figure. Furthermore Jesus’ frequent quotes from Jonah seem to suggest that for Jesus, Jonah was a real historical figure also.

 

In Luke 11:30 Jesus contrasts his generation with the generation that lived in the time of Jonah, “For as Jonah became a sign to the people of Nineveh, so will the Son of Man be to this generation.” (ESV)

 

2 Kings 14 tells us that Jonah lived during the reign of Jeroboam the son of Joash, king of Israel. William F. Albright dates his reign to 786–746 BC, E. R. Thiele suggests that he was co-regent with Jehoash 793–782 BC and sole ruler 782–753 BCE.

 

Both of these dates fall within the reign of Adad-Nirari III (805-782 BCE). Although, other candidates for Jonah’s “king of Nineveh” do exist, Adad-Nirari III seems to be an interesting fit due to his little-known monotheistic revolution. For reasons unknown Adad-Nirari III chose Nabu, the Assyrian god of literacy, scribes and wisdom, as the sole god to be worshipped.

 

In his book titled The Ancient World From c. 1400 to 586 B.C., Francis Nicole makes the following observation: “A strange religious revolution took place in the time of Adad-nirari III, which can be compared with that of the Egyptian Pharaoh Ikhnaton.

 

For an unknown reason Nabu (Nebo), the god of Borsippa, seems to have been proclaimed sole god, or at least the principal god, of the empire. A Nabu temple was erected in 787 B.C. at Calah, and on a Nabu statue one of the governors dedicated to the king appear the significant words, 'Trust in Nabu, do not trust in any other god'.”

 

Nicole continues: “The favorite place accorded Nabu in the religious life of Assyria is revealed by the fact that no other god appears so often in personal names. This monotheistic revolution had as short a life as the Aton revolution in Egypt. The worshipers of the Assyrian national deities quickly recovered from their impotence, reoccupied their privileged places, and suppressed Nabu. This is the reason that so little is known concerning the events during the time of the monotheistic revolution. Biblical chronology places Jonah's ministry in the time of Jeroboam II, of Israel, who reigned from 793 to 753 B.C. Hence, Jonah's mission to Nineveh may have occurred in the reign of Adad-Nirari III, and may have had something to do with his decision to abandon the old gods and serve only one deity. This explanation can, however, be given only as a possibility, because source material for that period is so scanty and fragmentary that a complete reconstruction of the political and religious history of Assyria during the time under consideration is not yet possible.”

 

Under this scenario, if indeed Adad-Nirari III is the king of Nineveh, it would seem reasonable to conclude that by sending Jonah, the God of Israel was extending a hand of mercy to the very king that had earlier delivered Israel from the oppression of the Arameans.

 

Jonah’s message led the population to repentance and in their turn to monotheism perhaps they identified Jonah’s god with Nabu. Although it is difficult to say with precise certainty if this is indeed the nature of the events that unfolded, it nonetheless makes for a compelling possibility!

 

Marc Madrigal has raised some really intriguing points in his article.

What I especially take from it, apart from my same conclusion that Adad-nirari III was the very much sought for “king of Nineveh”, is the shock leaning towards monotheism; something totally unexpected amongst the haughty, and utterly pagan, kings of Assyro-Babylonia.

 

Long road to Jonah’s “King of Nineveh”

 

When leading in to Marc Madrigal’s article above, I had stated that “I shall be coming to the same conclusion as [he has], but via entirely different historical paths”.

 

Almost miraculously, as it seems to me, Marc Madrigal has arrived at the right conclusion about Adad-nirari III despite the seeming impossibility of being able to align a hopelessly faulty neo-Assyrian chronology with an improperly worked out history of biblical Israel. 

 

There is so much to say here.

Thankfully, I have written articles whose references I can provide to save an enormous amount of repetitive explanation. See my Bibliography at the end of this article.

 

In a nutshell, the thing is, the long-lived prophet Jonah made his famous prediction about King Jeroboam II very early in his prophetic ministry; whereas his mission to Nineveh occurred very late in his prophetic ministry.

 

By the time that Jonah arrived in Nineveh, King Jeroboam II, and indeed the entire Jehu-ide line, had died out.

And so had died out all of the supposed kings of Assyria contemporaneous with Jeroboam II. Even Bill Cooper’s late entry, Tiglath-pileser, had passed on.

All of those in Zack Duncan’s list - except for Adad-nirari III, who is a special case.

 

Let me try to explain.

 

So-called ‘Middle’ kingdom Assyro-Babylonian kings need to be folded into Neo kings.

That is a categorical necessity of chronological revisionism.

 

For a long time I had considered Adad-Nirari I/III to have been an early king, and had accepted this list below from Marc Van de Mieroop’s book, A History of the Ancient Near East ca. 3000 -323 BC. - his “King Lists” towards the end of his book - as being a perfect one for our period in question (p. 294):

 

Adad-nirari [I]

Shalmaneser [I]

Tukulti-Ninurta [I]

Assur-nadin-apli [I]

 

where Tukulti-Ninurta = Sennacherib and Assur-nadin-apli = Ashurnasirpal = Esarhaddon.

This sequence accords perfectly with the neo-Assyrian sequence given in Tobit 1: “Shalmaneser”; “Sennacherib”; “Esarhaddon”. ….

 

But recently I have come to realise that Adad-Nirari actually belongs at the bottom, not at the top, of this list. And that that is the key to the true identity of Adad-Nirari:

 

Adding Adad Nirari to Shalmaneser as Assyrian kings needing to be re shuffled

 

(3) Adding Adad Nirari to Shalmaneser as Assyrian kings needing to be re shuffled

 

And that is not the only massive re-shuffling of kings needed as we course along the Long road to Jonah’s “King of Nineveh”.

 

The full identification of the prophet Jonah himself, relative to the kings of Judah and Israel, is extremely involved as well:

 

De-coding Jonah

 

(6) De-coding Jonah

 

And the list of the kings of Israel needs shortening, too, with some of the names being duplicates. I have only to recall a favourite equation of mine, enabling for the last six named kings of Israel to be reduced to just three:

 

Zechariah (murdered) = Pekahiah (murdered);

Shallum (murderer-murdered) = Pekah (murderer-murdered);

Menahem (murderer) = Hoshea (murderer).

 

In other words, for one to arrive at a complete, long-lived prophet Jonah and his contemporaneous “king of Nineveh”, one needs to undertake a massive revision of the kings of Israel and Judah, as well as those of Assyro-Babylonia.

 

We read earlier that Marc Madrigal had gone so far as to propose that Adad-Nirari may have been Israel’s “saviour” against the Syrians (Arameans) (cf. 2 Kings 13:5):

 

“It is possible that the unnamed deliverer who saved the kingdom of Israel from the oppression and threat of the Arameans is none other than Adad-Nirari III himself”.

 

But that era was far too early for our (revised) Adad-Nirari.

 

The “saviour” was, according to my own view, the Jehu-ide king of Israel, Jehoash:

 

An Old Testament “saviour” of Israel

 

(7) An Old Testament "saviour" of Israel

 

Having in mind that Adad-Nirari was so well distant from King Jeroboam II, and from the “saviour” incident favoured for him by Marc Madrigal, I had earlier remarked:

 

Almost miraculously, as it seems to me, Marc Madrigal has arrived at the right conclusion about Adad-nirari III despite the seeming impossibility of being able to align a hopelessly faulty neo-Assyrian chronology with an improperly worked out history of biblical Israel”. 

 

Now, returning to that ‘Middle’ kingdom list of Assyrian kings about which I had initially been so bullish:

 

Adad-nirari [I]

Shalmaneser [I]

Tukulti-Ninurta [I]

Assur-nadin-apli [I]

 

where Tukulti-Ninurta = Sennacherib and Assur-nadin-apli = Ashurnasirpal = Esarhaddon.

This sequence accords perfectly with the neo-Assyrian sequence given in Tobit 1: “Shalmaneser”; “Sennacherib”; “Esarhaddon”. ….

 

I would now update it as follows:

 

Shalmaneser = Shalmaneser

Tukulti-Ninurta = Sargon II/Sennacherib

Adad-nirari = Esarhaddon

 

Esarhaddon was the king of Nineveh during whose early rule I believe that the prophet Jonah came to Nineveh:

 

The ‘Jonah incident’ historically identified

 

(7) The 'Jonah incident' historically identified

 

Hence, I can likewise say that Adad-Nirari was the king of Nineveh during whose early rule I believe that the prophet Jonah came to Nineveh.

 

This, my recent de-coding of who Adad-Nirari III really was, and when he actually lived – some two centuries later than according to convention – has enabled for him to take his place as another of those mighty alter egos of the Chaldean (not Assyrian) king, Nebuchednezzar ‘the Great’.

 

Adad-Nirari was, all at once (to name a few), Ashurnasirpal:

 

King Ashurnasirpal brings critically relevant elements to a reconstructed Jonah

 

(7) King Ashurnasirpal brings critically relevant elements to a reconstructed Jonah

 

And he was Esarhaddon (as noted above).

 

And he was Nebuchednezzar (as noted above).

 

And he was Nabonidus.

 

An unexpected trend towards a form of monotheism can be discerned amongst Nebuchednezzar; Nabonidus; Adad-Nirari, as noted on another occasion as follows:

 

A religious revolution

 

A notable revolution towards a monotheistic worship of the god, Nebo, that occurred during the reign of Adad-Nirari III – somewhat akin to that of pharaoh Akhnaton towards the Aton – was common as well to Adad-Nirari’s alter egos (in my revision), e.g. King Nebuchednezzar’s Monotheistic Inscription (No. 15) and the singular worship by King Nabonidus of the god, Sin:

 

Venerating the god Sin common to Nebuchednezzar’s main ‘alter egos’

 

(13) Venerating the god Sin common to Nebuchednezzar's main 'alter egos'

 

In that article I considered, for instance:

 

Nabonidus’s fanatical devotion to god Sin

 

Previously I have written on this phenomenon:

 

‘God of gods’

 

Though it would be much over-stating things to claim that King Nabonidus became a monotheist, there is a definite progression in that direction in

the course of his reign.

 

“Monotheistic Tendency” of Nebuchednezzar

 

Charles Boutflower has advanced a strong argument in his book, In and Around the Book of Daniel:

https://archive.org/stream/inaroundbookofda00boutuoft/inaroundbookofda00boutuoft_djvu.txt

for evidence of a trend towards a Marduk (Merodach) monotheism in various inscriptions of Nebuchednezzar:

 

According, then, to this authority, No. 15 is the latest of the

inscriptions of Nebuchadnezzar, and the Merodach tendency

noticed by Langdon is of necessity a monotheistic tendency, for

Merodach, who, as we have seen, is always foremost of the gods,

appears in some passages of this inscription to stand alone.

 

Now it is just in these monotheistic passages, these " inserted prayers "

and " changes of text," that we seem to see the work of the real

Nebuchadnezzar.

 

Thus, immediately after the introductory

passage, which describes the position occupied by the king with

reference to Merodach and Nebo, there follows a hymn to those

divinities, col. i. 23 to ii. 39, extracted from inscriptions 19 and

14. But in the middle of this hymn we meet with a prayer

addressed to Merodach alone : col. i. 51 to ii. 11, and this prayer,

be it noted, is an entirely original addition, not found in any previous

inscription. Jastrow remarks with reference to it, "The con-

ception of Merodach rises to a height of spiritual aspiration,

which comes to us as a surprise in a religion that remained steeped

in polytheism, and that was associated with practices and rites

of a much lower order of thought." 2 This remarkable prayer

runs thus

 

"To Merodach my lord I prayed,

I addressed my supplication.

He had regard to the utterance of my heart,

I spake unto him:

'Everlasting prince,

Lord of all that is,

for the king whom thou lovest,

whose name thou proclaimest,

who is pleasing to thee :

direct him aright,

lead him in the right path !

I am a prince obedient unto thee,

the creature of thy hands,

thou hast created me,

and hast appointed me to the lordship of multitudes of people.

According to thy mercy, Lord, which thou bestowest upon

all of them,

cause them to love thy exalted lordship :

cause the fear of thy godhead to abide in my heart !

 

Grant what to thee is pleasing,

for thou makest my life’.” ….

 

And a similar exaltation of the god, Sîn, in the case of King Nabonidus, is a central feature of Paul-Alain Beaulieu’s book, The Reign of Nabonidus, King of Babylon, 556-539 B.C. (1989).

Beaulieu has interpreted Nabonidus’s exaltation of the moon god, Sîn, as “an outright usurpation of Marduk’s prerogatives”.

 

Sîn is the ilu/ilani sa ilani, “the god(s) of the gods”.

 

This exalted invocation is undoubtedly due to the influence of the prophet Daniel.

 

Now, similarly (and I do not agree with the following in its entirety):

 

“A strange religious revolution took place in the time of Adad-nirari III,

which can be compared with that of the Egyptian Pharaoh Ikhnaton.

For an unknown reason Nabu (Nebo), the god of Borsippa, seems to have

been proclaimed sole god, or at least the principal god, of the empire”.

 

Francis D. Nichol

 

 

Bibliography:

 

For the revision of biblical and ancient history:

 

Chaotic King Lists can conceal some sure historical sequences

 

(8) Chaotic King Lists can conceal some sure historical sequences

 

Necessary fusion of Hezekiah and Josiah

 

(8) Necessary fusion of Hezekiah and Josiah

 

Last six Kings of Israel were only three

 

(7) Last six Kings of Israel were only three

 

For the prophet Jonah and the Book of Jonah:

 

Jonah 3:6's “King of Nineveh”

 

(8) Jonah 3:6's "King of Nineveh"

 

Jonah 3 historically based according to BibleHub

 

(8) Jonah 3 historically based according to BibleHub

 

Plant that gave Jonah shade

 

(8) Plant that gave Jonah shade

 

God can raise up prophets at will - even from a shepherd of Simeon

 

(8) God can raise up prophets at will - even from a shepherd of Simeon

 

A north and south geography for the major prophet Isaiah

 

(8) A north and south geography for the major prophet Isaiah

 

For Adad-nirari III:

 

Adding Adad Nirari to Shalmaneser as Assyrian kings needing to be re shuffled

 

(8) Adding Adad Nirari to Shalmaneser as Assyrian kings needing to be re shuffled

 

 

 

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