i have absolutely no idea
the lord had used assyria to punish israel
Isaiah lived at a time when Assyria posed a clear and real threat to Jerusalem, and frequently warned of this. However, these warnings, which sometimes came in the form of oracles, can not really be called prophecies. As Assyria never actually captured Jerusalem, anything he might have said to that effect was not a prophecy as we understand the term. Isaiah's initial prophecy concerning Assyria is in Isaiah chapter 10. Here Isaiah refers to Assyria as the tool or instrument of Yahweh, insinuating that the tool is nothing without the power of the one wielding the tool. He also makes clear Yahweh's promise to care for a remnant that will remain no matter what transpires and that in the end, that Assyria will be punished and destroyed.
Tiberius was a person and on capri which is very far from Jerusalem
Jerusalem is not terribly important to the history of Mesopotamia. The only real connection that it has is that a number of Mesopotamian civilizations (like Assyria and Babylonia) attacked and besieged the city.
bethelehem is about 11 km from Jerusalem
King of ancient Assyria, who tried to conquer Jerusalem. God defeated Sennacharib by sending His angel to slay 185,000 Assyrians in one night.
Jerusalem and Baghdad are 547 miles (881km) apart.
The quickest driving route to Eliat from Jerusalem is 308 km
1103 miles
about 50 to 150
about 140 miles<<!!!!>>
AnswerIsaiah lived at a time when Assyria posed a clear and real threat to Jerusalem, and frequently warned of this. However, these warnings, which sometimes came in the form of oracles, can not really be called prophecies. As Assyria never actually captured Jerusalem, anything he might have said to that effect was not a prophecy as we understand the term. Isaiah warned of the danger Jerusalem faced from Assyria, but did not actually prophesy that they would capture Jerusalem, which in any event they did not do. The nearest to such a prophecy is in verses 1:10-11, possibly a later addition: "As my hand hath found the kingdoms of the idols, and whose graven images did excel them of Jerusalem and of Samaria; Shall I not, as I have done unto Samaria and her idols, so do to Jerusalem and her idols?" If this is read as a prophecy of the capture of Jerusalem, then it must also be read as evidence that Isaiah could no more see inot the future than could those he was warning.