Yes. (1 Kings 12:17+23)
A:Abijam, or Abijah, was the son and successor to Rehoboam as king of Judah.
Rehoboam for Judah and Jeroboam for Israel to begin with.
Nadab was king of Israel after Jeroboam I.
A:According to the Bible, Rehoboam was succeeded by Abijah, who ruled Judah for two years. Some scholars believe that both Rehoboam and Abijah might have been purely legendary, as they say Judah probably did not have kings at such an early stage in its history.
A:According to The Bible, Rehoboam was succeeded by Abijah, who ruled Judah for two years. Some scholars believe that both Rehoboam and Abijah might have been purely legendary, as they say Judah probably did not have kings at such an early stage in its history.
king Solomon son Rehoboam succeeded Solomon as King.
King David was the king of Judah and Israel. The separation between the kingdoms was on the days of king David's grandson, king Rehoboam (son of king Solomon, who was the son of king David).
Rehoboam was the King of Judah who took eighteen wives and sixty concubines. He fathered twenty-eight sons and sixty daughters, for a total of 88 children.
Rehoboam lost the northern ten tribes almost immediately (within the first two years of his reign). He remained the King of Judah for an additional fifteen years.
Because the sin of idolatry which is the symbol of judah's loss of power under Rehoboam
Solomon's successor Rehoboam
A:According to the Bible, Solomon's son, Rehoboam, succeeded him. Shortly afterwards, Israel rebelled against Rehoboam and broke away, installing Jeroboam as its king, leaving Rehoboam as king only of the small enclave of Judah. Lester L Grabbe (Ancient Israel: What Do We Know and How Do We Know It?) says that these stories are, at least in part, legendary. He cites H M Niemann, who argued that Israel did not become a state until the time of King Omri, over a hundred years later, and Judah not until tirne of Uzziah.Another Answer:As noted, shortly after the death of King Solomon, circa 930 BC, the Kingdom of Israel split in two with Jeroboam ruling the Northern Kingdom and Rehoboam ruling Judah (which had many from Benjamin, Simeon, and Levi with him). There is ample archaeological findings to support the Kingdom beginning with the 'golden period' of King David circa 1010-970 BC.