Babylonia.
The nation that threatened Judah during the time of Jeremiah was Babylonia, specifically the Neo-Babylonian Empire led by King Nebuchadnezzar. The Babylonians invaded Judah multiple times and eventually destroyed Jerusalem in 586 BCE, leading to the Babylonian exile of the Jewish people.
Jeremiah was from the Kingdom of Judah. He was a Hebrew prophet who lived during the late 7th and early 6th centuries BCE.
Jeremiah was present in the courts of Josiah. He weeps for his death and laments.
Yirmiyah (Jeremiah) prophesied to the people of Judah and their King Zedekiah a few decades before the First Destruction.
Jeremiah lived in the Kingdom of Judah, primarily in the city of Jerusalem. He was a prophet who served during a tumultuous time in the history of ancient Israel and is best known for his prophecies predicting the fall of Jerusalem to the Babylonians.
The prophet Jeremiah was imprisoned for prophesying the destruction of Judah. His warnings were seen as treasonous by the ruling authorities at the time, and he faced opposition and persecution for his messages.
The Kingdom of Judah
Jeremiah was the prophet whom God instructed not to marry and have children. This was part of God's instructions to Jeremiah as a sign of the impending judgment that was to come upon Judah.
the Babylonians
God appeared to Jeremiah through a vision where He showed Jeremiah an almond tree branch and a boiling pot facing north. This vision symbolized God's watchfulness and impending judgment on Judah.
He was king of Judah shortly before the destruction of the First Temple.
The prophet that God sent to remind the people of Judah of His love for them was the prophet Jeremiah. Jeremiah's main message was to urge the people to turn from their sinful ways and return to God, who still loved them despite their transgressions.
No, Judah and Benjamin remained separate tribes within the nation of Israel. They were originally part of the kingdom of Judah after the split of Israel into two kingdoms but retained their tribal identities.