No. The Ancient Northern Kingdom of Israel was conquered by Assyria, but that is the extent of the relationship between Israel and Assyria. The modern State of Israel was founded by the descendants (2600+ years later) of the Ancient Southern Kingdom of Judah.
... He didn't found any kingdom, he founded a dynasty, which is a royal, ruling family, but he was the second king of the united Kingdom of Israel, the throne was previously held by King Saul.
An Israeli is a citizen of the modern State of Israel. An Israelite is a person from the Biblical Era that was a descendant of Jacob and probably lived in either the United Kingdom of Israel, the Northern Kingdom of Israel, or the Kingdom of Judah. It is conventionally believed that the Israelites are the ancestors of the Jewish people, who then founded the State of Israel roughly 2000 years later. The difference is primarily time.
That would be the kingdom of Israel. The Southern Kingdom was called Judah.
Only two: the Kingdom of Judah and the Kingdom of Israel, which later merged into Israel.
The Kingdom of Mysore was founded by Yaduraya. It was founded in the year 1399 and was a kingdom of southern India.
Exactly that: the Northern Kingdom of Israel.
The Modern State of Israel has never ceased being a country since it was founded in 1948. If the question is referring to the Biblical Kingdom of Northern Israel, it was conquered by the Assyrians in 722 B.C.E. If the question is referring to the last Jewish State to fall before the establishment of the Modern State of Israel it is the Hasmonean Kingdom which fell to the Romans in 63 B.C.E.
That would be the kingdom of Israel. The Southern Kingdom was called Judah.
It was founded in Israel.
Judaism was founded three thousand years ago in Israel. Judaism was founded three thousand years ago in Israel.
Yes. Samaria was the capital of the northern Kingdom of Israel. (Gibeah, Hebron, and Jerusalem were the capitals of the United Kingdom of Israel.)