Hezekiah.
Isaiah the prophet have a least one son, whose name was Maher-shalal-hash-baz. His name meant "speed the spoil." Read Isaiah 8:1-3.
Precious Lord, Take My Hand
Cyrus is mentioned in the prophecies of Isaiah as a Persian king who is chosen by God to conquer Babylon and release the Israelites from captivity. He is seen as a tool of God's divine plan to bring about the restoration of the Jewish people and the rebuilding of the temple in Jerusalem.
No. The abolitionists sought to end slavery in the U.S., which ended nearly 100 years before King became involved in the Civil Rights Movement.
Martin Luther King Jr not only sought equal treatment for his own race, but also he delivered a message that would affect everyone.
King Nebuchadnezzar was a Babylonian King, not an Israelite and Judean King and is therefore not in that book.
Isaiah's father, Amotz, was the brother of King Amatziah (Talmud, Megillah 10b). Isaiah's daughter married King Hizkiah (Talmud Berakhot 10a), and Isaiah's grandson was Menashe.
The main characters in The Book of Isaiah are the prophet Isaiah, King Ahaz, King Hezekiah, and the people of Judah and Jerusalem. Isaiah prophesies about the coming judgment on Israel, the restoration of God's people, and the future Messiah.
I believe it was the King Uzziah.
He wasn't a king. It was the prophet Isaiah.
Isaiah was a respected, and trusted seer at the court of King Hezekiah. He held that post from 754 until 707 BCE, serving a total of 47 years under the reigns of King Uzziah, King Jotham, King Ahaz, as well as King Hezekiah.
The king who sought to take the life of the baby Jesus was King Herod the Great.
The Book of Mormon quotes 478 verses from the Book of Isaiah. That is a full 1/3 of the Book of Isaiah! Of those 478 verses: 201 verses are exactly the same as the King James Version of Isaiah. 207 verses are slightly different from the King James Version of Isaiah. 69 verses are paraphrased from Isaiah. A great article on Isaiah in the Book of Mormon is found at the "Related Link" below.
No, Isaiah was a prophet. You may be thinking of Nehemiah. He was a cup bearer to King Artaxerxes the Persian King where Nehemiah and his countrymen were in exile. See Nehemiah 2:1.
The bible does not mention the death of the prophet Isaiah, but it is recorded i that he was sawed in half by a king Masanah.
Josiah
Isaiah was born in Jerusalem.