Initially in 740 BCE the northern part was absorbed into the Assyrian Empire. Then in 722 BCE, the southern part and capital Samaria was absorbed. The aristocracy was deported to Assyria where it was used to rule another part of the empire, and the aristocracy there brought in to take on ruling the northern 10 tribes. The Assyrians use this technique so that conquered territories did not have sympathetic aristocracies which might promote rebellions. The Babylonians copied this technique when they later took over Judah and Benjamin in the south, deporting the aristocracy to Babylon and importing a foreign aristocracy to rule them.
There was no Israel in 587 BCE. Israel was destroyed by the Assyrians in 722 BCE.If perhaps the question was referring to the Kingdom of Judah which would be destroyed one year later by the Babylonians, the King of Judah at that time was King Zedekiah son of Josiah.
Oh honey, Israel was in and out of captivity more times than I've had hot dinners. During Isaiah's time, Israel was indeed in captivity to the Assyrian Empire. It was a messy situation, let me tell you.
After the death (477) of Gaiseric the Vandals declined quickly as a dominant power. In 533, Justinian I sent against them an army under Belisarius , which after meeting weak resistance, captured Carthage. With this overwhelming defeat the Vandals ceased to exist as a nation.The last Vandal king Gelimer was defeated by a Roman army under Belisarius in 533 and subsequently captured and taken to Constantinople.
Judah sought an alliance with Assyria against Israel, which was threatening to invade Jerusalem and depose the king. Assyria conquered Israel in 722 BCE and made the former kingdom into the province of Samaria. Assyria then turned its attention to Judah, with the intention of extending its empire southwards, but found the fortified city of Jerusalem too hard to defeat.
The Assyrian Empire conquered the northern kingdom of Israel in 722 BCE, renaming it as the Assyrian province of Samaria.
The Northern Kingdom of Israel was conquered by the Assyrian Empire in 722 B.C.E. effectively ending its independence.
It was called Israel
There are two different empires at play here. The empire that destroyed the Northern Kingdom of Israel was Assyria in 722 BCE. The empire that took the Jews into captivity (and destroyed the Southern Kingdom of Judah) was Babylonia in 586 BCE.
Samaria fell in 722 BCE. It was the capital of the Northern Kingdom of Israel and was conquered by the Assyrian Empire during their campaign against Israel. This event marked the end of the Northern Kingdom and led to the exile of many Israelites.
The ten northern tribes of Israel formed the Kingdom of Israel, also known as the Northern Kingdom, after the united monarchy split around 931 BCE. This kingdom existed alongside the Southern Kingdom of Judah, which comprised the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. The Kingdom of Israel had its capital in Samaria and was characterized by a series of dynastic changes and conflicts with Judah until its conquest by the Assyrian Empire in 722 BCE.
Hoshea reigned as the last king of Israel from approximately 732 to 722 BCE. His reign ended with the fall of Samaria, the capital of the Northern Kingdom of Israel, to the Assyrian Empire. This event marked the end of the Northern Kingdom and led to the exile of many Israelites.
Rehoboam Another answer: Rehav'am (Rehoboam) did not conquer the Northern Kingdom. Rather, he took leadership over it when it was formed (the Ten Tribes seceded from the rule of King David's descendants). The Northern Kingdom was conquered by the Assyrian king Shalmanesser.
In 722 BCE, the Assyrians, under Shalmaneser, and then under Sargon, conquered Israel (the northern Kingdom), destroyed its capital Samaria, and sent the Israelites into exile and captivity. Much of the nine landed tribes of the northern kingdom become 'lost'. However, what is less commonly know is that many people from the conquered northern kingdom fled south to safety in Judea, the Southern Kingdom, which maintained its independence. By this time the nation of Judah then was populated with Israelites from Judah, Bejamain, Shimeon, some of Levi, and many from all of the other tribes as well.
Although David established Jerusalem as the capital of a united Israel long before Jesus came, the country later split into two kindgoms - the kingdom of the north retaining the name of Israel and that of the south being called Judah, as it occupied much of the territory that was held as the area of the tribe of Judah way back in the time of Jacob abd his twelve sons . The Kingdom of Israel (or Northern Kingdom) existed as an independent state until around 720 BC when it was conquered by the Assyrian Empire; while the Kingdom of Judah (or Southern Kingdom) existed as an independent state until 586BC when it was conquered by the Babylonicn Empire. Until these times the capital of the northern kingdom of Israel was Samaria, and the southern kingdom of Judah still held Jerusalem as its capital. In the time of Jesus, the Roman Empire had conquered both Israel and Judah (which became known by its Latin name of Judea) and the two capitals retained as administrative centres, but as they were part of the Roman Empire, the official capital city was, of course, Rome.
When Israel was divided into two kingdoms around 930 BCE, it split into the northern kingdom of Israel and the southern kingdom of Judah. This division arose due to political tensions and disagreements over leadership after King Solomon's reign. The northern kingdom eventually fell to the Assyrian Empire in 722 BCE, while the southern kingdom of Judah was conquered by the Babylonian Empire in 586 BCE, leading to the Babylonian Exile. This division significantly impacted the cultural, political, and religious landscape of the region.
The northern kingdom was destroyed by the assyrian empire raised up by God.