HEBREW: 5818 hyze `Uzziyah or whyze Uzziyahuw
EBD: Uzziah
SMITH: UZZIAH
ISBE: UZZIAH; (AZARIAH)
Uzziah
In Bible versions:
Uzziah: NET AVS NIV NRSV NASB TEVUzziah's: NASB
son and successor of king Amaziah of Judah
son of Uriel of Kohath son of Levi
father of Jonathan, the head of country treasuries under David
a priest of the Harim Clan who put away his heathen wife
son of Zechariah; father of Athaiah of Judah, a returned exile
the strength, or kid, of the Lord ( --> same as Uzziel)
Greek
Strongs #3604: Oziav Ozias
Uzziah = "strength of Jehovah"1) son of Amaziah, king of Judah from B.C. 810 - 758
3604 Ozias od-zee'-as
of Hebrew origin (5818); Ozias (i.e. Uzzijah), an Israelite:-Ozias.see HEBREW for 05818
Hebrew
Strongs #05818: hyze `Uzziyah or whyze Uzziyahuw
Uzziah = "my strength is Jehovah"1) son of king Amaziah of Judah and king of Judah himself for 52
years; also 'Azariah'
2) a Kohathite Levite and ancestor of Samuel
3) a priest of the sons of Harim who took a foreign wife in the time
of Ezra
4) a Judaite, father of Athaiah or Uthai
5) father of Jehonathan, one of David's overseers
5818 `Uzziyah ooz-zee-yaw'
or Uzziyahuw {ooz-zee-yaw'-hoo}; from 5797 and 3050; strengthof Jah; Uzzijah, the name of five Israelites:-Uzziah.
see HEBREW for 05797
see HEBREW for 03050
Uzziah [EBD]
a contracted form of Azari'ah the Lord is my strength. (1.) One of Amaziah's sons, whom the people made king of Judah in his father's stead (
(2.) The father of Jehonathan, one of David's overseers (
UZZIAH [SMITH]
(strength of Jehovah).- King of Judah B.C. 809-8 to 757-6. In some passages his name appears in the lengthened form Azariah: After the murder of Amaziah, his son Uzziah was chosen by the people, at the age of sixteen, to occupy the vacant throne; and for the greater part of his long reign of fifty-two years he lived in the fear of God, and showed himself a wise, active and pious ruler. He never deserted the worship of the true God, and was much influenced by Zechariah, a prophet who is mentioned only in connection with him. (
2 Chronicles 26:5 ) So the southern kingdom was raised to a condition of prosperity which it had not known since the death of Solomon. The end of Uzziah was less prosperous than his beginning. Elated with his splendid career, he determined to burn incense on the altar of God, but was opposed by the high priest Azariah and eighty others. See (Exodus 30:7,8 ;Numbers 16:40 ;18:7 ) The king was enraged at their resistance, and, as he pressed forward with his censer was suddenly smitten with leprosy. This lawless attempt to burn incense was the only exception to the excellence of his administration. (2 Chronicles 27:2 ) Uzziah was buried "with his fathers," yet apparently not actually in the royal sepulchres. (2 Chronicles 26:23 ) During his reign a great earthquake occurred. (Amos 1:1 ;Zechariah 14:5 ) - A Kohathite Levite, and ancestor of Samuel. (
1 Chronicles 6:24 ) (9). - A priest of the sons of Harim, who had taken a foreign wife in the days of Ezra. (
Ezra 10:21 ) (B.C. 458.) - Father of Athaiah or Uthai. (
Nehemiah 11:4 ) - Father of Jehonathan, one of David?s overseers. (
1 Chronicles 27:25 ) (B.C. about 1053.)
UZZIAH; (AZARIAH) [ISBE]
UZZIAH; (AZARIAH) - u-zi'-a, oo-zi'-a (`uzziyah (1. Accession:
Uzziah or Azariah, son of Amaziah, and 11th king of Judah, came to the throne at the age of 16. The length of his reign is given as 52 years. The chronological questions raised by this statement are considered below. His accession may here be provisionally dated in 783 BC. His father Amaziah had met his death by popular violence (
2. Foreign Wars:
The unpopularity of his father, owing to a great military disaster, must ever have been present to the mind of Uzziah, and early in his reign he undertook and successfully carried through an expedition against his father's enemies of 20 years before, only extending his operations over a wider area. The Edomites, Philistines and Arabians were successively subdued (these being members of a confederacy which, in an earlier reign, had raided Jerusalem and nearly extirpated the royal family,
3. Home Defenses:
Uzziah next turned his attention to securing the defenses of his capital and country. The walls of Jerusalem were strengthened by towers built at the corner gate, at the valley gate, and at an angle in the wall (see plan of Jerusalem in the writer's Second Temple in Jerusalem); military stations were also formed in Philistia, and in the wilderness of the Negeb, and these were supplied with the necessary cisterns for rain storage (
4. Uzziah's Leprosy and Retirement:
These successes came so rapidly that Uzziah had hardly passed his 40th year when a great personal calamity overtook him. In the earlier part of his career Uzziah had enjoyed and profited by the counsels of Zechariah, a man "who had understanding in the vision of God" (
Uzziah's public life was now ended. In his enforced privacy, he may still have occupied himself with his cattle and agricultural operations, "for he loved husbandry" (
5. Chronology of Reign:
The chronology of the reign of Uzziah presents peculiar difficulties, some of which, probably, cannot be satisfactorily solved. Reckoning upward from the fall of Samaria in 721 BC, the Biblical data would suggest 759 as the first year of Jotham. If, as is now generally conceded, Jotham's regnal years are reckoned from the commencement of his regency, when his father had been stricken with leprosy, and if, as synchronisms seem to indicate, Uzziah was about 40 years of age at this time, we are brought for the year of Uzziah's accession to 783. His death, 52 years later, would occur in 731. (On the other hand, it is known that Isaiah, whose call was in the year of Uzziah's death,
In 2 Kings 15 Uzziah is referred to as giving data for the accessions of the northern kings (15:8, Zechariah; 15:13, Shallum; 15:17, Menahem; 15:23, Pekahiah; 15:27, Pekah), but it is difficult to fit these synchronisms into any scheme of chronology, if taken as regnal years. Uzziah is mentioned as the father of Jotham in
W. Shaw Caldecott

