Kings of Israel and Judah
After Solomon's death (c. 930 BC), the united kingdom split into two: Judah in the south (comprising Judah and Benjamin), ruled continuously by David's dynasty; and Israel in the north (the remaining ten tribes), which saw nine different dynasties in just over two hundred years. The northern kingdom fell to Assyria in 722 BC, and the southern kingdom fell to Babylon in 586 BC.
The timeline below shows every king of both kingdoms side by side, with reign lengths drawn to scale. The color of each bar reflects the biblical evaluation found in 1–2 Kings and 1–2 Chronicles: green for kings who "did right in the eyes of the LORD," red for those who "did evil," and gold for kings with mixed records. The center column marks the prophets active during this period.
Kings of Judah (Southern Kingdom)
All twenty rulers of Judah came from the line of David, fulfilling God's promise of an enduring dynasty (2 Samuel 7:16). The one exception is Athaliah, a queen from the house of Omri who usurped the throne for six years before Joash was restored.
| # | King | Reign | Years | Verdict | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rehoboam | 930–913 BC | 17 | Bad | Solomon's son; kingdom splits under his rule |
| 2 | Abijah | 913–910 BC | 3 | Bad | Also called Abijam |
| 3 | Asa | 910–869 BC | 41 | Good | Removed idols; relied on God early, physicians later |
| 4 | Jehoshaphat | 869–848 BC | 21 | Good | Sent teachers throughout Judah; allied with Ahab |
| 5 | Jehoram | 848–841 BC | 7 | Bad | Married Athaliah (Ahab's daughter); killed his brothers |
| 6 | Ahaziah | 841–840 BC | 1 | Bad | Killed by Jehu alongside Joram of Israel |
| 7 | Athaliah | 840–835 BC | 6 | Bad | Queen mother; usurped throne; nearly destroyed Davidic line |
| 8 | Joash | 835–796 BC | 39 | Mixed | Repaired the temple under Jehoiada; turned to idols after |
| 9 | Amaziah | 796–767 BC | 29 | Mixed | Defeated Edom; challenged Israel and lost |
| 10 | Uzziah | 767–740 BC | 27 | Good | Powerful king; struck with leprosy for entering the temple |
| 11 | Jotham | 740–732 BC | 8 | Good | Built the upper gate of the temple |
| 12 | Ahaz | 732–716 BC | 16 | Bad | Became Assyrian vassal; set up pagan altar in the temple |
| 13 | Hezekiah | 716–687 BC | 29 | Good | Great reformer; survived Sennacherib's siege by faith |
| 14 | Manasseh | 687–642 BC | 45 | Bad | Longest reign; most wicked; rebuilt high places; shed innocent blood |
| 15 | Amon | 642–640 BC | 2 | Bad | Assassinated by his own servants |
| 16 | Josiah | 640–609 BC | 31 | Good | Found the Book of the Law; led the greatest reform |
| 17 | Jehoahaz | 609 BC | 3 mo. | Bad | Deposed by Pharaoh Neco after three months |
| 18 | Jehoiakim | 609–598 BC | 11 | Bad | Egyptian then Babylonian vassal; burned Jeremiah's scroll |
| 19 | Jehoiachin | 598–597 BC | 3 mo. | Bad | Surrendered to Nebuchadnezzar; exiled to Babylon |
| 20 | Zedekiah | 597–586 BC | 11 | Bad | Last king; rebelled against Babylon; Jerusalem destroyed |
Kings of Israel (Northern Kingdom)
Israel's northern kingdom was plagued by political instability — nine different dynasties in 208 years. Not a single king received a positive evaluation in the biblical record. Jeroboam I established the pattern by setting up golden calves at Bethel and Dan (1 Kings 12:28-30), and every subsequent king is measured against that original sin.
| # | King | Reign | Years | Dynasty | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jeroboam I | 930–909 BC | 21 | Jeroboam | Set up golden calves at Bethel and Dan |
| 2 | Nadab | 909–908 BC | 1 | Jeroboam | Assassinated by Baasha |
| 3 | Baasha | 908–886 BC | 22 | Baasha | Usurper; destroyed Jeroboam's entire line |
| 4 | Elah | 886–885 BC | 1 | Baasha | Assassinated while drinking by Zimri |
| 5 | Zimri | 885 BC | 7 days | Zimri | Committed suicide by burning palace around himself |
| 6 | Omri | 885–874 BC | 11 | Omri | Founded Samaria as the new capital |
| 7 | Ahab | 874–853 BC | 21 | Omri | Married Jezebel; introduced Baal worship; opposed by Elijah |
| 8 | Ahaziah | 853–852 BC | 1 | Omri | Fell through lattice; inquired of Baal-zebub |
| 9 | Joram | 852–841 BC | 11 | Omri | Killed by Jehu's arrow at Jezreel |
| 10 | Jehu | 841–814 BC | 27 | Jehu | Destroyed Baal worship and Ahab's house; mixed verdict |
| 11 | Jehoahaz | 814–798 BC | 16 | Jehu | Oppressed by Aram; army reduced to almost nothing |
| 12 | Jehoash | 798–782 BC | 16 | Jehu | Visited Elisha on his deathbed; defeated Aram three times |
| 13 | Jeroboam II | 782–753 BC | 29 | Jehu | Restored Israel's borders; great prosperity; prophets Amos and Hosea |
| 14 | Zechariah | 753–752 BC | 6 mo. | Jehu | Last of Jehu's dynasty; assassinated by Shallum |
| 15 | Shallum | 752 BC | 1 mo. | Shallum | Assassinated by Menahem |
| 16 | Menahem | 752–742 BC | 10 | Menahem | Brutal ruler; paid heavy tribute to Assyria |
| 17 | Pekahiah | 742–740 BC | 2 | Menahem | Assassinated by his officer Pekah |
| 18 | Pekah | 740–732 BC | 8 | Pekah | Allied with Aram against Judah; Assyria conquered northern territories |
| 19 | Hoshea | 732–722 BC | 10 | Hoshea | Last king; Samaria fell to Assyria; Israel exiled |
Key Themes
Judah's Davidic covenant. Despite many wicked kings, God preserved David's line on the throne for over 340 years, in keeping with the unconditional promise of 2 Samuel 7:12-16. The periodic appearance of reformer-kings (Asa, Jehoshaphat, Hezekiah, Josiah) prolonged the kingdom's life.
Israel's cycle of usurpation. Without a divinely established dynasty, the northern kingdom suffered repeated coups. Of Israel's nineteen kings, at least eight came to power through assassination or military revolt.
The prophetic witness. God continually sent prophets to both kingdoms — Elijah and Elisha to Israel, Isaiah to Judah, and others like Amos and Hosea who spoke to both. Their ministry called the kings and people back to covenant faithfulness.
Judgment and exile. Both kingdoms ultimately fell because of persistent idolatry and covenant-breaking. Israel fell to Assyria in 722 BC (2 Kings 17:6-23), and Judah to Babylon in 586 BC (2 Kings 25:1-21). Yet even in judgment, the prophets spoke of future restoration (Jeremiah 29:10-14, Ezekiel 37:15-28).