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He made its gates seventy cubits high and forty cubits wide to enable his entire army to march out in a body with his infantry arrayed in proper rank.

In those days, King Nebuchadnezzar waged war against King Arphaxad in the vast plain of the district of Regau. Coming to his support were all the inhabitants of the hill country, all who dwelt along the Euphrates, the Tigris, and the Hydaspes,[a] and from the plain, Arioch, king of the Elamites. Thus many nations banded together to confront the forces of the Cheleoud.

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Footnotes

  1. Judith 1:6 Hydaspes is probably the result of a confusion with the well-known Hydaspes in India; it could refer to the Choaspes River, which flowed through Susa, or the Ulai, which flowed past it. The Elamites were found in the eastern province of the Persian Empire (see 1 Mac 6:1).