[10:14] Every year King Solomon received over twenty-five tons of gold,
[10:15] in addition to the taxes paid by merchants, the profits from trade, and tribute paid by the Arabian kings and the governors of the Israelite districts.
[10:16] Solomon made two hundred large shields and had each one overlaid with almost fifteen pounds of gold.
[10:17] He also made three hundred smaller shields, overlaying each one of them with nearly four pounds of gold. He had all these shields placed in the Hall of the Forest of Lebanon.
[10:18] He also had a large throne made. Part of it was covered with ivory and the rest of it was covered with the finest gold.
[10:21] All of Solomon's drinking cups were made of gold, and all the utensils in the Hall of the Forest of Lebanon were of pure gold. No silver was used, since it was not considered valuable in Solomon's day.
[10:22] He had a fleet of ocean-going ships sailing with Hiram's fleet. Every three years his fleet would return, bringing gold, silver, ivory, apes, and monkeys.
[10:23] King Solomon was richer and wiser than any other king,
[10:24] and the whole world wanted to come and listen to the wisdom that God had given him.
[10:25] Everyone who came brought him a gift—articles of silver and gold, robes, weapons, spices, horses, and mules. This continued year after year.
[10:26] Solomon built up a force of fourteen hundred chariots and twelve thousand cavalry horses. Some of them he kept in Jerusalem and the rest he stationed in various other cities.
[10:27] During his reign silver was as common in Jerusalem as stone, and cedar was as plentiful as ordinary sycamore in the foothills of Judah.
[10:28] The king's agents controlled the export of horses from Musri and Cilicia,
[10:29] and the export of chariots from Egypt. They supplied the Hittite and Syrian kings with horses and chariots, selling chariots for 600 pieces of silver each and horses for 150 each.