See also Hosea, who has the same name in Biblical Hebrew.
Hoshea (Hebrew: הושע, Modern Hoshea, Tiberian Hôšēăʻ ; "salvation"; Latin: Osee) was the last king of the Israelite Kingdom of Israel and son of Elah (not the Israelite king Elah). William F. Albright dated his reign to 732–721 BC, while E. R. Thiele offered the dates 732–723 BC.
Assyrian records basically confirm the Biblical account of how he became king. Under Ahaz, Judah had rendered allegiance to Tiglath-Pileser III of Assyria, when the Northern Kingdom under Pekah, in league with Rezin of Damascus, had attempted to coerce the Judean king into joint action against Assyria. Hoshea placed himself at the head of the Assyrian party in Samaria and removed Pekah by assassination; Tiglath-pileser rewarded Hoshea by making him king over Israel, or, rather, over Ephraim, then reduced to very small dimensions. An undated inscription of Tiglath-Pileser III boasts of making Hoshea king after his predecessor had been overthrown:
Sometimes I hear those sounds through the wall
sometimes when I cannot sleep
it’s all I have when the day is gone
creeping insecurity
All the things that I wanted to prove, that I wanted to
prove
turned to things that I could not do, that I could not do
Wanna fly again, reach the sky again
but somehow I’m just losing every time
oh why is it so hard to let it go
and why, oh why can’t I shake the doubt
I know it’s only shadows of fear
darkening my troubled mind
in the middle of the night I try to stay clear
but I cannot sleep and I can’t unwind
‘Cause all the things that I wanted to prove
that I wanted to prove
turned to things that I could not do
that I could not do
Wanna fly again, reach the sky again
but somehow I’m just losing every time
oh why is it so hard to let it go
and why, oh why can’t I shake the doubt
Sometimes I hear those sounds through the wall