The interpretation timeline

Jer 52:15

How this passage has been read — the sources, oldest to newest.

From the early Church Fathers to now.

Jer 52:15 · Douay-Rheims
“But Nabuzardan the general carried away captives some of the poor people, and of the rest of the common sort who remained in the city, and of the fugitives that were fled over to the king of Babylon, and the rest of the multitude.”
Patristic before A.D. 750
407
A.D.
John Chrysostom Patristic
A.D. 347–407
“And as Isaiah said before, "Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a seed, we would have been as Sodom and would have been made like to Gomorrah." Here again he shows another thing, that not even those few were saved by their own resources. They too would have perished and met with Sodom's fate, that is, they would have had to undergo utter destruction. They (of Sodom) were destroyed root and branch and left not even the slightest remnant of themselves. They too, he means, would have been like these, unless God had used much kindness to them and had saved them by faith. This happened also in the case of the visible captivity, the majority having been taken away captive and perished and some few only being saved.”
Source
Modern · 1953 →

The in-app commentary runs from the Fathers to the early-modern record, then stops — that's where the public-domain sources end, not where the reading does. For the modern reading, follow the sources directly.