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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Aha | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Aha | ||
|subject=Aha | |subject=Aha | ||
|summary="Aha (OW), a name of the first Pharaoh; it means "warrior" and is a common word." <ref name= | |summary="Aha (OW), a name of the first Pharaoh; it means "warrior" and is a common word." <ref name="Nibley">{{Nibley5|start=23-32}} [Nibley marks Old World names as (OW) and Book of Mormon names as (BM).]</ref> | ||
*"Hugh Nibley proposed that the name was of Egyptian origin meaning "warrior". But the name is now attested in several early inscriptions as Hebrew 'h', thought by scholars to have been vocalized 'Aha' and to be a hypocoristic name based on 'ah, "brother". The longer form, rendered Ahijah in the King James Bible, is 'ahîyah(û), which means "brother of Yah (Jehovah)" or "Yah is my brother",21 which is also attested in a dozen ancient Hebrew inscriptions."<ref name="gee"></ref> | *"Hugh Nibley proposed that the name was of Egyptian origin meaning "warrior". But the name is now attested in several early inscriptions as Hebrew 'h', thought by scholars to have been vocalized 'Aha' and to be a hypocoristic name based on 'ah, "brother". The longer form, rendered Ahijah in the King James Bible, is 'ahîyah(û), which means "brother of Yah (Jehovah)" or "Yah is my brother",21 which is also attested in a dozen ancient Hebrew inscriptions."<ref name="gee"></ref> | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Ammon | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Ammon | ||
|subject=Ammon | |subject=Ammon | ||
|summary="Ammon (Amon, Amun) (OW), the commonest name in the Egyptian Empire: the great universal God of the Empire."<ref name= | |summary="Ammon (Amon, Amun) (OW), the commonest name in the Egyptian Empire: the great universal God of the Empire."<ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Ammonihah | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Ammonihah | ||
|subject=Ammonihah | |subject=Ammonihah | ||
|summary="Ammoni-hah (BM), name of a country and city. [compare with] Ammuni-ra (OW), prince of Beyrut under Egyptian rule. The above might stand the same relationship to this name as Khamuni-ra (OW), Amarna personal name, perhaps equivalent of Ammuni-ra."<ref name= | |summary="Ammoni-hah (BM), name of a country and city. [compare with] Ammuni-ra (OW), prince of Beyrut under Egyptian rule. The above might stand the same relationship to this name as Khamuni-ra (OW), Amarna personal name, perhaps equivalent of Ammuni-ra."<ref name="Nibley"></ref>"The name is attested on two Hebrew seals, one known to date to the seventh century BC, in the forms ‘mnyhw and ‘mnwyhw." <ref name="gee"> </ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Helaman | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Helaman | ||
|subject=Helaman | |subject=Helaman | ||
|summary="Helaman (BM), great Nephite prophet. [compare with] Her-amon (OW), "in the presence of Amon," as in the Egyptian proper name Heri-i-her-imn. Semitic "l" is always written "r" in Egyptian, which has no "l." Conversely, the Egyptian "r" is often written "l" in Semitic languages.<ref name= | |summary="Helaman (BM), great Nephite prophet. [compare with] Her-amon (OW), "in the presence of Amon," as in the Egyptian proper name Heri-i-her-imn. Semitic "l" is always written "r" in Egyptian, which has no "l." Conversely, the Egyptian "r" is often written "l" in Semitic languages.<ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Hem | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Hem | ||
|subject=Hem | |subject=Hem | ||
|summary="Hem (BM), brother of the earlier Ammon." "Hem (OW), means "servant," specifically of Ammon, as in the title Hem tp n 'Imn, "chief servant of Ammon" held by the high priest of Thebes." <ref name= | |summary="Hem (BM), brother of the earlier Ammon." "Hem (OW), means "servant," specifically of Ammon, as in the title Hem tp n 'Imn, "chief servant of Ammon" held by the high priest of Thebes." <ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Himni | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Himni | ||
|subject=Himni | |subject=Himni | ||
|summary="Himni (BM), a son of King Mosiah. Hmn (OW), a name of the Egyptian hawk-god, symbol of the emperor."<ref name= | |summary="Himni (BM), a son of King Mosiah. Hmn (OW), a name of the Egyptian hawk-god, symbol of the emperor."<ref name="Nibley"></ref>"...the name Himni is clearly Hebrew and is represented by the unvocalized form, Hmn on two Israelite seals. The first, from the eighth century BC, was found at Megiddo in the Jezreel Valley. The other is from the first half of the seventh century BC." <ref name="gee"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Korihor | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Korihor | ||
|subject=Korihor | |subject=Korihor | ||
|summary="Korihor (BM), a political agitator who was seized by the people of Ammon. Kherihor (also written Khurhor, etc.) (OW), great high priest of Ammon who seized the throne of Egypt at Thebes, cir. 1085 B.C."<ref name= | |summary="Korihor (BM), a political agitator who was seized by the people of Ammon. Kherihor (also written Khurhor, etc.) (OW), great high priest of Ammon who seized the throne of Egypt at Thebes, cir. 1085 B.C."<ref name="Nibley"></ref>The twenty-first [Egyptian] dynasty was founded by a person called Korihor whose son was Piankhi. That's a very funny name; you don't invent a thing like that. It wasn't discovered until the 1870s that Piankhi is a name that we have in the Book of Mormon. Korihor was a priest of Amon who usurped the power of the state. His son Piankhi became king.<ref>Hugh Nibley, ''Ancient Documents and the Pearl of Great Price'', edited by Robert Smith and Robert Smythe (n.p., n.d.), 11.</ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Lachoneus | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Lachoneus | ||
|subject=Lachoneus | |subject=Lachoneus | ||
|summary=Wrote Hugh Nibley of this Old World name: "The occurrence of the names Timothy and Lachoneus in the Book of Mormon is strictly in order, however odd it may seem at first glance. Since the fourteenth century B.C. at latest, Syria and Palestine had been in constant contact with the Aegean world, and since the middle of the seventh century Greek mercenaries and merchants, closely bound to Egyptian interests (the best Egyptian mercenaries were Greeks), swarmed throughout the Near East. Lehi's people...could not have avoided considerable contact with these people in Egypt and especially in Sidon, which Greek poets even in that day were celebrating as the great world center of trade. It is interesting to note in passing that Timothy is an Ionian name, since the Greeks in Palestine were Ionians (hence the Hebrew name for Greeks: "Sons of Javanim"), and—since "Lachoneus" means "a Laconian"—that the oldest Greek traders were Laconians, who had colonies in Cyprus (BM Akish) and of course traded with Palestine<ref name= | |summary=Wrote Hugh Nibley of this Old World name: "The occurrence of the names Timothy and Lachoneus in the Book of Mormon is strictly in order, however odd it may seem at first glance. Since the fourteenth century B.C. at latest, Syria and Palestine had been in constant contact with the Aegean world, and since the middle of the seventh century Greek mercenaries and merchants, closely bound to Egyptian interests (the best Egyptian mercenaries were Greeks), swarmed throughout the Near East. Lehi's people...could not have avoided considerable contact with these people in Egypt and especially in Sidon, which Greek poets even in that day were celebrating as the great world center of trade. It is interesting to note in passing that Timothy is an Ionian name, since the Greeks in Palestine were Ionians (hence the Hebrew name for Greeks: "Sons of Javanim"), and—since "Lachoneus" means "a Laconian"—that the oldest Greek traders were Laconians, who had colonies in Cyprus (BM Akish) and of course traded with Palestine<ref name="Nibley"></ref>Lehi or Mulek's group would have then known—or even contained—people named "Lachoneus," a proper Greek name of the proper sort in the proper timeframe. | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Manti | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Manti | ||
|subject=Manti | |subject=Manti | ||
|summary="Manti (BM), the name of a Nephite soldier, a land, a city, and a hill. Manti (OW), Semitic form of an Egyptian proper name, e.g., Manti-mankhi, a prince in Upper Egypt cir. 650 B.C. It is a late form of Month, god of Hermonthis." <ref name= | |summary="Manti (BM), the name of a Nephite soldier, a land, a city, and a hill. Manti (OW), Semitic form of an Egyptian proper name, e.g., Manti-mankhi, a prince in Upper Egypt cir. 650 B.C. It is a late form of Month, god of Hermonthis." <ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Nephi | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Nephi | ||
|subject=Nephi | |subject=Nephi | ||
|summary="Nephi (BM), founder of the Nephite nation. Nehi, Nehri (OW), famous Egyptian noblemen. Nfy was the name of an Egyptian captain. Since BM insists on "ph," Nephi is closer to Nihpi, original name of the god Pa-nepi, which may even have been Nephi."<ref name= | |summary="Nephi (BM), founder of the Nephite nation. Nehi, Nehri (OW), famous Egyptian noblemen. Nfy was the name of an Egyptian captain. Since BM insists on "ph," Nephi is closer to Nihpi, original name of the god Pa-nepi, which may even have been Nephi."<ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Paanchi | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Paanchi | ||
|subject=Paanchi | |subject=Paanchi | ||
|summary="Paanchi (BM), son of Pahoran, Sr., and pretender to the chief-judgeship. Paanchi (OW), son of Kherihor, a) chief high priest of Amon, b) ruler of the south who conquered all of Egypt and was high priest of Amon at Thebes."<ref name= | |summary="Paanchi (BM), son of Pahoran, Sr., and pretender to the chief-judgeship. Paanchi (OW), son of Kherihor, a) chief high priest of Amon, b) ruler of the south who conquered all of Egypt and was high priest of Amon at Thebes."<ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Pahoran | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Pahoran | ||
|subject=Pahoran | |subject=Pahoran | ||
|summary=Pahoran (BM), a) great chief judge, b) son of the same. Pa-her-an (OW), ambassador of Egypt in Palestine, where his name has the "reformed" reading Pahura; in Egyptian as Pa-her-y it means "the Syrian" or Asiatic."<ref name= | |summary=Pahoran (BM), a) great chief judge, b) son of the same. Pa-her-an (OW), ambassador of Egypt in Palestine, where his name has the "reformed" reading Pahura; in Egyptian as Pa-her-y it means "the Syrian" or Asiatic."<ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Pacumeni | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Pacumeni | ||
|subject=Pacumeni | |subject=Pacumeni | ||
|summary="Pacumeni (BM), son of Pahoran. Pakamen (OW), Egyptian proper name meaning "blind man"; also Pamenches (Gk. Pachomios), commander of the south and high priest of Horus."<ref name= | |summary="Pacumeni (BM), son of Pahoran. Pakamen (OW), Egyptian proper name meaning "blind man"; also Pamenches (Gk. Pachomios), commander of the south and high priest of Horus."<ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Pachus | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Pachus | ||
|subject=Pachus | |subject=Pachus | ||
|summary="Pachus (BM), revolutionary leader and usurper of the throne. Pa-ks and Pach-qs (OW), Egyptian proper name. Compare Pa-ches-i, "he is praised.""<ref name= | |summary="Pachus (BM), revolutionary leader and usurper of the throne. Pa-ks and Pach-qs (OW), Egyptian proper name. Compare Pa-ches-i, "he is praised.""<ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Sam | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Sam | ||
|subject=Sam | |subject=Sam | ||
|summary="While Sam is a perfectly good Egyptian name, it is also the normal Arabic form of Shem, the son of Noah." "Sam (BM), brother of Nephi. Sam Tawi (OW), Egyptian "uniter of the lands," title taken by the brother of Nehri upon mounting the throne."<ref name= | |summary="While Sam is a perfectly good Egyptian name, it is also the normal Arabic form of Shem, the son of Noah." "Sam (BM), brother of Nephi. Sam Tawi (OW), Egyptian "uniter of the lands," title taken by the brother of Nehri upon mounting the throne."<ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Zenoch | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Zenoch | ||
|subject=Zenoch | |subject=Zenoch | ||
|summary="Zenoch (BM), according to various Nephite writers, an ancient Hebrew prophet. Zenekh (OW), Egyptian proper name; once a serpent-god."<ref name= | |summary="Zenoch (BM), according to various Nephite writers, an ancient Hebrew prophet. Zenekh (OW), Egyptian proper name; once a serpent-god."<ref name="Nibley"></ref> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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General information: Book of Mormon & Bible: Criticisms: |
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It is claimed that some Book of Mormon names are used improperly or in an inappropriate context.
Examples include:
To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, click here
Many Book of Mormon names are not found in the Bible, and were unknown to Joseph Smith. Yet, these names have meaning in ancient languages and/or have been found as actual names from ancient history. These "hits" provide additional evidence that the Book of Mormon is indeed an ancient record.
This page is still under construction. We welcome any suggestions for improving the content of this FAIR Answers Wiki page. |
For remarks on the "-ihah" ending likely not reflecting the divine name of God (Yahweh or Jehovah), see:
Linguistics is a complex subject, and it is all too common for zealous but mistaken defenders of the Church to use parallels in names or language which cannot be sustained. Since most Church members have no training in ancient American languages, evaluating such claims can be difficult.
Mesoamerican scholars consulted by FAIR have recommended that the following sources, while superficially persuasive, should be used with caution (if at all):
These comments are not intended to disparage the individuals involved, but to encourage rigor and restraint in claims made. As Elder Dallin H. Oaks cautioned, "When attacked by error, truth is better served by silence than by a bad argument."[8]
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