Difference between revisions of "The Kirtland Egyptian Papers"

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[[de:Buch Abraham/Kirtland Egyptian Papers]]
 
[[de:Buch Abraham/Kirtland Egyptian Papers]]
 
[[es:El Libro de Abraham/Papeles egipcios de Kirtland]]
 
[[es:El Libro de Abraham/Papeles egipcios de Kirtland]]
[[pt:O Livro de Abraão/Documentos egípcios Kirtland]]
 

Revision as of 15:00, 5 June 2017

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The Kirtland Egyptian Papers

Summary: Among the early Book-of-Abraham-related-manuscripts that have survived from the days of Joseph Smith are a number of papers collectively referred to as the "Kirtland Egyptian Papers" (KEP). These pages were written while the Saints lived in Kirtland, Ohio, and were recorded in the general time frame that Joseph was translating the Book of Abraham. They are in the same handwriting of several of Joseph's scribes.

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Background and provenance of the Kirtland Egyptian Papers

Summary: The Kirtland Egyptian Papers (KEP) are a collection of documents written by various individuals, mostly dating to the Kirtland period of Church history (early- to mid-1830s), constituting some sort of study documents relating to the Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri.


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Purpose of the Kirtland Egyptian Papers

Summary: For many years, the KEP were not well studied. A variety of possible explanations have been offered by LDS researchers over the years. One of the more recent approaches postulates that the KEP represent an attempt by Joseph and his associates to create a way to encode revelations and other sensitive data in a form approximating "pure language." Research into this theory is ongoing.

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