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Diferencia entre revisiones de «El Libro de Mormón/Nombres»
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Línea 9: | Línea 9: | ||
Examples include: | Examples include: | ||
*using "Alma" as a man's name, rather than a woman's name | *using "Alma" as a man's name, rather than a woman's name | ||
− | *using names of Greek origin, such as "Timothy" | + | *using names of Greek origin, such as "[[Book_of_Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Timothy|Timothy]]" |
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Línea 20: | Línea 20: | ||
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===General treatments on Book of Mormon names=== | ===General treatments on Book of Mormon names=== | ||
Línea 32: | Línea 25: | ||
*{{JBMS-3-1-2}} | *{{JBMS-3-1-2}} | ||
*{{JBMS-6-2-15}} | *{{JBMS-6-2-15}} | ||
+ | *{{JBMS-9-1-10}} | ||
+ | *{{Nibley5|start=23-32}} | ||
*{{JBMS-7-1-11}} | *{{JBMS-7-1-11}} | ||
Línea 41: | Línea 36: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Abish | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Abish | ||
|subject=Abish | |subject=Abish | ||
− | |summary="Abish corresponds to the Hebrew name 'bš', found on a seal from pre-exilic times (prior to 587 BC) in the Hecht Museum in Haifa.19 The addition of the Hebrew letter aleph (symbolized by ' in transliteration) to the end of the name is known from other Hebrew hypocoristic names, suggesting that the name on the seal may be hypocoristic." | + | |summary="Abish corresponds to the Hebrew name 'bš', found on a seal from pre-exilic times (prior to 587 BC) in the Hecht Museum in Haifa.19 The addition of the Hebrew letter aleph (symbolized by ' in transliteration) to the end of the name is known from other Hebrew hypocoristic names, suggesting that the name on the seal may be hypocoristic." <ref name="gee">{{JBMS-9-1-10}}</ref> |
}} | }} | ||
==== ==== | ==== ==== | ||
Línea 47: | Línea 42: | ||
|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." {{ | + | |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." | + | *"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> |
}} | }} | ||
==== ==== | ==== ==== | ||
Línea 54: | Línea 49: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Alma | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Alma | ||
|subject=Alma | |subject=Alma | ||
− | |summary="Alma is supposed to be a prophet of God and of Jewish ancestry in the Book of Mormon. In Hebrew Alma means a betrothed virgin maiden-hardly a fitting name for a man." - "Dr." Walter Martin, ''The Maze of Mormonism'' (Santa Ana, California: Vision House, 1978), 327. However, despite claims into the 1980s by anti-Mormon critics, the name "Alma" has been known since the 1960s as a male Hebrew name. It occurs in contexts from 2200 B.C. to the second century B.C. | + | |summary="Alma is supposed to be a prophet of God and of Jewish ancestry in the Book of Mormon. In Hebrew Alma means a betrothed virgin maiden-hardly a fitting name for a man." - "Dr." Walter Martin, ''The Maze of Mormonism'' (Santa Ana, California: Vision House, 1978), 327. However, despite claims into the 1980s by anti-Mormon critics, the name "Alma" has been known since the 1960s as a male Hebrew name. It occurs in contexts from 2200 B.C. to the second century B.C.<ref>Matthew Roper, "[http://www.fairlds.org/pubs/conf/2001RopM.html Right on Target: Boomerang Hits and the Book of Mormon], FAIR Conference, 2001.</ref> |
}} | }} | ||
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Línea 60: | Línea 55: | ||
|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." | + | |summary="Ammon (Amon, Amun) (OW), the commonest name in the Egyptian Empire: the great universal God of the Empire."<ref name="Nibley"></ref> |
}} | }} | ||
==== ==== | ==== ==== | ||
Línea 66: | Línea 61: | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
==== ==== | ==== ==== | ||
Línea 72: | Línea 67: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Chemish | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Chemish | ||
|subject=Chemish | |subject=Chemish | ||
− | |summary="His name is apparently related to that of the Ammonite god Chemosh, spelled Kmš in prevocalic Hebrew and Ammonite (related languages). A number of names containing the element Kmš are known, in which it is clear that the divine name was meant.33 Also known is a seal currently in the Israel Museum that has Kmš as the name of a man or woman." | + | |summary="His name is apparently related to that of the Ammonite god Chemosh, spelled Kmš in prevocalic Hebrew and Ammonite (related languages). A number of names containing the element Kmš are known, in which it is clear that the divine name was meant.33 Also known is a seal currently in the Israel Museum that has Kmš as the name of a man or woman." <ref name="gee"></ref> |
}} | }} | ||
==== ==== | ==== ==== | ||
Línea 110: | Línea 105: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Hagoth | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Hagoth | ||
|subject=Hagoth | |subject=Hagoth | ||
− | |summary="One Book of Mormon critic argued that Joseph Smith derived the name Hagoth from the name of the biblical prophet Haggai. Indeed, the names may be related, but a closer parallel is the biblical Haggith (see {{b|2|Samuel|3|4}}; {{b|1|Kings|1|5}}, etc.), which may have been vocalized Hagoth anciently. All three names derive from a root referring to a pilgrimage to attend religious festivals. The name Hagoth is attested in the form Hgt on an Ammonite seal inscribed sometime in the eighth through the sixth centuries BC36 (The Ammonites, neighbors of the Israelites and descendants of Abraham's nephew Lot, wrote and spoke the same language as the Israelites.)" | + | |summary="One Book of Mormon critic argued that Joseph Smith derived the name Hagoth from the name of the biblical prophet Haggai. Indeed, the names may be related, but a closer parallel is the biblical Haggith (see {{b|2|Samuel|3|4}}; {{b|1|Kings|1|5}}, etc.), which may have been vocalized Hagoth anciently. All three names derive from a root referring to a pilgrimage to attend religious festivals. The name Hagoth is attested in the form Hgt on an Ammonite seal inscribed sometime in the eighth through the sixth centuries BC36 (The Ammonites, neighbors of the Israelites and descendants of Abraham's nephew Lot, wrote and spoke the same language as the Israelites.)" <ref name="gee"></ref> |
}} | }} | ||
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Línea 116: | Línea 111: | ||
|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. | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
==== ==== | ==== ==== | ||
Línea 122: | Línea 117: | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
==== ==== | ==== ==== | ||
Línea 128: | Línea 123: | ||
|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." | + | |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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Línea 134: | Línea 129: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Isabel | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Isabel | ||
|subject=Isabel | |subject=Isabel | ||
− | |summary="Isabel was a harlot in the land of Siron, on the border between the Lamanites and the Zoramites (see {{s||Alma|39|3}}). LDS scholars have generally assumed that the name is identical to that of the Old Testament Jezebel, the Hebrew form of which was 'ÃŽzebel, and this is probably correct. But the spelling Yzbl is now attested on a seal in the Israel Museum in Jerusalem that is thought to be Phoenician in origin." | + | |summary="Isabel was a harlot in the land of Siron, on the border between the Lamanites and the Zoramites (see {{s||Alma|39|3}}). LDS scholars have generally assumed that the name is identical to that of the Old Testament Jezebel, the Hebrew form of which was 'ÃŽzebel, and this is probably correct. But the spelling Yzbl is now attested on a seal in the Israel Museum in Jerusalem that is thought to be Phoenician in origin." <ref name="gee"></ref> |
}} | }} | ||
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Línea 145: | Línea 140: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Jarrom | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Jarrom | ||
|subject=Jarrom | |subject=Jarrom | ||
− | |summary="One might wish to compare Jarom with the biblical name Jehoram, which is found twenty-one times in the Bible, while its hypocoristic form Joram occurs twenty-four times. But several Hebrew inscriptions bear the name Yrm, which scholars consider to be the hypocoristic form of Yrmyh(w), Jeremiah, whose name means "Yah (Jehovah) exalts." Yrm is found in four Hebrew inscriptions, including a seal of the seventh century BC, found in Egypt, and three items from the time of Lehi: a jug inscription from Tel esh-Shari‘ah, and an ostracon and bulla in the Moussaieff collection." | + | |summary="One might wish to compare Jarom with the biblical name Jehoram, which is found twenty-one times in the Bible, while its hypocoristic form Joram occurs twenty-four times. But several Hebrew inscriptions bear the name Yrm, which scholars consider to be the hypocoristic form of Yrmyh(w), Jeremiah, whose name means "Yah (Jehovah) exalts." Yrm is found in four Hebrew inscriptions, including a seal of the seventh century BC, found in Egypt, and three items from the time of Lehi: a jug inscription from Tel esh-Shari‘ah, and an ostracon and bulla in the Moussaieff collection." <ref name="gee"></ref> |
}} | }} | ||
==== ==== | ==== ==== | ||
Línea 151: | Línea 146: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Jershon | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Jershon | ||
|subject=Jershon | |subject=Jershon | ||
− | |summary=Matthew Roper: "The Book of Mormon name Jershon can be traced to a Hebrew root meaning 'to inherit.' In the Book of Mormon we read 'Behold, we will give up the land of Jershon, which is on the east by the sea…and this land of Jershon is the land which we will give unto our brethren for an inheritance' (Alma 27 | + | |summary=Matthew Roper: "The Book of Mormon name Jershon can be traced to a Hebrew root meaning 'to inherit.' In the Book of Mormon we read 'Behold, we will give up the land of Jershon, which is on the east by the sea…and this land of Jershon is the land which we will give unto our brethren for an inheritance' ({{s||Alma|27|22}})." |
}} | }} | ||
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Línea 157: | Línea 152: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Josh | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Josh | ||
|subject=Josh | |subject=Josh | ||
− | |summary="Josh was the name of a city destroyed at the time of Christ's crucifixion (see {{s|3|Nephi|9|10}}) and of a Nephite military leader who died in the great battle at Cumorah (see {{s||Mormon|6|14}}). Critics have suggested that this is merely the American diminutive for the name Joshua. But a number of Hebrew inscriptions bear the name Y'š, probably vocalized Yô'š, which Israeli scholars have acknowledged to be hypocoristic for the biblical name Y'šyhw, Josiah, in whose reign Jeremiah began his prophetic mission (see Jeremiah 1 | + | |summary="Josh was the name of a city destroyed at the time of Christ's crucifixion (see {{s|3|Nephi|9|10}}) and of a Nephite military leader who died in the great battle at Cumorah (see {{s||Mormon|6|14}}). Critics have suggested that this is merely the American diminutive for the name Joshua. But a number of Hebrew inscriptions bear the name Y'š, probably vocalized Yô'š, which Israeli scholars have acknowledged to be hypocoristic for the biblical name Y'šyhw, Josiah, in whose reign Jeremiah began his prophetic mission (see {{b||Jeremiah|1|2}}; {{bv||Jeremiah|27|1}}).43 The name appears in three of the Lachish letters (2, 3, and 6) from the time of Lehi.44 It is also the name of four persons named in the fifth-century BC Jewish Aramaic papyri from Elephantine, Egypt. Four of the bullae found near Tel Beit Mirsim and dating from ca. 600 BC bear the name Y'š. Three of them were made from the same seal. |
}} | }} | ||
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Línea 170: | Línea 165: | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 177: | Línea 172: | ||
|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 | + | |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. |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 193: | Línea 188: | ||
|summary= | |summary= | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | :It is also an interesting coincidence that similar evidence for Lehi's wife's name has turned up in a papyrus document, written in Persian period Aramaic, in the era following the sixth century BC. The female Jewish/Hebrew name Sariah appears in an Aramaic papyrus from the fifth century BC (albeit partially restored by the original publisher). The document is known as C-22 (or Cowley-22), and was found at Elephantine in upper Egypt around the year 1900....The female name Sariah does not appear in the Bible, just as the male name Lehi does not. Yet both appear in the Book of Mormon. That we can now identify both the Jewish/Hebrew names Sariah in the Elephantine Papyri and Lehi in the Samaria Papyri and on Ostracon 2071 represents two significant steps forward in corroborating the authenticity [of the Book of Mormon]. | + | :It is also an interesting coincidence that similar evidence for Lehi's wife's name has turned up in a papyrus document, written in Persian period Aramaic, in the era following the sixth century BC. The female Jewish/Hebrew name Sariah appears in an Aramaic papyrus from the fifth century BC (albeit partially restored by the original publisher). The document is known as C-22 (or Cowley-22), and was found at Elephantine in upper Egypt around the year 1900....The female name Sariah does not appear in the Bible, just as the male name Lehi does not. Yet both appear in the Book of Mormon. That we can now identify both the Jewish/Hebrew names Sariah in the Elephantine Papyri and Lehi in the Samaria Papyri and on Ostracon 2071 represents two significant steps forward in corroborating the authenticity [of the Book of Mormon]. |
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Línea 215: | Línea 210: | ||
|summary= | |summary= | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | * "The name is reflected in the second element of the name 'dn-Lrm, "Lord of LRM," known from a seal of ca. 720 BC found during excavations at Hama (Hamath) in Syria. The name is also known from graffiti on three bricks from the same level at Hama." | + | * "The name is reflected in the second element of the name 'dn-Lrm, "Lord of LRM," known from a seal of ca. 720 BC found during excavations at Hama (Hamath) in Syria. The name is also known from graffiti on three bricks from the same level at Hama." <ref name="gee"></ref> |
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{{SummaryItem | {{SummaryItem | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 227: | Línea 222: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Mathoni | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Mathoni | ||
|subject=Mathoni | |subject=Mathoni | ||
− | |summary="The Hebrew name Mtnyhw appears on a seventh- century BC wine decanter, on six seals, and on seven bullae, most of them from the time of Lehi. The hypocoristic Mtn, which could be vocalized either Mattan (as in the Bible) or Mathoni (as in the Book of Mormon), is found on Ostracon 1682/2 from Khirbet el-Meshash (second half of the seventh century BC), seven seals (most from the seventh century BC), and eleven bullae (most from the time of Lehi)." | + | |summary="The Hebrew name Mtnyhw appears on a seventh- century BC wine decanter, on six seals, and on seven bullae, most of them from the time of Lehi. The hypocoristic Mtn, which could be vocalized either Mattan (as in the Bible) or Mathoni (as in the Book of Mormon), is found on Ostracon 1682/2 from Khirbet el-Meshash (second half of the seventh century BC), seven seals (most from the seventh century BC), and eleven bullae (most from the time of Lehi)." <ref name="gee"></ref> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 262: | Línea 257: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Muloki | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Muloki | ||
|subject=Muloki | |subject=Muloki | ||
− | |summary="Muloki was one of the men who accompanied the sons of Mosiah on their mission to the Lamanites (see Alma 20:2; 21:11). His name suggests that he may have been a Mulekite. Also from the same root are names such as [[#Mulek|Mulek]] and Melek, which is the Hebrew word meaning "king". Mulek is hypocoristic for Hebrew Mlkyh(w) (KJV Melchiah and Malchiah), which is attested both in the Bible (see 1 Chronicles 6:40; Ezra 10:25, 3; Nehemiah 3:14, 31; 8:4; 11:12; Jeremiah 21:1; 38:1, 6) and in numerous ancient inscriptions, most of them from the time of Lehi. Indeed, it has been suggested that one of the men bearing this name is the Mulek of the Book of Mormon. He is called "Malchiah the son of Hammelech," which means "Malchiah, son of the king" (see Jeremiah 38:6).<br>Muloki corresponds to the name Mlky on a bulla found in the City of David (Jerusalem) and dating from the time of Lehi." | + | |summary="Muloki was one of the men who accompanied the sons of Mosiah on their mission to the Lamanites (see Alma 20:2; 21:11). His name suggests that he may have been a Mulekite. Also from the same root are names such as [[#Mulek|Mulek]] and Melek, which is the Hebrew word meaning "king". Mulek is hypocoristic for Hebrew Mlkyh(w) (KJV Melchiah and Malchiah), which is attested both in the Bible (see 1 Chronicles 6:40; Ezra 10:25, 3; Nehemiah 3:14, 31; 8:4; 11:12; Jeremiah 21:1; 38:1, 6) and in numerous ancient inscriptions, most of them from the time of Lehi. Indeed, it has been suggested that one of the men bearing this name is the Mulek of the Book of Mormon. He is called "Malchiah the son of Hammelech," which means "Malchiah, son of the king" (see Jeremiah 38:6).<br>Muloki corresponds to the name Mlky on a bulla found in the City of David (Jerusalem) and dating from the time of Lehi." <ref name="gee"></ref> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 269: | Línea 264: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Geography/Old World/Nahom | |link=Book of Mormon/Geography/Old World/Nahom | ||
|subject=Nahom | |subject=Nahom | ||
− | |summary=Nephi's party reaches an area "which was called Nahom" (1 Nephi 16 | + | |summary=Nephi's party reaches an area "which was called Nahom" ({{s|1|Nephi|16|34}}) near the time that they make an eastward turn in their journey. NHM [the root for naham] appears twenty-five times in the narrative books of the Bible, and in every case it is associated with death. Strikingly, altars dating from the time of Lehi have been found with the inscription "NHM." As one travels south-southeast of Jerusalem along the major trunk of the ancient Arabian trade route, the route branches east toward the southeastern coast at only one point: in the Jawf valley (Wadi Jawf) just a few miles from Nehem. From thence the eastern branch of the trade route goes toward the ancient port of Qana--modern Bir Ali—on the Hadhramaut coast, where most of the incense was shipped. This eastern branch was the major route—the pathways to the south were less used. |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 276: | Línea 271: | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 297: | Línea 292: | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 304: | Línea 299: | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 311: | Línea 306: | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 318: | Línea 313: | ||
|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."" | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 325: | Línea 320: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Rameumptom | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Rameumptom | ||
|subject=Rameumptom | |subject=Rameumptom | ||
− | |summary=While many words and names found in the Book of Mormon have exact equivalents in the Hebrew Bible, certain others exhibit Semitic characteristics, though their spelling does not always match known Hebrew forms. For example, "Rabbanah" as "great king" ({{s||Alma|18|13}}) may have affinities with the Hebrew root /rbb/, meaning "to be great or many." "Rameumptom" ({{s||Alma|31|21}}), meaning "holy stand," contains consonantal patterns suggesting the stems /rmm/ramah/, "to be high," and /tmm/tam/tom/, "to be complete, perfect, holy.{{ | + | |summary=While many words and names found in the Book of Mormon have exact equivalents in the Hebrew Bible, certain others exhibit Semitic characteristics, though their spelling does not always match known Hebrew forms. For example, "Rabbanah" as "great king" ({{s||Alma|18|13}}) may have affinities with the Hebrew root /rbb/, meaning "to be great or many." "Rameumptom" ({{s||Alma|31|21}}), meaning "holy stand," contains consonantal patterns suggesting the stems /rmm/ramah/, "to be high," and /tmm/tam/tom/, "to be complete, perfect, holy.<ref>{{EoM1|vol=1|start=181|author=Brian D. Stubbs|article=[http://eom.byu.edu/index.php/Book_of_Mormon_Language Book of Mormon Language]}}</ref> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 332: | Línea 327: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Rabbanah | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Rabbanah | ||
|subject=Rabbanah | |subject=Rabbanah | ||
− | |summary=While many words and names found in the Book of Mormon have exact equivalents in the Hebrew Bible, certain others exhibit Semitic characteristics, though their spelling does not always match known Hebrew forms. For example, "Rabbanah" as "great king" ({{s||Alma|18|13}}) may have affinities with the Hebrew root /rbb/, meaning "to be great or many." "Rameumptom" ({{s||Alma|31|21}}), meaning "holy stand," contains consonantal patterns suggesting the stems /rmm/ramah/, "to be high," and /tmm/tam/tom/, "to be complete, perfect, holy.{{ | + | |summary=While many words and names found in the Book of Mormon have exact equivalents in the Hebrew Bible, certain others exhibit Semitic characteristics, though their spelling does not always match known Hebrew forms. For example, "Rabbanah" as "great king" ({{s||Alma|18|13}}) may have affinities with the Hebrew root /rbb/, meaning "to be great or many." "Rameumptom" ({{s||Alma|31|21}}), meaning "holy stand," contains consonantal patterns suggesting the stems /rmm/ramah/, "to be high," and /tmm/tam/tom/, "to be complete, perfect, holy.<ref>{{EoM1|vol=1|start=181|author=Brian D. Stubbs|article=[http://eom.byu.edu/index.php/Book_of_Mormon_Language Book of Mormon Language]}}</ref> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 339: | Línea 334: | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 358: | Línea 353: | ||
|link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Timothy | |link=Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names/Timothy | ||
|subject=Timothy | |subject=Timothy | ||
− | |summary=[R]emember...that in Lehi's day Palestine was swarming with Greeks, important Greeks. Remember, it was Egyptian territory [prior to being seized by Babylon] at that time and Egyptian culture. The Egyptian army, Necho's army, was almost entirely Greek mercenaries. We have inscriptions from that very time up the Nile at Aswan-inscriptions from the mercenaries of the Egyptian army, and they're all in Greek. So Greek was very common, and especially the name Timotheus.{{ | + | |summary=[R]emember...that in Lehi's day Palestine was swarming with Greeks, important Greeks. Remember, it was Egyptian territory [prior to being seized by Babylon] at that time and Egyptian culture. The Egyptian army, Necho's army, was almost entirely Greek mercenaries. We have inscriptions from that very time up the Nile at Aswan-inscriptions from the mercenaries of the Egyptian army, and they're all in Greek. So Greek was very common, and especially the name Timotheus.<ref>{{NibleyTeachingsBoM1_1||article=Lecture 27: Omni; Words of Mormon; Mosiah 1: The End of the Small Plates and The Coronation of Mosiah|start=430}}</ref> |
}} | }} | ||
Línea 380: | Línea 375: | ||
|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." | + | |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> |
}} | }} | ||
==== ==== | ==== ==== | ||
Línea 398: | Línea 393: | ||
* Bruce W. Warren, "'Kish'—A personal Name" ''Meridian Magazine'' (17 February 2005){{link|url=http://www.meridianmagazine.com/articles/050217kish.html}}; citing {{NewEvidencesOfChrist|start=19|end=22}} | * Bruce W. Warren, "'Kish'—A personal Name" ''Meridian Magazine'' (17 February 2005){{link|url=http://www.meridianmagazine.com/articles/050217kish.html}}; citing {{NewEvidencesOfChrist|start=19|end=22}} | ||
− | 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."{{ref | + | 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."<ref>{{Ensign1|author=Dallin H. Oaks|article=[http://www.lds.org/ensign/1989/05/alternate-voices?lang=eng Alternative Voices]|date=May 1989|start=27}}</ref> |
+ | == == | ||
+ | {{Videos label}} | ||
<videoflash>pDqeaU0N-tg</videoflash> | <videoflash>pDqeaU0N-tg</videoflash> | ||
− | =={{Endnotes label}} | + | == == |
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− | + | [[de:Anachronismen_im_Buch_Mormon/Namen]] | |
− | + | [[es:Libro_de_Morm%C3%B3n_Anacronismos:_Nombres]] | |
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− | + | {{Articles Footer 1}} | |
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+ | [[fr:Book of Mormon/Anachronisms/Names]] |
Revisión del 08:00 13 jun 2014
Plantilla:Articles FAIR copyright Plantilla:Articles Header 1 Plantilla:Articles Header 2 Plantilla:Articles Header 3 Plantilla:Articles Header 4 Plantilla:Articles Header 5 Plantilla:Articles Header 6 Plantilla:Articles Header 7 Plantilla:Articles Header 8 Plantilla:Articles Header 9 Plantilla:Articles Header 10 Plantilla:Resource Title Plantilla:Summary
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Contenido
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5 Less well supported examples
- 6
- 7
- 8 Acerca de FairMormon Únete a FairMormon Contactar FairMormon Donar a FairMormon Derechos de autor © 1997-2015 por la Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research. Todos los derechos reservados. Ninguna parte de este sitio puede ser reproducida sin el consentimiento expreso y por escrito de Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research.
It is claimed that some Book of Mormon names are used improperly or in an inappropriate context. Examples include:
- using "Alma" as a man's name, rather than a woman's name
- using names of Greek origin, such as "Timothy"
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.
General treatments on Book of Mormon names
- John A. Tvedtnes, "What's in a Name? A Look at the Book of Mormon Onomasticon (Review of I Know Thee by Name: Hebrew Roots of Lehi-ite Non-Biblical Names in the Book of Mormon)," FARMS Review of Books 8/2 (1996): 34–42. off-site (Inglés)
- Gordon C. Thomasson, "What's in a Name? Book of Mormon Language, Names, and [Metonymic] Naming," Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 3/1 (1994): 1–27. off-site (Inglés) wiki
- Stephen D. Ricks and John A. Tvedtnes, "The Hebrew Origin of Some Book of Mormon Place Names," Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 6/2 (1997): 255–259. off-site (Inglés) wiki
- John A. Tvedtnes, John Gee, Matthew Roper, "Book of Mormon Names Attested in Ancient Hebrew Inscriptions," Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 9/1 (2000): 40–51. off-site (Inglés) wiki
- Hugh W. Nibley, Lehi in the Desert, the World of the Jaredites, There Were Jaredites, edited by John W. Welch with Darrell L. Matthew and Stephen R. Callister, (Salt Lake City, Utah : Deseret Book Company ; Provo, Utah : Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, 1988), 23-32. ISBN 0875791328.
- Paul Y. Hoskisson, "What's in a Name?," Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 7/1 (1998): 78–78?. off-site (Inglés) wiki
Plantilla:Topics label Plantilla:UnderConstructionSuggestions
Plantilla:SummaryItem Plantilla:SummaryItem
Lehi and Sariah
- It is also an interesting coincidence that similar evidence for Lehi's wife's name has turned up in a papyrus document, written in Persian period Aramaic, in the era following the sixth century BC. The female Jewish/Hebrew name Sariah appears in an Aramaic papyrus from the fifth century BC (albeit partially restored by the original publisher). The document is known as C-22 (or Cowley-22), and was found at Elephantine in upper Egypt around the year 1900....The female name Sariah does not appear in the Bible, just as the male name Lehi does not. Yet both appear in the Book of Mormon. That we can now identify both the Jewish/Hebrew names Sariah in the Elephantine Papyri and Lehi in the Samaria Papyri and on Ostracon 2071 represents two significant steps forward in corroborating the authenticity [of the Book of Mormon].
- "The name is reflected in the second element of the name 'dn-Lrm, "Lord of LRM," known from a seal of ca. 720 BC found during excavations at Hama (Hamath) in Syria. The name is also known from graffiti on three bricks from the same level at Hama." [1]
- John Sawyer, "What Was a Mosiaʿ?" Vetus Testamentum 15 (1965): 475–486 [FARMS Reprint in 1989]; cited and applied by John W. Welch, "What Was A 'Mosiah'?," in Reexploring the Book of Mormon, edited by John W. Welch, (Provo, Utah: FARMS, 1992), 105–107. ISBN 0875796001 off-site (Inglés) FAIR link
- Stephen D. Ricks and John A. Tvedtnes, "The Hebrew Origin of Some Book of Mormon Place Names," Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 6/2 (1997): 255–259. off-site (Inglés) wiki
Plantilla:SummaryItem For remarks on the "-ihah" ending likely not reflecting the divine name of God (Yahweh or Jehovah), see:
- Paul Y. Hoskisson, "It Is OK Not to Have Every Answer: The Book of Mormon Onomastic Ending -(i)hah," Journal of the Book of Mormon and Restoration Scripture 18/1 (2009): 48–55. off-site (Inglés) wiki
Less well supported examples
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):
- Bruce W. Warren, "Surviving Jaredite Names in Mesoamerica," Meridian Magazine (26 May 2005) off-site (Inglés); citing Plantilla:NewEvidencesOfChrist
- Bruce W. Warren, "'Kish'—A personal Name" Meridian Magazine (17 February 2005) off-site (Inglés); citing Plantilla:NewEvidencesOfChrist
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."[2]
- ↑ Error en la cita: Etiqueta
<ref>
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- ↑ Dallin H. Oaks, "Alternative Voices," Ensign (May 1989), 27.