The Nahom Maps

Title

The Nahom Maps

Publication Type

Journal Article

Year of Publication

2008

Authors

Gee, James (Primary)

Journal

Journal of Book of Mormon Studies

Pagination

40-57

Volume

17

Issue

1-2

Terms of use

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Bibliographic Citation

Abstract

Several maps from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries support details of Lehi’s journey as recorded in the Book of Mormon. In 1751, the renowned cartographer Jean Baptiste Bourguignon D’Anville became the first to include Nahom (or Nehem), Ishmael’s burial place in the Book of Mormon, in his map of Asia. This map and a 1771 map of Yemen are the basis for most accurate maps of Arabia from 1751 to 1814. The spelling varies among the subsequent maps, with most using either D’Anville’s Nehem or Niebuhr’s Nehhm, but the location of Nahom does not differ between those maps that include Nahom. The mention of Nahom on the finest maps by the greatest cartographers of the times, in a location that corresponds to Lehi’s account, gives credence to Lehi’s travels.

Nahom
Arabia
Yemen
Map
Cartography
Ishmael (Ephraimite)

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