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INTRODUCTION:
Ether 10:17 reads: "And it came to pass that Corom, (19th
descendent of Jared), did that which was good in the sight of the Lord all his
days; and he begat many sons and daughters; and after he had seen many days he
did pass away, even like unto the rest of the earth; and Kish reigned in his stead."
Kish is an unusual name that
stands out, he was the 30th descendent of Jared. Kish is a very ancient Kingdom, though
it seems to have become famous after
the Flood. In the newly discovered Kingdom of Ebla (1976) in northwestern Syria, 68 documents were found in which
Kish is mentioned. (Archi 1997, p.
125) The ancient "Sumerian "King List's first post-diluvial dynasty---Kish---rose to prominence." (Saggs p.
27) Kish is recorded as the first
great prominent city after the
flood. A city that most likely would
have been known by the Jaredites. The fact that the name Kish is found in the Jaredite records is evidence for the antiquity
and accuracy of the Book of Ether as an authentic historical record. Kish
was "an early Sumerian City, now modern Tell al-Uhaimer, eight miles east and a
little south of Babylon. Excavations by H. de Genouillac in 1912-14, and S.
Langdon in 1923-33...unearthed ...ziggurats...temples...palaces. And numerous clay
tablets ...shed[ing] light on early Sumerian culture (Early Dynastic period,
about 2900-2370 BC)." (Miller p. 371)
When Ebla was destroyed at
about 2250 BC, there was a "disappearance of a cultural linguistic horizon
linking Ebla to pre-Sargonic Mari, (Erickson, Mari, 29 June 2005) and too many cities in northern
Babylonia dubbed the ‘Kish
Civilization.'" (Sasson p. 1128) The
French excavations [still in progress, Sasson p. 1732] and "soundings at Kish (Tell Iingharra/Tell Uhaimir)
confirmed the complicated heredity [of ancient Kish and Sumer]." (Sasson p. 1731)
Remember that a ‘Tell' is a high mound over an ancient ruin, modern
names are given to the mound until they identify by excavations which ancient city it may have been.
KISH ALL OVER THE PLACE
The name Kish shows up in other Jaredite names as well: The 25th
descendent of Jared has Kish as a suffix in the
name Riplakish. (Ether 10:4) The 15th
descendent of Jared is an unnamed daughter of a man named after Jared (the 14th
descendant of Jared). She marries a no-good by the name of Akish. (Ether 8:10) Akish was the son of Kimnor, he desired to marry Jared's
daughter, she was promised to him on condition that he bring King Omer's head
to Jared, her father (14th descendent of Jared). Later Kish kills his father in law in order
to become king himself, and then establishes secret combinations. (Price p.
159) Book of Mormon students will
recall the name Kishkumen (Hel
1:8-12) the founder of secret combinations among the Nephites. He was
murderous, ambitious and rebellious. (Largey p. 483) It was the infamous Gadianton who assumed leadership of Kishkumen's organization. Kishkumen was also the name for a
wicked city burned at the time of the crucifixion of Christ. (3 Nephi 9:10-11) In the name Kishkumen, Kish is a prefix, the suffix is also a name, Kumen.
It is the name of one of the twelve prophets of the Nephites (3 Nephi 19:4,
and the prefix of another of that
twelve, Kumenonhi. All of this is sufficient reason to look
into the Kingdom of Kish
and the family from whence came this name found in the record of the Jaredites,
and latter even in the names held by some of the northern Ten Tribes. Such
names would have been transmitted in part down to the Nephites through the
Brass Plates and perhaps the records of genealogies of other Jaredites.
THE CITY OF KISH:
Modern Warka [a large Tell] is the
site of the ancient city of Erech
(Uruk), it precedes Kish, modern
Al-Uhaimir, in what is called the Uruk Period. "Writings of the Uruk state
cannot be read, although some scholars believe that on the basis of
similarities of archaic signs with later Sumerian signs, they are able to
identify various city-names." (Saggs p. 33) Names seem to persist
regardless of the language. Is there a relation of this unreadable language and
the Adamic Language which would have been prevalent before the Flood? The
Jemdet Nasr Period which followed, yields texts that are also difficult to
read, in fact texts from any site of that age are difficult. Kish comes on the scene in the Jemdet
Nasr III period. Kish is therefore one of the older sites in the Sumerian
region. ‘Uruk [biblical Erech] was founded by Meskiaggasher and his
successors, although it was a later king, Gilgamesh,
[of the great Epic] who engaged in a
power struggle with the rival Sumerian kingdoms of Kish and Ur." ( Hunt. P. 20) "Enmebaragesi and his son Agga are the
first Kish rulers, we know from
early inscriptions." (Hunt p. 22) Not
long after, two other important sites appear on the scene, Shuruppak, the subject of a study in this series, with astonishing
parallels, and Abu Salabikh, an ancient will be studied
and the data included in this web site.
"By the middle of the third
millennium, what has come to be known as the Mature Harappan Period (about
2500-1900 BC) [in upper India] began....the distinctive square seals of the
Harappan civilization have been found in Mesopotamia and Iran and at Kish." (Sasson p. 1457) Trade in the Indian Ocean, from the Upper
Indus River, up the Persian Gulf and up the rivers of Mesopotamia was taking
place vigorously as early as 3500 BC.
THE GREAT FLOOD TRADITION
"According to the Sumerian King
List, the first city to claim dynastic privilege after the great flood was Kish (Kic). However, its supremacy was
far from assured, and rivalry from Lagash
and Umma weakened Mesopotamia at a time when Semitic invasions threatened."
(Hunt p. 22) The invading Semites were
the Amorites (Amurru in Deuteronomy
20:17), the full disaster fell on the earlier States between 2029-2006 BC.
(Saggs p. 54) The Language of the Amorites is rich in parallels to Book of
Mormon names. (See Mari on the
Erickson web site July 2005) The early Semitic language spoken in the early
Mesopotamian areas was akin to Aramaic.
See the Chart on Sumer and Akkad in the Third Millennium
accompanying this study. "The excavations show continuous habitation [of Kish] from the proto-literate period
until the climax of Sumerian civilization, when Kish was apparently overthrown by an invasion of Semite-speaking
peoples." (Hunt p. 22)
"The Sumerians, like the Israelites,
had a tradition of a great flood, but they held that their history began even
earlier. Their King List knew of five cities-Eridu, Bad-bibira, Larak, Sippar
and Shuruppak-so ancient that they
existed before the flood." (Saggs p. 26)
"The account of the pre-diluvial
dynasties end: ‘Five cities were they. Eight kings reigned for 241,200 years.
The Flood swept thereover.' The incredible lengths of reigns show the
remote-ness of these traditions." (Saggs p. 27) Thus a tradition of pre-diluvians having long lives is found in
the Sumerian tablets on par with Biblical account. "From the Early Dynastic
period, four thousand gods are known by name...[But] ‘the creator God', the great
God, was Enlil...king of the earth...called the ‘Father of the Gods' or ‘king of
the Gods'...who as Lord of the earth, had planned and created the world and its
plants."( Saggs pp. 256-257)
"There is a reference to the
assembly of the City of Kish
choosing a king as late as 2300 BC; he took the throne-name
Iphur-kish (‘Kish assembled') to emphasize the popular basis of his rule."
(Saggs p. 132) In "The epic dealing
with the siege of Erech by the King of Kish
shows that Gilgamesh, the ruler of Erech, having defeated his rival [Kish] neither put him to death nor
humiliated him, but showed clemency and returned him to his own kingdom."
(Saggs p. 180) In "The ‘Epic of
Etana'...Etana was a man who is referred to in the Sumerian King Lists as a post-diluvian
king of Kish, the city which was the
northern cultural centre corresponding to Erech in the south." Saggs p. 348)
SUBSEQUENT HISTORY OF KISH
It was the Great Hammurabi who
"welded into one Kingdom the many former city states of Summer and Akkad, and
brought them under one legal system. From that time [1800 BC] it was
recognition at Babylon, (not as formerly) at Nippur, which gave legitimation to
a dynasty." (Saggs p. 69) For the next
1500 years Babylon would be the center of most activities influencing the
Mesopotamian area, and the biblical world.
"At the turn of the third to second millennium some peoples
speaking Indo-European languages had moved from north of the Caucasus into
parts of what is now Asiatic Turkey. There the most important
group, the Hittites, had reformed first a kingdom and then an empire, based on the
region of the Haly River. Suddenly, in 1595 BC, Mursalis l, the third major ruler of the Hittite Empire, swept
out of Asia Minor into Syria (where he took Aleppo), down the Euphrates,
sacking Mari on the way. The
conqueror reached Babylon, [and no doubt Kish
which was near by] which he plundered and burnt, and then returned to his
capital, as suddenly as he had come, but it was too late to crush a court
conspiracy which led to his assassination. His stay in Babylon had, however,
been long enough to bring to an end the reign of the last of Hammurabi's
successors...and to disrupt government. Babylon was first taken over briefly by
the southern dynasty of the Sealands, [people of the wet lands at the head of
the Persian Gulf] and then by the Cassites." (Saggs p. 70) Another ethnic group then enters the
picture, the Hurrians. "These
peoples have long been known in the Old Testament as the Horites, (Genesis 14:6, Deuteronomy 2:12)." (Saggs p. 71) They had immigrated into the region from the
vicinity of the Black Sea and out of Ancient Armenia. "an important Hurrian state, known as Mittanni, [was]
to develop in the Habur region...it stood as an equal with Egypt and the Hittite Empire."
(Saggs p. 72) About 1450 BC the
Hurrians became powerful enough to annex Assyria, and "controlled the whole
area from Lake Van ....to the Syrian coast." (Saggs p. 73) However, Babylon reasserted itself, "and
controlled the whole of Mesopotamia." (Saggs p. 73)
KISH THE CENTER OF POLITICAL POWER
Ancient "Eridu flourished and before
the King List's first post-diluvial dynasty-Kish-rose to prominence. Archaeology shows that there was no
important occupation of Eridu after the Uruk period, (before 3000 BC) and that it was virtually abandoned well
before the Early Dynastic period; that is to say, the heyday of Eridu was past
by about 3000 BC. Excavations have
established that Kish did not become
a major city until the Jemdet Nasr period (i.e. in the century after 3000 BC).
This [helps] fixes the date at which Sumerian tradition placed the Flood as
between 3000 and 2900 BC." (Saggs p. 27) More likely the flood was closer to
2500 BC. But it is interesting to note how the scholars try to establish a working
date for the Flood. "The first centre
in terms of Political power...fell to Kish,
recorded as the first dynasty after the Flood. Kish lay in Akkad, that is, north Babylonia, not far from the site
of the later Babylon. The city has been excavated [started by the French] to
virgin soil, and the earliest major phase of occupation was in the Jemdet Nasr
period....Kish was indisputably the
most important centre of north
Babylonia in the Early Dynastic period: such was its traditional reputation as
a centre of political power that
later in the millennium, even when it was no longer an independent dynastic
capital, its name was included in the title of any ruler who claimed dominion
over the whole of Babylonia." (Saggs, 28)
The Jaredites were around when Kish
had risen to this glory. There was no way the Jaredites would not have been
familiar with this Kingdom and its founding families and rulers. The Jaredites, so familiar with the Tower of
Babel, could have lived within 50 miles of the great City of Kish, and for a time have been subject
to its rule and influence..
"‘Me-salim, King of Kish'
had arbitrated between two city-states, arranging peace terms and setting up a boundary
stone to demarcate their territories...This power of early Kings of Kish to wield authority far beyond the
borders of its own city-state eventually led to the title ‘King of Kish' being adopted by any ruler who
claimed over lordship of Sumer and Akkad, even if his primary territory was
some city-state other than Kish."
(Saggs 37) So, there was no way that
the Jaredites would not be familiar with Kish,
and that familiarity would include transmitting that name into their
genealogies.
THE EPIC OF GILGAMESH
"The last king of the first Dynasty
of Kish, as stated in the Sumerian
King List, was Akka, son of Enmebaragesi. ... ‘Kish was smitten with weapons. Its
kingship was carried to Eanna (i.e. Erech).' With the mention of the defeat of Akka, we
link up indirectly with one of the epics from Erech." (Saggs pp. 28-29) This is Epic of Gilgamesh. "Nine Erech epics
[are known]." (Saggs p. 28) In one of
the Epics of Gilgamesh messengers
come to Akka, son of Enmebaragesi from Kish,
asking the question "Are we to submit to the house of Kish?" (Saggs p. 29) These epics have been treated by Nibley and
others. (Pritchard pp. 25-86) Gilgamesh is an ancient name. The prefix, ‘Gil' in the name is found in the name of the second son of Jared, Gilgah (Ether 6:14) was also the name
of a valley in Ether 13:27, 29, 30) Gilgah
was also the name of one of the leaders of ten thousand that fell at the Battle
of Cumorah (Mormon 6:14). In the name Gilgamesh
the prefix Gilga is also a given
name, and the name ‘mesh, or mish'
comes from the God Chemish found in the ancient name Carchemish, which means ‘quay of the
God', it was one of the main crossings of the upper Euphrates River. Abraham
probably used it on his way from Haran to the Promised land. Gilgah or Gilga, both are the same and are vocalized the same. The elements and name of Gil are found in Old Testament names,
and from the time of Assurbanipal, including: Gihilu, gil, Gilaia. They are also found in Ancient
Akkadian, Gilgames-edasu-saksid, and in Hurrian as Gilu,
Gilua, Giluni, Gilua and Giluuni. (Radner p. 423). The use of the prefix and the name would have not been uncommon, so the Jaredites
and later even the Ten Tribes, no dobut in with Semitic peoples bearing these
names transmitted them down through time.
THE JAREDITES, THE BRASS PLATES AND
THE KINGDOM OF KISH
The Jaredites testify to the
existence of this Kingdom and its rulers by the utilizationof the name Kish in their genealogical lines.
The name Kish was given to
the 3 descendent of Jared, the 15th Descendent was the daughter of a
man named Jared after his illustrious ancestor marries a man named Akish.
The 25th descendent of Jared was a man named Riplakish. The name of Kish in a
variety of names may have also been included in other Jaredite records. (Largey
p. 431) Without the occurrence of Kish in the Book of Mormon in the Jaredite
records, our interest in this ancient important Kingdom would not have been
stimulated. Where could Joseph Smith have obtained information about this
ancient Kingdom and Family in order to incorporate the names into an ancient
record? Who, in the world, at the time
the Book of Mormon was published, even knew anything about Kish or the discoveries that would be made in Mesopotamia? And who suspected a unique biblical link of
the Bible to the ancient kingdom that would be remarkable evidence that such a
record as the Brass Plates may have actually existed?
CHRONOLOGY"
"...In ancient Mesopotamian
civilization from its very beginnings, before 3000 BC, and that by 2800 BC the Semitic
element was so prominent, at least in the north of what was to become
Babylonia, that the Sumerian King List gives Semitic names for most of the
rulers of the first Dynasty of Kish.
By 2600-2500 BC, tablets from Abu Salabikh, near Nippur in central Sumer,
bear a large number of Semitic names, including the names of about half of the
scribes who wrote those tablets, in Sumerian." (Saggs p. 41)
"Some Scholars avoid giving absolute
dates which may subsequently prove to be inaccurate, by referring to periods
rather than years BC." (Saggs p. 24) Of use, therefore, is a Chart prepared by
Saggs provided in the web site and for use in this study.
Kish,
however is extremely important for dating and establishing the stratigraphy of
Ancient Sumer. "An ancient cemetery was found at Kish, which revealed a
complete sequence of pottery from the earliest proto-literate period through to
that of Nebuchadnezza [the time of Lehi] ...including the so-called goddess jars that provide a chronological reference for dating remains at other sites."
(Hunt p. 23)
CHART - SCAGGS PAGE 25
| COMMONEST TERM |
OTHER TERMS |
ABSOLUTE DATE |
|
|
BC |
|
|
|
| Uruk IV |
Proto-literate; Proto-historic |
before 3000 |
| Uruk III |
Jemdet Nasr; Proto-literate; Proto-historic |
3000-2900 |
| Early Dynastic |
Elba; Mari; Kish |
2900-2370 |
| ED I |
|
2900-2700 |
| ED II |
|
2700-2600 |
| ED III |
Fara |
2600-2370 |
| late ED III |
pre-Sargonic |
2500-2370 |
| Agade |
Addadian; Sargonic |
2371-2230 |
| Gutian |
dynasy of Gutium, post-Akkadian |
2250-2120 |
| Ur III |
Third Dynasy of Ur; Neo-Sumerian |
2113-2006 |
Additional Charts and Correlations
of regional areas are found in Saggs
pp. 415-419The period of time before the flood,
and before 3000 BC is called the "Proto-literate;
Proto-historic" or ‘Uruk IV'
Period. (Saggs p. 25) Another great city developing before the Uruk IV period was
‘"Erech [which was] by no means the only city developing in the Uruk
(Proto-literate) period." (Saggs p. 24)
By 2900 BC, "there may have been as many as fifty substantial urban
complexes in south Mesopotamia...about a dozen had already reached a stage of
political and social development for which the term ‘city state" is
appropriate." (Saggs p. 24) Most of
these developed after the flood. "This development continued and saw its peak
during the succeeding four hundred years. Typical of this period was the rise
of dynasties ruling individual city-states or grouping of states; for this
reason it is generally known as ‘Early Dynastic ED'." (Saggs p. 24) (See the
chart by Saggs) During this period,
which was post the flood, populations proliferated, the Jaradites were
commanded to depart from the region, the Tower of Babel incident occurred, and
the proliferation of tongues occurred. Then after the flood, "Just after 2400
BC came the first successful attempt at creating an empire ...[the Akkadian,
Sargonic], enduring for more than a century until it broke down under the
pressure of its own internal stresses, coupled with foreign invasion...The final
two centuries saw a brief return of independent city-states, culminating in
another more compact empire, [Third dynasty of Ur} which in turn collapsed a
few years before 2000 BC under the weight of immigrant Semites.(Saggs p.
24) The disappearance of the Third
Dynasty of Ur (2000 BC) is also associated with the invasion out of Iran, then
known as Elam, (a name found in 2 Nephi 21:11, probably from an Isaiah passage
in the Brass Plates). Sumerian "now became replaced by the Semitic language,
Akkadian." (Saggs p. 57) An announcement that they have finally been able to
translate ancient Elamitic was made in January 2005 referenced in a previous
study.
After the fall of Ur 111, "many
petty Amorite rulers, not only in South Mesopotamia but spread over the whole
region from the borders of Elam to Syria" (Saggs p. 60) and the east coast of the Mediterranean, and
they stayed there for most of the Israelite period. Thus, ancient Sumerian and
Elamitic names, Akkadian names, (Di Vito), and especially Amoritic,
(Gelb), names are all extremely
fruitful for researching for Book of Mormon name parallels. The yield is truly amazing.
EBLA, MARI, AND
KISH:
In 1981 Gelb wrote an article,
entitled Ebla and the Kish Civilization',
which he
revised (Gelb 1992), dating the Ebla archive to the Pe-Sargonic period
(bout 2450 BC) extending back to the time of the early years of the ancient
Sargon when he was still battling for domination for what would later be called
the Akkad Empire. Synchronous texts from Ebla and Mari permitted
Sargon to stress the role of Mari
within the frame of the Kish
Civilization, thus linking these three great early civilizations, Ebla to the northwest, Mari in the center, and Kish to the southeast in the
Mesopotamian region.(See maps). Gelb "stressed the
importance of the city and state of Kish
and of the title ‘King of Kish' in
early Dynastic times." (Gelb 1992, p. 123)
All three of these Kingdoms are the subject of various studies in this
series. All yield exciting confirmation of the development and correct use of
Onomastic Science of the prefix, roots, and suffix developments of Book of Mormon names and distinct parallels
to names found in that Sacred Book.
From the Royal Archives of Ebla,
vase fragments were found that
"contained the titles of two Pharaohs, Chephren, of the
Fourth Dynasty, and Pepi l, [2333-2283]
of the Sixth Egyptian Dynasty, who began to reign bout 2300 BC." (Pettinato p.
60) Sargon of Akkad has a proposed date
of about 2340-2284, and for his son Naram Sin, 2260-2223, in order to conform
to the time of the capture of Ebla and its destruction by Naram Sin about 2250
BC. "Ar-Ennum was the third King of
Ebla at the same time Iblul-Il was the King of Mari, (Pettinato p. 61) [who may
have been a second generation after the flood and] who clearly lived before the
Sargonic perod and the establishment of the Akkad Empire [which would be just
after the flood]. In the Ebla Archives
"the city most frequently mentioned [in early times] is Kish, followed by the city
of Adab." (Pettinato p. 61) Thus the
archive of early Ebla seems to be "contemporary with the First Dynasty of Kish
(2600-2500 BC)." (Pettinato p. 61) Thus, the sites of the cities of Kish and
Ebla and Mari, may have all have had a pre-flood history, and extensive post
flood histories and then a profusive
history after the tower of Babel. What
does this all mean? It means that
records from these early stages of the developments of the cities and kingdoms
of Ebla, Mari and Kish are prime sources for verifying names found in the
Jaredite records, and then transmitted down to the Nephites, they would show up
in the Nephite records after the plates of Ether had been translated (Mosiah
22:14) after 279 BC. The engraved stone
that was found bore Coriantumr's royal genealogy. Mosiah
translated the stone and the plates, (Omni l:19-22) Conversely, it means that some names found in the Book of Ether
and transmitted to the Nephites after 279 BC,
should be found in these three Cities, at least, and others directly
associated with them down until the time the Jaredites left the Babylonian
area. More detailed archeological
studies will no doubt provide even more accurate dates for all of the
personages and authorities found in the various archives, and the dates may
change, but not by very much, perhaps by less than 40 years.
LAGISH AND KISH:
"We know of many Sumerian
city-states in the middle of the third millennium, but the one about which we
are best informed is Lagash. This
city-state was based on three distinct urban centres, Lagash, itself, ...Girsu...and
Nina, which together....had a free population of 100,000...[today] these sites
still enjoy considerable agricultural prosperity, by virtue of an efficient
system of irrigation canals." (Saggs p. 350
"The Lagash records refer back to still earlier events, and thereby tell
us something of the wider aspects of Early Dynastic Sumerian Political
organization." (Saggs p. 37)
Between 2500-2000 BC the population
of Lagish rose to as much as 120,000. (Yoffee p. 443) The Population of Kish
only rose to 60,000. This compares with the ancient civilization of
Mohanjo-Daro and Harappa, in the Indus Valley, and Memphis in Egypt that had
populations of 60 to 80,000 at the same time period. (Yoffee p. 43) Trade goods from India and Egypt are found
at Kish. Before archaeologist knew anything about such contacts, the Book
of Abraham tells of the Egyptian Influence on Ur and upon Abraham. On his way
to Haran, Abraham would have passed only a short distance from Kish, and his records may have
transmitted some of these ancient names down in time. Abraham was born about
2052 BC and lived during a time of great upheavals in the region.
Lagash and Kish, farther up the Euphrates River, prospered because of the
Persian Gulf trade. Gudea, a Gutian ruler of
Lagash before 2100 BC, "claimed that ‘Magan, Meluhha, Gubi, and Tilmun brought
tribute; their ships came to Lagash
with timber.' Stone, bitumen and gypsum were brought in shiploads for the
building of the temple of Ningirsu, whilst other imported good included diorite
from Magan, cedar wood from the Lebanon, copper from Kimash (in western Iran)
and gold from Hahu in Asia Minor." (Saggs
p. 49) Were the Jaredites
merchants and traders like Lehi? They
seemed to have traveled great distances with ease and not much discomfort.
The City of Kish lasted three thousand years, and at its height covered 5.5
square kilometers. (Yoffee p. 57) Lagash will be included in a future
study.
THE KING LISTS:
"In early Dynastic Kish ‘palaces' are ... designated...In the
third Dynasty of Ur, there are also temples and ziggurats, and we have a list
of Kings, but where is the Palace?"
(Yoffee p. 228) Records abound
in the tablets that refer to Kings and their Palaces.
But
Archaeologists found few palaces. It was the palace archive of Ebla
that yields so many tablets and
names used in these studies. About 165 BC,
a group of late Babylonian scholars, based on traditions and records
available to them, recorded the names of ancient Mesopotamian sages and
the
kings they advised. It was an "original
attempt to portray Mesopotamian history and some of its most famous
figures. It
draws on the venerable tradition of the seven sages and Mesopotamian
king
lists." (Yoffee p. 159) A convenient starting point for the
interpretation of
the Early Dynastic period is a composition known as the ‘Sumerian King
List',
which gives an account of the dynasties ruling in Sumer and Akkad in
the third
millennium. (Saggs p. 26) A later
version, incorporating older materials was prepared in the second
millennium.
Five cities so ancient that they were listed as having been before the
flood "Eight Kings reigned for 241,000 years. The Flood
swept thereover...[Then] the King
List's first post-diluvial dynasty-Kish-rose to
prominenace." (Saggs p. 27, 415) Kish is one of the first important
cities developed after the flood. From
the story of Ether, that would also mean before the Tower of Babel. The
Jaredite leaders evidently knew about these ancient post-flood cities and
transmitted names from them into their records, and then these show up in the
Nephite record.
By 2400 BC Sargon of Akkad
established the Akkadian State, "his ascent to power from the venerable city of Kish (which he had conquered)" (Yoffee
p. 142) and built a new capital at
Akkad, his grand-son Naram-Sin conquered Ebla,
and other City States along the Euphrates River down south past Kish, to set up the first Pan
Mesopotamian State. But it didn't last.
Kish did persist as a city state
down to about the time of Christ. It is of interest to note that for his army,
Naram-Sin had a single delivery of 60,000 dried fish. (Yoffee p. 142) Some fishermen did very well. The Army diet
was blah.
KISH AND THE BRASS PLATES:
In Hebrew the name Kish means ‘bow'. (Mandel p. 321) Kish
shows up in a strange relationship to the northern tribes of Israel and some
aspects of the Biblical Narrative. In
1 Sam 9:1, in the 11th century BC, Kish
of the tribe of Benjamin, was a
wealthy and powerful man in his community.
"One day some of Kish's
assess were lost, and he sent his son Saul,
a tall and good-looking young man, to search for them. This search led to Saul's meeting with the prophet Samuel,
and his anointment as king." Mandel p. 321) In l Sam 9:1, the father of Kish is called Abiel. In the first Book of
Chronicles he is called Jeiel (l Chron 9:35) In l Chron. 8:33 it says that Ner
was the father of Kish. Was there
three men called Kish, or one man
whose father had three different names?
The point we wish to make here is that Kish was a name given to a member
of the ten tribes. The main body of the tribe of Benjamin was joined with the
tribe of Judah in southern Palestine at the time, but this Kish lived in the southern extremity of the Northern Tribes where
Samuel lived, and seemed to be included in events of that southern border of
the Tribes.
Kish,
another Benjamite, living in the territory of the northern tribes when he was taken captive, was the father of
Shimei and an ancestor of Mordecai and Esther. (Esther 2:5) Since Mordecai and Esther were both
residents of Susa, a Persian Capital in the fifth century BC, could the name of
their ancestor have been derived during the Babylonian captivity when they were
in the vicinity of Babylon near the ancient city of Kish? The family had been
in captivity for nearly a century.
In l Chronicles, Kish, was the son of Mahli, a
descendant of Merari, the son of Levi. "His sons--one of them was
Jerahmeel--married the daughters of his brother Eleazar, who had died without
sons." (Mandel p. 321, l Chron 23:31)
In the "8th century
another descendant of Merari, Abdi, also had a son he called Kish.
This Kish lived during the reign of
King Hezekiah of Judah. He was one of the Levites who assembled all the other
Levites to make themselves ritually clean and to purify the temple." (Mandel p.
321)
Another name with the prefix Kish, is Kishi, meaning
‘my bow' who lived in the 11th Century, and was also called Kushaiah, (Mandel p. 321) a Theophoric
variation of the name, with the hypocoristicon suffix of ‘iah',
for Jehovah, or God; meaning: ‘God is my Bow'.
He also was a descendant of Merari. (l Chron 15:17) Kish had a son, Ethan, who "was one of the Levites appointed by
King David to play trumpets and cymbals in the House of the Lord. His
descendants were gatekeepers in the Temple." (Mandel p. 321) He had to have had some musical ability.
Note that nearly half of the above
references of men named Kish are
related to a common ancestor: Merari. The name means ‘bitter'. (Mandel p. 350) He
is mentioned in Genesis near the 17th century BC as one of the three
sons of Levi and the ancestor of the
clan of Levites. He was one of the
seventy Israelites who immigrated to Egypt. (Gen 46:11) His brothers were
Kehath and Gershon. His sons were Mahli
and Mushi. His Grandsons from Mahli
were Eleazar and Kish. His grandsons from Mushi were Mahli, Eder
and Jerimoth. Did Jacob pick up the
name Kish, and at least two
variations of the name, Kishi, and Kushaiah, a theophoric name, and put it
into his records during the 20 or more years he spent in Haran with Laban to
obtain his wives and great wealth? It is evident that the name was part of the
name baggage being carried into Egypt when they immigrated there during the
Famine and were reunited with Joseph. In particular that name seems to have
been taken up and used from time to time by descendants of Merari, the Son of Levi, among the Levites wherever they were
scattered. Was the name Kish, therefore, a name that appeared
frequently in the BRASS PLATES?
Particularly in the tribes of Levi, Benjamin and Manasseh?
The prefix Kish is also found in the name of Kishon, ‘stream of the god Kish'
(Miller p. 371), the River is referred to in the story of Barak's victory,
and Elijah's slaughter of the prophets of Baal. It flows into the sea north of
Mt. Carmel. (Alexander p. 673
KING MANASSEH'S TRIP TO BABYLON:
At the time of Isaiah (before 720
BC), Assyria was very precarious and Babylon was very active. It threatened a future captivity, which
became a reality. King Manasseh, son of
Hezekiah, and a submissive vassal of Assyria, was temporarily taken to Babylon
by King Esarhaddon. Esarhaddon succeeded his father Sennacherib as king of
Assyria (691 BC, 2 Kings 19:22, Alexander p. 664). He was the father of
Ashurbanipal who succeeded him in 669 BC. (Miller p. 170) During that forced
visit, did Manasseh pick up the name Kish
from the locals? The City of Kish
was only a short distance from Babylon. (Kitchen p. 52) Did some of the Nephite
usages of this name come from the Brass Plates, since the name occurs in the
tribe of Manasseh, did King Manasseh bring it back with him? Or did the
Nephites derive their use of the name from the record of the Jaredites? Either way, the name ultimately derives from
the Ancient Kingdom of Kish right
after the flood. The name Kish
provides a strange thread of continuity and reality from ancient times into the
Book of Mormon.
THE GENEALOGIES OF ZARAHEMLA,
CORIANTUMR, AND JARED:
Three genealogies of three
individuals are mentioned in the Book of Mormon record that would be useful for
transmitting names into Nephites usage. One of these is that of Zarahemla, who
was taught in the language of Mosiah,
and gave a genealogy of his fathers. That genealogy would go back to
Zedikiah. It would have some names that
may have been prevalent in Jerusalem at the time of Zedikiah who was captured
and deported to Babylon, and Muelek who was brought to the western hemisphere.
[some think by the Phoenicians] (Omni l: 19-22)
Another is the genealogy of
Coriantumr which was engraven on stone and translated by Mosiah giving the genealogy and
an account of Coriantumr the last surviving Jaredite. (Omni l: 21-22).
Another was the genealogy provided
by Ether in the account of his own genealogy back to Jared. The
Gold Plates of the Jaredites may also
have included the genealogy of Mohonrhi Moriumtumr, the brother of
Jared. Which, while translated, was not abridged by Moroni
into the present
record. Much of it remains as part of the sealed portion of the Book of
Mormon. These all suggest that an entire array of
names was transmitted down from
Jaredite times, and from the time of Zedikiah, that in some cases, may
not have been or could not have been transmitted down through the Brass
Plates.
This study is an attempt to open
some doors for further research and point how many and rich the sources and areas
are that could be mined for confirmation of historical and linguistic
confirmation of Book of Mormon names. The entire complexity of it all was kept
in perfect order and lucidity by the Prophet Joseph Smith. No Corrections or
retractions were ever made, or called for.
JARED'S GENEALOGY:
Largey has worked out this genealogy
from the Book of Ether (Largey p. 431)
His chart is an excellent reference and
useful in these series.
ANCIENT TEXTS AND NAMES:
As discussed in previous studies in
this series, names can be constructed with a prefix,
a root, and a suffix. Sometimes a name
may be just a prefix, or just a root, or just a suffix, most of the time a name may consist solely of a prefix, or just a prefix and just a suffix. Some names may be a little more complicated than this, but for
the most part, the construct of a name follows this pretty well. So, we are interested in finding any names
in the most ancient tablets and texts that might fit into the world of the
Jaredites. From the Jaredite records such names might be transmitted down into
use by the Nephites when their records were found and translated after 278
BC.
Morphological and lexical lists of
personal names have been tabulated from the Ebla texts which also contain names
from the Hittite, Akkad, Sumerian, Mari, and Kish civilizations of about the
same period. For the most part we will
be looking at the names in the Eblaitic Texts found after 1976, any occurrence of a name from
these texts found in the Book of Mormon would constitute profound evidence that
the Book of Mormon names are authentic, thus the Book of Mormon is authentic,
they cannot be separated.
GILGAH
AND AHU
Notice the Third name in the
Genealogy of Jared, it is Gilgah. He is one of the four children of Jared, the
second by birth. The name is composed of a prefix,
‘Gil', and a suffix ‘gah'.
The prefix name Gil is found
in several forms in the lists of names assembled and published. It is the prefix in the name Gilaahu, Gil can mean
‘adversary' or ‘exhultation' the suffix,
‘ahu' means ‘brother'. So Gilaahu means ‘adversary of brother'.
(Pagan pp 312) The suffix ‘ahu' is also found in ancient texts and
has been discussed in previous studies. Other forms of the name include: Gilaar,
meaning ‘adversary of Har (ar)', Gili, meaning ‘my exultation', Giliim,
‘exultation of Lim'. (Pagan p. 312) Gilum,
also meaning ‘exultation'. The variations are many, the meaning is the same.
(Pagan page 312)
LIB
Also note that the 3lst descendent
of Jared is Lib. (Ether 1:17) Clearly
this is a prefix being used as a
name. The name should be found in one
or another of the five civilization named above, and perhaps others as well.
Taking into consideration that we certainly do not have all of the names from
these civilizations, it is worth the effort to check the names we do have from
the available ancient records and see what can be found. So, in checking for the name Lib, it can be expected at times to be
coupled with a root or a suffix, or both. In the old Akkadian names we do find Lib, and many names with Lib
as a prefix. Alone the name means ‘man' or ‘the one'. In
the Akkadian name Libbalaiu, which
also can designate an office, the meaning is the ‘man from the inner
city'. Varieties of the name, which is
quite common in Akkadian, include names such as Libbali-hammat, Libbali-sarrat,
Libbalitu, Libiraiu, (meaning ‘man from Libiru'),
Liblut, meaning ‘may he, ‘[the man]
live'. Also Libusu, meaning ‘may they
[ill wishers] come to shame'. All of
the names are ancient Akkadian, but were passed on down through 2300 years of
generations to the time of Nebuchadnezzar. (Baker pp. 660-661) This would be at
the time of Lehi. In ancient Nippur, an archive of tablets was found dating to about 700 BC, just
before the time of Lehi. In those tablets
one can find the name ina-lib-bi
where lib is used as a root in the name. (Cole p. 269) Lib is also found elsewhere. "Beginning
with the Hyksos [descendents of Shem] in the 18th century BC, and
then the Libyans and the so-called
Sea People [the Phoencians] a few centuries later," (Chadwick p. 204) Egypt was
constantly being invaded. Note that Lib
is found associated with the Libyans, and
the Phoenician Sea People. So, the
Jaredite records have the name of Lib,
and the Brass Plates could have had the Lib
names also from the constant contact with the Phoenicians the Northern Tribes
may have had, and the
Hebrew records and those at the time
of Lehi may have been familiar with the names as well. The name LIB also appears in other records that
will be discussed in future additions to the web site. The ancient records
confirm it as an authentic ancient name, just as they confirm many other
names.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alexander,
David, & Pat Alexander, Eds. Eerdmans'
Handbook to the Bible, Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids,
Michigan 1977
Aharoni,
Yohanan, Michael Avi-Yonah, Anson F. Rainey, Ze'ev Safrai, The Carta Bible Atlas, Carta Jerusalem, 2002
Archi,
Alfonso, Eblaite Personal Names and
Semitic Name-Giving, Archivi Reali
Di Ebla Studi 1, University Degli Studi Di Roma, Missione
Archaeologica Italiana In Siria, 1988 The great discovery of tablets at Ebla were
made after 1977.
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and Eblaite
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Heather D. Ed. The Prosopography of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project. Vo. 2, Part
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Steven W., The Early Neo-Babylonian Governor's Archive From Nippur, Oriental Institute Publications Vol
114, University of Chicago, Illinois, 1996
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Series Major 16, Editrice Pontificio Istituto Biblico, Roma 1993
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Ignace J., Computer-Aided Analysis of
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Madeleine S., & J. Lane Miller, Harper's
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Giovanni, Ebla: A New Look at
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Lynn F., Every Person in the Book of
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H. W. F., The Babylonians, London
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Gordon D., Mari In Retrospect, Eisenbrauns, Winona Lake, Indiana 1992
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