Item Detail
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29065
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7
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12
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English
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A History of NaHoM
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BYU Studies
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2012
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51
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2
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Provo, UT
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Brigham Young University
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78-98
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"Around 700 BC, a wealthy man in southern Arabia donated three limestone altars to a temple dedicated to llmaqah, the moon god. inscribed on each altar was a text identifying him as the grandson of Naw'um of the Nihm tribe. The three altars were unearthed in 1988 by German archaeologists amid the ruins of the Bar'an temple near Marib, in modern Yemen. They provide the earliest known reference to the Nihm, who today, nearly three millennia later, retain the name and are one of Yemen's largest tribes."[ABSTRACT PROVIDED}
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An Ishmael Buried Near Nahom
Knowing Why: 137 Evidences that the Book of Mormon is True
Nephi’s “Bountiful”: Contrasting Both Candidates
Nephi’s Eight Years in the “Wilderness”: Reconsidering Definitions and Details
Orson Scott Card's 'Artifact or Artifice' : Where It Stands After Twenty-five Years
The Nahom Convergence Reexamined: The Eastward Trail, Burial of the Dead, and the Ancient Borders of Nihm
The Place—or the Tribe—Called Nahom?: NHM as Both a Tribal and Geographic Name in Modern and Ancient Yemen -
Book of Mormon Authorship Revisited : The Evidence for Ancient Origins
By the Hand of Mormon : The American Scripture that Launched a New World Religion
Identifying Our Best Candidate for Nephi's Bountiful
Joseph Smith : Rough Stone Rolling
Lehi in the Desert; The World of the Jaredites; There Were Jaredites
Lehi's Trail : From the Valley of Lemuel to Nephi's Harbor
On Lehi's Trail : Nahom, Ishmael's Burial Place
The Book of Mormon Authorship : New Light on Ancient Origins
The Book of Mormon : A Very Short Introduction
The Nahom Maps
"The Place that was Called Nahom" : New Light from Ancient Yemen
Through the Arabian Desert to a Bountiful Land : Could Joseph Smith Have Known the Way?