Land of Nephi (Tehuantepec geography model)

Land established by Nephi, later occupied by Lamanites, Zeniffites

Land of Nephi (Tehuantepec geography model)

The land of Nephi lay south of the land of Zarahemla, divided from it by a narrow strip of wilderness that ran from the sea east to the sea west (Alma 22:27). It sat at a higher elevation than Zarahemla: the record consistently describes travelers going up when heading south to Nephi and coming down when returning north to Zarahemla (Mosiah 7:2–6; 8:2; 9:3; Alma 17:8; Omni 1:13). On the western shore, in the land of Nephi, was the place of the fathers’ first inheritance, where Lehi’s family had first settled (Alma 22:28). Aaron, one of the sons of Mosiah², found the Lamanite king who reigned over all this land except the land of Ishmael (Alma 22:1).

The land was agriculturally productive. The Nephites raised flocks and herds and sowed corn, wheat, barley, neas, and sheum (2 Ne. 5:11; Mosiah 9:9). Nephi¹ built a temple there after the manner of Solomon’s temple, though without its costly materials, which were not found in the land (2 Ne. 5:16). The Nephites settled and held the land from roughly 590 to 200 B.C.; thereafter the Lamanites held it for the remainder of the recorded history (Omni 1:12–13).

The city of Nephi, also called Lehi-Nephi, was the principal settlement, founded by Nephi¹ after he separated from his brethren and later occupied by the Zeniffite colonists under Zeniff, Noah³, and Limhi (Mosiah 9:8). When Mosiah’s men set out from Zarahemla to find these colonists, they wandered forty days before reaching a hill north of Shilom, then went down into the land of Nephi (Mosiah 7:2–6; cf. 9:3). Events recorded in the land include Jacob²‘s prophecies, the preaching of Abinadi, the conversion of Alma¹ and his establishing a church at the waters of Mormon, the bondage of Limhi’s people, and the missions of Ammon and Aaron to the Lamanites (2 Ne. 5:16; Alma 17–26; Mosiah 9; 11; Mosiah 17:2; 18:4–5, 16).

The surrounding territories appear to have been small. Noah³ built a tower from which he could overlook the lands of Shilom and Shemlon, and Limhi later watched the Lamanite army approach from the same tower (Mosiah 11:12; 19:6; 20:7–9). Neighboring lands lay within a few days’ travel: pursuers tracked Limhi’s people for two days before losing them in the wilderness, and Amulon’s group, searching for the land of Nephi, came upon the land of Helam (Mosiah 22:16; 23:30–31, 35).

A Lamanite city in the region was called Jerusalem, after the city of their fathers’ nativity, and lay adjoining the borders of Mormon; near it was a village called Ani-Anti (Alma 21:1–2; 21:11). The waters of Mormon, a fountain in a forest near the city, were where Alma¹ baptized about two hundred and four converts (Mosiah 18:8, 16). The city of Jerusalem, along with the city of Gilgal, was later sunk and covered with water at the time of the crucifixion (3 Nephi 9:6–7).

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