SHINEHAH: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
|SHINEHAH1 “the sun” (BofAbraham 3:13) | |SHINEHAH1 “the sun” (BofAbraham 3:13) | ||
|} | |} | ||
As Egyptian, SHINEHAH could certainly be the “sun,” since it apparently incorporates Egyptian ''šn(w)'', the name for the solar “circuit,” and for the old “cartouche” – “emblem of sun’s orbit, which symbolizes eternity”<ref>Budge, ''Book of the Dead'' (1913), II:381-382; (Univ. Books, 1960), 259; Budge, ''The Mummy'', 2nd ed., 264; Budge, ''Hieroglyphic Dictionary'', 743-744 (''šnw'' “endless time, eternity”; ''šnt nt pt'' “circuit of heaven”; ''šnw n tЗ'' “circuit of the earth”); | As Egyptian, SHINEHAH could certainly be the “sun,” since it apparently incorporates Egyptian ''šn(w)'', the name for the solar “circuit,” and for the old “cartouche” – “emblem of sun’s orbit, which symbolizes eternity”<ref>Budge, ''Book of the Dead'' (1913), II:381-382; (Univ. Books, 1960), 259; Budge, ''The Mummy'', 2nd ed., 264; Budge, ''Hieroglyphic Dictionary'', 743-744 (''šnw'' “endless time, eternity”; ''šnt nt pt'' “circuit of heaven”; ''šnw n tЗ'' “circuit of the earth”); Nibley long ago noted this use of the ''šn''-sign (private communication to RFS).</ref>; + Egyptian ''nḥḥ'' “eternity, forever” (with solar determinative ⊙) > Coptic ''eneḥ'' “eternity,” ''šaeneḥ'' “forever”; or Egyptian ''ḥḥ'' > Coptic ''ḥaḥ'' “million, large number,” which may be related. Egyptian ''nḥḥ'' is “dynamic eternity,” to be differentiated from ''dt'' “static eternity.”<ref>James P. Allen, “The Celestial Realm,” in D. Silverman, ed., ''Ancient Egypt'', 131; J. Cooper first pointed this out to RFS during his Middle Egyptian class at the Claremont Colleges in 1968-1969.</ref> Cf. also 1 Nephi 10:19, “the course of the Lord is one eternal round”; Alma 7:20, D&C 35:1, “course is one eternal round.” | ||
Used also as a convenient code-word for Kirtland, Ohio, in 1835 D&C 82:12, 117:8, etc.<ref>See the explanation of Christopher Smith, “The Inspired Fictionalization of the 1835 United Firm Revelations,” ''Claremont Journal of Mormon Studies'', 1/1 (Apr 2011):22, 24, and n. 31.</ref> | Used also as a convenient code-word for Kirtland, Ohio, in 1835 D&C 82:12, 117:8, etc.<ref>See the explanation of Christopher Smith, “The Inspired Fictionalization of the 1835 United Firm Revelations,” ''Claremont Journal of Mormon Studies'', 1/1 (Apr 2011):22, 24, and n. 31.</ref> | ||
John Gee has suggested another etymology for SHINEHAH, from ancient Egyptian ''š-n-ḫЗ'' , the prouniciation of which he reconstructs as *''šī-ne-ḫaʼ'',<ref>Gee, ''Interpreter'', 42 (2021):157.</ref> which describes the sun’s ecliptic as a “celestial waterway” going across the sky from East to West.<ref>Pearl of Great Price Central, ““Shinehah, The Sun,” ''Book of Abraham Insight'' #16, Oct 23, 2019, online at https://www.pearlofgreatpricecentral.org/shinehah-the-sun/ .</ref> Egyptologist Raymond Faulkner translated the alternative (earlier) reading, ''Mr nḫЗ'', as the “Winding Waterway”<ref>Faulkner, ''Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts'', §§340,343,352,359,469,543,594-597,599-600, 802, 1084, 1102, 1138, 1162, 1228,1345,1376-1377,1382,1441,1541,1704,1737,1759,2061,2172,2235.</ref> in the sky, ascending with Reˁ and the Imperishable Stars (see especially Pyramid Text 624). | |||
'''Notes''' | '''Notes''' | ||
Line 16: | Line 18: | ||
'''Bibliography''' | '''Bibliography''' | ||
---- | ---- | ||
Gee, John L. ''An Introduction to the Book of Abraham''. Provo: BYU Religious Studies Center/ SLC: Deseret Book, 2017. | *Gee, John L. ''An Introduction to the Book of Abraham''. Provo: BYU Religious Studies Center/ SLC: Deseret Book, 2017. |
Latest revision as of 21:16, 17 September 2021
Pearl of Great Price PN | 1. | SHINEHAH1 “the sun” (BofAbraham 3:13) |
As Egyptian, SHINEHAH could certainly be the “sun,” since it apparently incorporates Egyptian šn(w), the name for the solar “circuit,” and for the old “cartouche” – “emblem of sun’s orbit, which symbolizes eternity”[1]; + Egyptian nḥḥ “eternity, forever” (with solar determinative ⊙) > Coptic eneḥ “eternity,” šaeneḥ “forever”; or Egyptian ḥḥ > Coptic ḥaḥ “million, large number,” which may be related. Egyptian nḥḥ is “dynamic eternity,” to be differentiated from dt “static eternity.”[2] Cf. also 1 Nephi 10:19, “the course of the Lord is one eternal round”; Alma 7:20, D&C 35:1, “course is one eternal round.”
Used also as a convenient code-word for Kirtland, Ohio, in 1835 D&C 82:12, 117:8, etc.[3]
John Gee has suggested another etymology for SHINEHAH, from ancient Egyptian š-n-ḫЗ , the prouniciation of which he reconstructs as *šī-ne-ḫaʼ,[4] which describes the sun’s ecliptic as a “celestial waterway” going across the sky from East to West.[5] Egyptologist Raymond Faulkner translated the alternative (earlier) reading, Mr nḫЗ, as the “Winding Waterway”[6] in the sky, ascending with Reˁ and the Imperishable Stars (see especially Pyramid Text 624).
Notes
- ↑ Budge, Book of the Dead (1913), II:381-382; (Univ. Books, 1960), 259; Budge, The Mummy, 2nd ed., 264; Budge, Hieroglyphic Dictionary, 743-744 (šnw “endless time, eternity”; šnt nt pt “circuit of heaven”; šnw n tЗ “circuit of the earth”); Nibley long ago noted this use of the šn-sign (private communication to RFS).
- ↑ James P. Allen, “The Celestial Realm,” in D. Silverman, ed., Ancient Egypt, 131; J. Cooper first pointed this out to RFS during his Middle Egyptian class at the Claremont Colleges in 1968-1969.
- ↑ See the explanation of Christopher Smith, “The Inspired Fictionalization of the 1835 United Firm Revelations,” Claremont Journal of Mormon Studies, 1/1 (Apr 2011):22, 24, and n. 31.
- ↑ Gee, Interpreter, 42 (2021):157.
- ↑ Pearl of Great Price Central, ““Shinehah, The Sun,” Book of Abraham Insight #16, Oct 23, 2019, online at https://www.pearlofgreatpricecentral.org/shinehah-the-sun/ .
- ↑ Faulkner, Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts, §§340,343,352,359,469,543,594-597,599-600, 802, 1084, 1102, 1138, 1162, 1228,1345,1376-1377,1382,1441,1541,1704,1737,1759,2061,2172,2235.
Bibliography
- Gee, John L. An Introduction to the Book of Abraham. Provo: BYU Religious Studies Center/ SLC: Deseret Book, 2017.