TIMOTHY: Difference between revisions

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|Apostle, ca. 30 AD ([http://scriptures.lds.org/en/3_ne/19/4#4 3 Nephi 19:4])
|Apostle, ca. 30 AD ([http://scriptures.lds.org/en/3_ne/19/4#4 3 Nephi 19:4])
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|}
'''Etymology'''


Apparently Greek, cf. NT ''timoeos'', '''TIMOTHY'''. Nibley notes that T<small>IMOTHY</small> is an Ionian name and that the Greeks in Palestine were Ionians (as evidenced by the fact that the  
Apparently Greek, cf. NT ''timoeos'', '''TIMOTHY'''. Nibley notes that T<small>IMOTHY</small> is an Ionian name and that the Greeks in Palestine were Ionians (as evidenced by the fact that the  
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that the Mulekites were actually accompanied by an ethnic Greek, and/or that some Greek names were preserved by them.  
that the Mulekites were actually accompanied by an ethnic Greek, and/or that some Greek names were preserved by them.  


==Notes==
'''Variants'''
 
'''Deseret Alphabet:'''
 
'''Notes'''
----
<references/>
<references/>


[[Category:Names]][[Category:Lehite PN]]
[[Category:Names]][[Category:Lehite PN]]

Revision as of 13:12, 11 June 2012

Lehite PN 1. Apostle, ca. 30 AD (3 Nephi 19:4)

Etymology

Apparently Greek, cf. NT timoeos, TIMOTHY. Nibley notes that TIMOTHY is an Ionian name and that the Greeks in Palestine were Ionians (as evidenced by the fact that the name for Greeks in Hebrew derives from this term) (ABM, 238, LID, 34). Sperry, Book of Mormon Testifies, p. 305, also made similar observations.

With a Greek presence in the Levant at least since the eighth century,[1] it is possible that a Greek name could have been preserved by the Lehites. It is also possible that the Mulekites were actually accompanied by an ethnic Greek, and/or that some Greek names were preserved by them.

Variants

Deseret Alphabet:

Notes


  1. For a study of the relations between ASSYRIA and Greece at an early state, see Giovani B. Lanfranchi, “The Ideological and Political Impact of the Assyrian Imperial Expansion on the Greek World in the 8th and 7th Centuries BC,” The Heirs of Assyria, Melammu Symposia I, ed. Sanna Aro and R. M. Whiting (Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 2000), 7-34. For instance, “by the second half of the 7th century, a slow but progressive decline of the Phœnician trade took place in favour of the Greek” (p. 9), including battles between the ASSYRIANS and the Greeks as early as the late 8th century, indicating that Greek influence become more prominent in the Levant at about the same time LEHI was born and founded his own family.