ANTUM

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ANTUM

Nephite (?) GN	Land north of Desolation, where the hill Shim is located, ca. 321 AD (Mormon 1:3)

Because Antum is north of the narrow neck of land, it may be Jaredite or an indigenous GN. An Egyptian etymology is also possible, *`n.tm(w), “many waters, 10,000 
waters” (RFS). 

Notes
Unlikely is Akkadian antum, female divinity and consort of Anum. The ending -um is a nominative singular case ending and would not have been borrowed into biblical 
Hebrew. The best known example of Hebrew borrowing from Akkadian, ekallum (itself a borrowing from Sumerian é.gal) > hkl, “temple, palace,” appears in Hebrew 
without the case ending. 

See also the king of Ashdod during Sennacherib’s Third Campaign, Mi-ti-in-ti (Col II, line 54).

Cf. Book of Mormon Onti, AniAnti, Antiomno, Antion, Antionah, Antionum, Antiparah, Antipas, Antipus, AntiNephiLehi, Seantum, Moriantum, Coriantum, and especially
Irreantum