"Kish"
– A Personal Name
By Bruce W. Warren
(Source: New Evidence of Christ in Ancient America,
pp.19-22; Book of Mormon Research Foundation)
Note: The Ancient America Foundation (AAF) is pleased to present AAF Notes:
a series of research articles by scholars of Book of Mormon
culture and history and reviewed by AAF editors. Visit our Web
site: http://www.ancientamerica.org.
The personal
name Kish gives us an especially intriguing connection
between the Book of Mormon Jaredites
and the Olmec culture.
In the Old
Testament in about 1000 B.C., Saul’s father was named Kish
(1
Samuel 9:1). Interestingly, in the book of Ether, a Jaredite
king, King Kish, lived about the same time. The book of Ether’s
account gives little information about King Kish other than
his name. He was the son of a righteous king named Corom
and the father of a righteous king named Lib (Ether 1:18-19;
10:17-19). Thus, King Kish was apparently one of the Jaredite
monarchs.
Within
the past twenty years, a new technique has been developed to
translate Maya hieroglyphs. The process is a complex one that
involves assigning sounds to as many of the glyphs as possible
and then converting the sounds to the Maya language that is
still spoken today by many native Mesoamericans.
Before
the development of this method of translation, little more than
dates could be deciphered from archaeological findings. With
the new procedures, however, significant new information is
now coming to light. For example, the name of the Jaredite
king Kish, as well as his birthday, birthplace, and the
day he ascended to the throne, may have been deciphered.
On the Tablet
of the Cross at Palenque are found engravings that trace the genealogy of
Kan Balam, the son of King Pacal,
who is buried in the great tomb there. Among the names of Kan
Balam’s royal ancestors is found what may be the full name
of King Kish_U-Kish Kan, an ancient
king of the Olmec culture.
Kan means
serpent. One of the meanings of Kish is feathered.
Now that the Maya code is being deciphered, the name of U-Kish
Kan has been translated as “he of the feathered serpent.”
This symbolic
connection between U-Kish Kan with the feathered serpent suggests
a relationship to Jesus Christ, whom the Jaredites
knew to be the Mesoamerican Messiah or the white god of Mesoamerica
who is also known as “the feathered serpent.”
This connection,
in combination with the Old Testament account in which Moses
lifted up the brazen serpent as a similitude of Christ, may
indicate that the serpent motif as a representation of Christ’s
condescension to earth was prominent in both Old and New World
cultures.
U-Kish Kan
was born on Wednesday, 8 March 993 B.C. In San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan
in southern Mexico
an engraved stone known as Monument 47 depicts a king who has
a serpent around his waist and who holds the head of the serpent
in his hands. The serpent has feathers on its head. This monument
is Olmec in style and dates to the
beginning of the first millennium B.C. The monument’s head is
missing, but because of the dating and imagery of the monument,
it could be a representation of Kan Balam’s
ancestor, U-Kish Kan, who took the throne on Wednesday, 25 March
967 B.C. Kish, an Olmec and
a Maya name, is prominent throughout the Jaredite
history of the book of Ether. The component Kish is also
evident in the compound names of two other Jaredite
kings, Riplakish and Akish.
As can be
seen, evidence continues to mount connecting the Jaredite
culture with the Olmec culture. At
the same time, information continues to surface suggesting that
the Jaredite/Olmec culture knew about
Jesus Christ as the Messiah-Redeemer – the Mesoamerican Messiah.
__
Copyright
© 1999-2002 Ancient America Foundation. This message may be forwarded with
identifying information. For more information or to subscribe
or unsubscribe to “AAF Notes”or utilize
the AAF order form, visit http://www.ancientamerica.org
and click “Contact us”. Refer, by e-mail, comments or questions
to
aaf@ancientamerica