Ammonihah
Encyclopedia
Ammonihah is a city mentioned in the Book of Mormon
Book of Mormon
The Book of Mormon is a sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement that adherents believe contains writings of ancient prophets who lived on the American continent from approximately 2600 BC to AD 421. It was first published in March 1830 by Joseph Smith, Jr...

. According to the book, the city was founded by an otherwise unknown man named Ammonihah. The inhabitants of Ammonihah were followers of the religion of Nehor
Nehor
Nehor was the name of the Nephite founder of an apostate sect mentioned in the Book of Mormon, around 90 BC . In opposition to the Church of God headed by Alma the Younger, Nehor zealously preached the following doctrines:...

.

Ammonihah was a city with a diverse population. A large portion of the people were descendants of Nephi, Zoram, Sam, Jacob, Joseph, Nephi’s sisters, and others who had separated themselves from the Lamanites five hundred years earlier. (2 Ne. 5:6.) Also living among the Nephites in Ammonihah in 82 B.C. were some of the people of Zarahemla—Mulekites who forty years earlier outnumbered the Nephites and could still be distinguished from them. (Omni 1:19; Mosiah 25:2, 4.) Descendants of the priests of Noah and daughters of the Lamanites were another segment of the population. (Mosiah 25:12.) It is entirely possible that full-blooded Lamanites were also in Ammonihah at this time: missionary work by the sons of Mosiah had instigated friendly relations between some Lamanites and Nephites, and Ammonihah was apparently close to the border between Nephite and Lamanite land. (See Alma 23:18. For location of Ammonihah, see Alma 8:3, 6; Alma 22:28; Alma 25:2.) The diversity of peoples in Ammonihah was great enough that when Amulek introduced himself to Alma, he first identified himself by saying, “I am a Nephite.” (Alma 8:20.)

After Alma the Younger
Alma the Younger
According to the Book of Mormon, Alma, the son of Alma was a Nephite prophet often referred to as "Alma the Younger" to distinguish him from his father, who is often referred to as "Alma the Elder"...

 had visited several cities, setting the church in order and preaching, he went to Ammonihah to do the same, but was rejected by the people. As he left the city to preach elsewhere, he saw an angel (the same angel who had confronted him prior to his conversion) and was instructed to return to Ammonihah and preach that the inhabitants of the city would be destroyed unless they repented because the Lord declared: "they do study at this time that they may destroy the liberty of thy people, (for thus saith the Lord) which is contrary to the statutes, and judgments, and commandments which he has given unto his people." On returning, Alma met a resident of Ammonihah named Amulek
Amulek
Amulek is a key figure from the Book of Alma, a section of the Book of Mormon.-Mission to Ammonihah:According to Alma, chapters 8-14, Amulek, in 82 B.C., accompanied the prophet Alma the Younger on a mission to the wicked city of Ammonihah, where he preached the Gospel and contended with the...

, who gave Alma food and lodging and joined him in his efforts to preach.

Engaging in a verbal confrontation with a lawyer named Zeezrom
Zeezrom
According to the Book of Mormon, Zeezrom was an ancient American lawyer who sought to destroy the liberty of the Nephites via his legal practice. He was converted to the gospel by Alma the Younger and his missionary companion Amulek...

, Amulek was able to discern his thoughts by the Power of the Holy Ghost and confound him. Alma then stepped forward and began warning the people that they would be destroyed if they did not repent and believe in the Son of God, even Jesus Christ, and obey his commandments. Many of the inhabitants of Ammonihah were converted through the preaching of Alma and Amulek, but their message was rejected by most of the people. The leaders, lawyers, and judges of the city of Ammonihah then brought Alma and Amulek before their chief judge, accusing them of denouncing their laws and of teaching that God's Son would come among the people but would not save them.

Zeezrom, now convinced of Alma and Amulek's righteousness, started speaking in their defense, but he and the other men who had been converted were driven out of the city, and their wives and children were burnt alive along with their scriptures. Forced to watch, Alma and Amulek were threatened with a similar fate, then imprisoned. After several days of mistreatment in prison, Alma and Amulek were confronted again by the lawyers, teachers, and judges of Ammonihah and challenged to show the power of God. Alma called on God, he and Amulek were freed from their bonds, and the prison tumbled down, killing the city leaders but leaving Alma and Amulek unharmed. When the people rushed to the prison to see what had happened and saw Alma and Amulek standing amidst the ruins, they fled in fear.

Alma and Amulek went to the nearby land of Sidom and found the men who had been expelled from Ammonihah for their belief — including Zeezrom, whom Alma healed of a fever and baptized. A few months later, an invading Lamanite
Lamanite
According to the Book of Mormon, a Lamanite is a member of a dark-skinned nation of indigenous Americans that battled with the light-skinned Nephite nation...

 army destroyed the city of Ammonihah and killed all its inhabitants. The dead were piled in a heap and covered with earth; on account of its stench, the site became known as Desolation of Nehors and remained uninhabited for many years.

Nine years later, in 72 BC, Ammonihah was rebuilt, and the Lamanites, under King Amalickiah
Amalickiah
In the Book of Mormon, Amalickiah was a Nephite leader of a movement to reestablish a king, specifically him as the king of the Nephites. When he failed to gain power through a popular uprising he dissented to the Lamanites becoming their king and using them as a means to gain power over the...

, were ordered to attack it, but since the king was not there, they left Ammonihah to attack Noah, instead.
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