Golden Plates on Display
in Bulgaria
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America Foundation (AAF) is pleased to present AAF Notes: a
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The world's oldest multiple-page book —
in the lost Etruscan language
— has gone on display in Bulgaria's
National History Museum in Sofia. And something about that book
has particular interest for Latter-day Saints.
As is evident from the photograph, this
book was created on metal plates that are bound together with
metal rings ? similar to the original source documents that
became the Book of Mormon.

The book dates back to 600 B.C., which is roughly
the time that Lehi and his family left Jerusalem.
The small manuscript,
which is more than two and a half millennia old, was discovered
60 years ago in a tomb uncovered during digging for a canal
along the Strouma River in southwestern Bulgaria. It has now
been donated to the museum by its finder, on condition of anonymity.
Reports say the unidentified donor
is now 87 years old and lives in Macedonia.The
authenticity of the book has been confirmed by two experts in
Sofia and London, museum director Bojidar Dimitrov said quoted
by AFP. The six sheets are believed to be the oldest comprehensive
work involving multiple pages, said Elka Penkova, who heads
the museum's archaeological department.
There are around 30 similar pages known in the world, Ms Penkova
said, "but they are not linked together in a book".
The Etruscans
—
one of Europe's most mysterious ancient peoples —
are believed to have migrated from Lydia, in modern western
Turkey, settling in northern and central Italy nearly 3,000
years ago.
They were wiped out by the conquering Romans in the fourth century
BC, leaving few written records.
AAF note: We wish to thank Jeff Brooks
for bringing this very interesting discovery article to our
attention. The long debated question about bound metal records
existing in the Middle East 2500 years ago as claimed by the
Book of Mormon can now be put to rest. Critics should take note
and check that item off their list of objections to the authenticity
of the Book of Mormon.
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