. . . . "2622921"^^ . . . . . . . . "1112715275"^^ . . . "Amaleki"@en . . . . . . . . . "4402"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . "According to the Book of Mormon, Amaleki (/\u0259\u02C8m\u00E6l\u0259ka\u026A/) was a Nephite record keeper (ca 130 BC). He received the plates of Nephi from his father Abinadom, and penned 18 verses in the Book of Omni (Omni 1:12-30). He was the last person to write in the small plates of Nephi. Before his death, Amaleki passed the Nephite record to King Benjamin, who was the son of Mosiah."@en . . . . . . . . "Sometime after 279 B.C."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Nephite record keeper of the small plates"@en . "According to the Book of Mormon, Amaleki (/\u0259\u02C8m\u00E6l\u0259ka\u026A/) was a Nephite record keeper (ca 130 BC). He received the plates of Nephi from his father Abinadom, and penned 18 verses in the Book of Omni (Omni 1:12-30). He was the last person to write in the small plates of Nephi. In his brief contribution to the Book of Mormon, Amaleki relates the flight of King Mosiah I and his people from the land of Nephi, and the subsequent discovery of the people and land of Zarahemla, who, like the Nephites, were descendants of the Israelites of the old world. Amaleki's writing also introduce the Jaredites for the first time in the Book of Mormon, since the people of Zarahemla had contact with Coriantumr, the last surviving Jaredite. Before his death, Amaleki passed the Nephite record to King Benjamin, who was the son of Mosiah."@en . .