Where Was Zarahemla?
Zarahemla is the central city of the Book of Mormon narrative. It functions as the political capital, military hub, judicial center, and population crossroads for much of the Nephite record. Because of this, any proposed Book of Mormon geography must place Zarahemla in a location that satisfies a large number of textual, geographic, and logistical constraints.
This page explains why the Ohio River–Scioto River confluence region (modern Portsmouth, Ohio) fits those constraints better than most alternatives, based on the internal logic of the Book of Mormon text.
What the Book of Mormon Requires for Zarahemla
Before proposing a location, we first identify what the text itself demands.
Below are the key requirements for Zarahemla, followed by how this location meets them.
✅ 1. Zarahemla Must Be Located on a Major River
Textual requirements:
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Zarahemla is repeatedly associated with the river Sidon
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Armies move along Sidon
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Battles occur near Sidon
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People cross Sidon near the city
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Sidon has identifiable headwaters and flows downstream
Why Portsmouth, Ohio fits:
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The Scioto River:
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Has clear headwaters to the south
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Flows northward to a major river (the Ohio)
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Is fordable in places
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Behaves exactly like Sidon does in the text
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Zarahemla itself is near Sidon, but not described as sitting directly on a crossing point (that role belongs to Gideon)
✔ Requirement satisfied
✅ 2. Zarahemla Must Be Centrally Located Between Major Regions
Textual requirements:
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Zarahemla lies between:
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The Land of Nephi (south)
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The Land Northward (north)
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Travel from Zarahemla to surrounding cities is measured in days, not months
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It functions as a hub, not an edge
Why this location fits:
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Portsmouth sits naturally:
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South of the Great Lakes / Land Northward
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North of the Appalachian uplands / Land of Nephi
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It is geographically central within the proposed Nephite lands
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All major directional movements in the text work cleanly from this point
✔ Requirement satisfied
✅ 3. Zarahemla Must Be Accessible by Water Travel
Textual requirements:
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The Mulekites arrive by boat and settle Zarahemla
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The city supports population growth without describing a long overland migration
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Rivers function as major travel corridors
Why this location fits:
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The Ohio River system allows:
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Travel from the Gulf of Mexico deep into the interior
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Movement without crossing major mountain barriers
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From an ancient perspective, this is one of the most accessible inland locations on the continent
✔ Requirement satisfied
✅ 4. Zarahemla Must Support Large Populations and Agriculture
Textual requirements:
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Zarahemla supports:
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Dense population
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Courts and judges
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Repeated military musters
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It is not described as marginal or fragile land
Why this location fits:
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The Ohio River and Scioto valleys are:
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Fertile floodplains
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Well-watered
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Capable of sustaining large agrarian societies
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The region naturally supports long-term settlement
✔ Requirement satisfied
✅ 5. Zarahemla Must Be Near Strategic Crossing Points
Textual requirements:
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Nearby cities (like Gideon) are associated with river crossings
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Military campaigns hinge on controlling these crossings
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Refugees flee to nearby locations rapidly
Why this location fits:
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The lower Scioto region historically contains:
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Multiple natural fords
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Constricted river sections ideal for crossings
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Gideon fits naturally as a satellite city near, but not inside, Zarahemla
✔ Requirement satisfied
✅ 6. Zarahemla Must Be Defensible but Not Isolated
Textual requirements:
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Zarahemla is threatened, but not easily overrun
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It relies on surrounding cities and borderlands for defense
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It is not located in extreme wilderness or mountains
Why this location fits:
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River confluences provide:
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Natural defensive advantages
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Early warning corridors
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The surrounding terrain allows:
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Defensive depth
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Movement of armies
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Support from nearby cities (Manti, Gideon, Melek)
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✔ Requirement satisfied
✅ 7. Proximity to Other Known Book of Mormon Cities
When placed at Portsmouth, Zarahemla works relationally with many other cities described in the text:
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Gideon → nearby river crossing on Sidon
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Manti → upstream near Sidon headwaters and wilderness
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Melek → northward intermediate city
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Ammonihah → inland north/northwest region
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Antionum → eastern frontier uplands
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Jershon → buffer land further east
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Bountiful (north) → reachable toward the Land Northward
These relationships match the directions, distances, and travel narratives in the Book of Mormon.
✔ Requirement satisfied
Archaeological Plausibility (Not Proof)
This model does not claim that archaeological remains can be definitively labeled “Zarahemla.” However, archaeology is used to test plausibility.
What archaeology shows for this region:
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Evidence of large, organized prehistoric societies
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Extensive earthworks, settlements, and trade networks
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Long-term habitation during the relevant time periods
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River-based transportation and interaction spheres
This demonstrates that the region is capable of supporting a city like Zarahemla, even if specific identifications remain uncertain.
✔ Plausibility supported
Why This Location Works Overall
When all constraints are considered together, the Ohio River–Scioto River confluence region stands out because it:
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Requires no reinterpretation of the text
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Preserves ancient travel realism
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Explains the central role of rivers
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Allows all major narratives to function coherently
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Integrates naturally with surrounding cities and lands
This does not prove Zarahemla was here — but it shows that this location works exceptionally well under a careful, text-first methodology.
Summary Checklist
✔ On a major river (Sidon)
✔ Centrally located
✔ Water-accessible by ancient travel
✔ Agriculturally productive
✔ Near key crossings
✔ Defensible but connected
✔ Fits all surrounding city relationships
✔ Archaeologically plausible
Final Note
This model is presented transparently and provisionally. Its strength lies not in certainty, but in internal consistency. Readers are encouraged to examine the text themselves and test whether this location explains the Book of Mormon narrative better than alternatives.
