The Source
In short, the biblical account is ambiguous and open to interpretation.
As a result, both ancient and modern authors have located the Garden of
Eden everywhere from Iran and Mongolia to South America and even Jackson
County, Missouri.
“Reprinted with permission of the National Geographic Society from the
book From Eden to Exile: Unraveling Mysteries of the Bible by Eric H.
Cline. Copyright ©2007 Eric H. Cline.”
By Eric H. Cline
Chair, Department of Classical and Semitic Languages and Literatures
The George Washington University
October 2009
====================================
See also:
Politics and Propaganda: The Use and Abuse of Ancient Conflicts in the Modern Battle for Jerusalem
Did David and Solomon Exist?
The Distortion of Archaeology and What We Can Do About It:
====================================
In trying to determine where the Garden of Eden might have been located,
we have an immediate problem, because while the biblical description is
quite detailed, it is also fairly succinct. We are told only that:
The Lord God planted a garden in Eden, in the east; and there he put the
man whom he had formed. . . . A river flows out of Eden to water the
garden, and from there it divides and becomes four branches. The name of
the first is Pishon; it is the one that flows around the whole land of
Havilah, where there is gold; and the gold of that land is good;
bdellium and onyx stone are there. The name of the second river is
Gihon; it is the one that flows around the whole land of Cush. The name
of the third river is Tigris, which flows east of Assyria. And the
fourth river is the Euphrates. (Genesis 2:8-14)
We have little to corroborate the biblical account just presented,
because there are no other independent sources of textual evidence for
the Garden of Eden. Unfortunately, as we noted in the introduction, most
ancient historians and archaeologists generally want several separate
sources of evidence before they will believe something to be factually
substantiated, and that is simply not possible in the case of the Garden
of Eden.
This is not the only time we will run into this problem, especially when
dealing with topics found in the first 11 chapters of the Book of
Genesis. These early chapters—which include accounts of the Creation,
the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve, and the biblical Flood—are very
different from those that follow, in large part because of the nature of
the evidence surrounding the stories. It is always difficult to
determine how much material in the Bible can be taken as true history,
in our definition of the term today, and how much material is instead
presented to illustrate an ethical or moral point.
Many scholars would agree that it is only when we get into periods
marked by the invention of writing (that is, after 3000 b.c.) that we
have any hope of corroborating the biblical accounts. This means that
the stories presented in the first chapters of Genesis may be more
difficult to corroborate than stories that appear later in Genesis and
certainly much harder to corroborate than stories that appear in the
other books of the Hebrew Bible.
Thus, we must deal with the biblical description of the Garden of Eden
on its own, and make of it what we will. Fortunately, two of the four
rivers mentioned in the biblical account are well known: the Tigris and
Euphrates rivers in Mesopotamia (modern Iraq). We should note that the
original biblical text doesn’t actually name the third river as
“Tigris”; instead the text says “Hiddekel.” However, we know from
elsewhere in the Bible (for example, Daniel 10:4) that this is a
reference to the Tigris River, so most modern translations of the Bible
simply call it the “Tigris” to reduce potential confusion. Similarly,
the Euphrates is referred to in the original biblical text as “Prat,”
the Hebrew rendition of the Babylonian and Assyrian words for the river
that was located next to the city of Babylon (the Euphrates). Again,
most modern translations of the Bible simply say “Euphrates” without
further explanation.
The other two rivers are less well known, and herein lies the problem of
determining where the Garden of Eden was located. The Bible says that
the Gihon River surrounded the land of Cush, while the Pishon River
flowed around the land of Havilah. Some researchers identify the land of
Havilah as southern Arabia, but this is merely a hypothesis. As for the
land of Cush, although we know that it was really in Africa, the Bible
seems to connect it with Mesopotamia (Genesis 10:8). However, as
Alessandro Scafi notes in Mapping Paradise: A History of Heaven on
Earth: “From the time of Augustine [fifth century a.d.] to the
Renaissance, the most learned scholars in all Europe, Africa and Asia,
agreed that the Gihon and the Pishon were the Nile and the Ganges, an
idea put forward by the firstcentury [a.d.] Jewish historian Flavius
Josephus.” After the Renaissance, speculation began anew.
In short, the biblical account is ambiguous and open to interpretation.
As a result, both ancient and modern authors have located the Garden of
Eden everywhere from Iran and Mongolia to South America and even Jackson
County, Missouri (according to Joseph Smith, Jr., founder of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, better known today as the Mormon
Church).
Most scholars who have written recently about the Garden of Eden,
however, usually place it in or around ancient Mesopotamia—anywhere from
the Persian Gulf to southern Turkey. This makes some sense from a
textual point of view, because not only does the biblical account say
that the garden lay “in the east” (meaning to the east of Israel), but
it also mentions the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in connection with the
Garden of Eden. In fact, the Greek meaning of the very word
“Mesopotamia” is “the land between the [two] rivers,” a reference to the
Tigris and Euphrates Rivers.
No earlier tales from ancient Mesopotamia can provide us with an exact
parallel for the Garden of Eden story, but the Sumerians who lived in
this region during the third millennium b.c. apparently did have the
word “Eden” in their language. Scholars have suggested that the
Sumerians adopted this word from an even earlier people—the Ubaidians,
who lived in the region from approximately 5500 to 3500 b.c.—and many of
them think the word should be translated as “fertile plain.” Moreover,
there is one Sumerian paradise myth about a land of plenty called
“Dilmun,” which scholars today suggest may well be modern- day Bahrain
in the Persian Gulf. The myth, known as “Enki and Ninhursag,” describes
Dilmun as being turned into a paradise when the Sumerian god Enki gave
it the gift of water:
The land Dilmun is pure, the land Dilmun is clean;
The land Dilmun is clean, the land Dilmun is most bright.
. . .
Her well of bitter water, verily it is become a well of sweet water,
Her furrowed fields and farms bore her grain,
Her city, verily it is become the bank-quay house of the land Dilmun. . . .
There are also creation stories from this area that have striking
similarities to the story found in Genesis. The most famous of these is
the myth called Enuma Elish (When on High), which has long been noted
for its biblical parallels. It begins as follows:
When on high the heaven had not been named, Firm ground below had not
been called by name, Naught but primordial Apsu, their begetter, [And]
Mummu-Tiamat, she who bore them all, Their waters commingling as a
single body; No reed hut had been matted, no marsh land had appeared,
When no gods whatever had been brought into being, Uncalled by name,
their destinies undetermined— Then it was that the gods were formed
within them.
This myth is sometimes referred to as the Babylonian Genesis because of
the obvious parallels to the account in the Hebrew Bible, and yet it is
hundreds of years older than the Bible. Scholars generally agree that
the Hebrew Bible as we have it today was compiled from various sources,
which were written down as early as the tenth or ninth century b.c. and
late as the sixth or fifth century b.c. Even the earliest parts of the
Bible, such as the source called J by biblical scholars, do not date
earlier than the tenth or ninth century b.c., hundreds of years after
Enuma Elish was written.
In fact, surprising as it may seem to some, it is Mesopotamia that had a
tremendous impact on later biblical Israel—for this area, during the
course of more than 9,000 years, from 10,000 b.c. to 1500 b.c., gave
rise to inventions, techniques, ideas, stories, and even laws that were
still in use centuries later in Israel and Judah. It is in Mesopotamia,
for instance, that we find Hammurabi’s Law Code, which gave us “an eye
for an eye, a tooth for a tooth” hundreds of years before the Bible. It
is in Mesopotamia that Abraham and the Patriarchs had their origins. And
it is in Mesopotamia that we find earlier accounts—Sumerian,
Babylonian, and Akkadian—of the Flood and of Noah’s ark. In these
accounts, Noah is instead named Ziusudra, Atrahasis, and Utnapishtim,
and the Flood is sent not because humankind is evil and has sinned but
because humankind is too noisy and is keeping the gods awake.
Enuma Elish in particular is a good example of what I would call a
transmitted narrative: a story that was handed down from generation to
generation and culture to culture in the ancient Near East. One of the
best ways to explain both the similarities and the differences between
the details in this myth and the biblical story found in Genesis is to
suggest that the original Mesopotamian story (or the concepts contained
within it) may have been passed down from the Sumerians in the third
millennium b.c. to the Babylonians, Assyrians, and the peoples of Ugarit
and Canaan in the second millennium b.c. and then to the Israelites,
eventually making its way into the Hebrew Bible in the first millennium
b.c. Additional examples of such transmitted narratives include portions
of the Epic of Gilgamesh and Hammurabi’s Law Code, both of which, as we
shall see, are probably reflected in the Hebrew Bible.
In trying to locate the Garden of Eden by using archaeological evidence,
of principal interest to us is the fact that the first plants and
animals were domesticated some 10,000 to 12,000 years ago in a wide
swath of land stretching across what is now modern Iraq, northern Syria,
and southern Turkey. This took place during the so-called neolithic
revolution (a reference to the revolutionary ideas that resulted in the
origins of agriculture).
This general region—encompassing Mesopotamia and beyond—has been dubbed
the Fertile Crescent by archaeologists. It was here that sheep, goats,
cattle, and even dogs were first domesticated, and it was here that the
idea of actually growing wheat, barley, einkorn, and other grains was
first put into practice, as opposed to just picking the wild varieties
at random each year.
This area may have also become somewhat of an agricultural paradise for
the local residents following the invention of irrigation during the
fourth millennium b.c. Archaeologists have long understood that sometime
during the period of 4000 to 3000 b.c., the various towns and villages
in this region gradually turned to irrigation agriculture. From this, it
is thought, first city-states, then kingdoms, and eventually even
empires emerged as a result of the need to work together to create such
large-scale projects. Whether or not this hypothesis is correct, it is
clear that the region was literally made to bloom in the centuries
before the Sumerian civilization arose near the end of the fourth
millennium b.c.
Since both the invention of agriculture and the invention of irrigation
occurred in the region of Mesopotamia, we should not be surprised that
some scholars have suggested the original Garden of Eden might have been
located in or near this area.
Persian Gulf Region—For instance, based on a variety of environmental,
geological, and archaeological data, Juris Zarins, professor of
anthropology at Southwest Missouri State University, has suggested that
the original location of the Garden of Eden is now underwater, at the
head of the Persian Gulf, near Bahrain. It was into this gulf that the
Tigris and Euphrates Rivers spilled their water in antiquity. Nearby,
the Karun River—which bears a similar name to the Bible’s Gihon
River—flows southwest through Iran toward the Persian Gulf. Landsat
images suggest that other rivers, now long dried up, flowed through the
region as well.
According to Zarins, geological and archaeological evidence suggest that
this area was subjected to changes in water level, resulting in the
expansion and contraction of the Persian Gulf coastline over time. The
southernmost part of Mesopotamia was finally flooded for good sometime
between 5000 and 4000 b.c. as part of a worldwide event scientists call
the Flandrian Transgression. This transgression caused gulf waters to
rise and cover large sections of what had once been dry land in
Mesopotamia. It is this region that formed the southeastern portion of
the Fertile Crescent, and it is in this region that we find the
Sumerians in the fourth and third millennia b.c.
Several decades before Zarins, the esteemed archaeologist and biblical
scholar Ephraim A. Speiser, who was a professor and chairman of the
Department of Oriental Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, made a
similar suggestion. In a brief article entitled “The Rivers of
Paradise,” Speiser hypothesizes that the Garden of Eden lay near the
head of the Persian Gulf, where the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers came
together, although he did not suggest that the garden was presently
underwater. After examining the biblical text in detail, as well as
additional factors such as the local geography in Mesopotamia, Speiser
states that “the biblical text, the traditions of ancient Mesopotamia,
the geographic history of the land at the head of the Persian Gulf, and
the surviving building practices in that marshy country point jointly to
an older garden land, richly watered, and favored by religion and
literature alike—the kind of Paradise, in short, that local tradition
still locates at the confluence of the Euphrates and the Tigris.”
Arabian Peninsula—A second possibility for the location of the Garden of
Eden, which has been suggested on the basis of scientific data, is the
nearby Arabian Peninsula. The late James Sauer, a professor at the
University of Pennsylvania and Harvard University, wrote, “With the use
of remote sensing technology, Boston University geologist Farouk El-Baz
has traced a major, partially underground, sand river channel from the
mountains of Hijaz to Kuwait, which he has named the Kuwait River.”
Sauer cautiously suggests that this river, which dried up sometime
between 3500 and 2000 b.c., might be linked with the biblical Pishon
River, since the account also mentions bdellium (an aromatic resin) and
onyx (a semiprecious stone), both of which are found in Yemen, on the
Arabian Peninsula.
For Sauer, however, the key lies in the biblical phrase “the gold of
that land is good,” for the only large deposit of gold in the area is
found at the site of Mahd edh-Dhahab (“cradle of gold”) near the
headwaters of this Kuwait river. He concludes, “No other river would
seem to fit the Biblical description” and that “the Kuwait river could
well be the Pishon of the Bible.” We should note, however, that it seems
to be this same “fossil river” that Zarins also suggests could be the
Pishon River, but he uses it to place the Garden of Eden underwater in
the Persian Gulf, rather than on the Arabian Peninsula.
Iran—More recently, British archaeologist David Rohl claims to have
located the Garden of Eden in Iran, near the modern city of Tabriz. Rohl
has a degree in ancient history and Egyptology from University College
London, and believes that scholars have wrongly dated portions of
ancient history. Although his earlier work was concerned with the second
and first millennia b.c., Rohl has moved backward in time and is now
working on material connected with Genesis and the books of the Hebrew
Bible.
Utilizing the work done by an earlier scholar named Reginald Walker,
Rohl suggests that the biblical Gihon and Pishon Rivers are respectively
the Aras (or Araxes) River—which reportedly was previously known as the
Gaihun River—and the Uizhun River in Iran. Rohl posits that when these
rivers are combined with the Tigris and the Euphrates Rivers, the
headwaters for all four rivers are in the approximate region of the
Garden of Eden. He also identifies “Noqdi,” an area east of his Eden, as
the biblical land of Nod, where Cain was exiled after killing his
brother, Abel. Rohl first proposed this hypothesis in his 1998 book,
Legend: The Genesis of Civilisation, but his suggestions have not caught
on with the scholarly establishment. His argument is not helped by the
fact that it depends upon speculations regarding the transmission of
place-names for both the various rivers and nearby related areas from
antiquity to the present. In the end, while Rohl’s suggestion is not out
of the question, it seems no more probable than any other hypothesis,
and less likely than those suggested by Speiser, Zarins, and Sauer.
Egypt—Two years after Rohl’s hypothesis was first published, Gary
Greenberg, a criminal defense attorney based in New York City, suggested
in his book 101 Myths of the Bible that the Garden of Eden was located
in Egypt. At first, this seems to make some sense, since Egypt lies in
Africa, and most physical anthropologists and other scientists believe
that humans originated in Africa and migrated outward from there, long
before the Sumerians—or their legends—ever existed.
Greenberg believes that the Garden of Eden was actually located at
Heliopolis, on the banks of the Nile River in Egypt, where Egyptian
tradition places the Tree of Life. He hypothesizes that the Garden of
Eden story derives from the Egyptian (Heliopolitan) Creation myths.
Eden, he says, was originally the “Isle of Flames”—the first land
referred to in these Egyptian Creation myths—which was situated at
Heliopolis.
However, Greenberg’s hypothesis depends in large part upon his argument
that the four rivers mentioned in the biblical account were all
originally tributaries of the Nile and that only later, when the Judeans
were carried off to Babylon in the sixth century b.c., were the names
of two of the rivers changed from branches of the Nile to the two
Mesopotamian rivers (the Tigris and the Euphrates). Greenberg suggests
that whoever changed the names of the rivers was “someone familiar with
Babylonian traditions but not knowledgeable about African geography” and
that the “flames associated with the original isle were transformed
into fiery swords wielded by cherubs.”
Like Rohl’s hypothesis, Greenberg’s suggestion cannot be dismissed
outright, but it seems a stretch to postulate that ancient authors or
editors changed the names of rivers and tributaries and moved these
rivers and other details from Egypt to Mesopotamia. As a result,
Greenberg’s suggestion has not received wide acceptance from the
scholarly establishment. Given the rest of the textual and
archaeological evidence, Mesopotamia seems a much more likely location,
despite the early origins of humanity in Africa.
Turkey—In 2001, Michael S. Sanders, a self-taught “Biblical Scholar of
Archaeology, Egyptology and Assyriology,” announced that he had located
the Garden of Eden in Turkey. In January 2001, Sanders was quoted in the
Canadian National Post, the Chicago Sun-Times, and the Daily Mail as
saying his research indicates that all of the earliest Bible stories
occurred in what is now Turkey, and not in the Persian Gulf as
previously believed. “The Garden of Eden, the Flood, the Tower of Babel,
the story of Abraham—all took place in a relatively small area between
the Black Sea in the North and the Ararat Range in the East,” he stated.
Using photographs taken by NASA satellites, Sanders identified the four
rivers of Eden as the Murat River, the Tigris, the Euphrates, and the
north fork of the Euphrates. “It is just remarkable that there are
actually four rivers in this region in Turkey,” he said, adding that
this “proves the Bible’s description of the Garden of Eden is
completely, and literally, accurate.” As we shall see in the following
chapters, since 1998 Sanders also claims to have pinpointed the location
of the Ark of the Covenant, the Ten Commandments, Solomon’s Temple,
Sodom and Gomorrah, and the Tower of Babel. Such additional claims may
or may not affect our appreciation of his assertions regarding the
Garden of Eden, as will the observation that Sanders has apparently made
his identification based primarily on NASA photographs and an a priori
assumption that the Bible is “completely, and literally, accurate.” Even
if Sanders were correct, we would need more facts on the ground before
we could decide whether he has proven his case.
It is hard to put the Garden of Eden into historical context, for it
belongs to the realm of prehistory, if not myth or legend. In fact, much
of the material found in the first 11 chapters of Genesis—especially
the stories— seem to be more literary than historical. Even biblical
scholars refer to Genesis 1-11 as the Primeval History and separate it
from chapters 12-50, the Patriarchal Tales. Robert Alter, translator of
The Five Books of Moses, observes: “The Primeval History, in contrast to
what follows in Genesis, cultivates a kind of narrative that is
fablelike or legendary, and sometimes residually mythic.” We should also
note the words of renowned scholar Ephraim Speiser, who wrote in his
commentary on Genesis that “it should be borne in mind that the Primeval
History is but a general preface to a much larger work, a preface about
a remote age which comes to life in Mesopotamia and for which that land
alone furnishes the necessary historical and cultural records.”
It is conceivable, however, that there is a historical kernel of truth
at the base of the Garden of Eden story, because, as Speiser notes, “To
the writer of the account in Gen. 2:8 . . . the Garden of Eden was
obviously a geographic reality.” If there is some historical truth to
the account, it would seem to be the fact that the region of Mesopotamia
was home to the Fertile Crescent, which stretched in an arc from the
Persian Gulf to southern Turkey and saw the origins of agriculture and
the first domestication of animals from approximately 10,000 b.c.
onward. It may well be that both the various Mesopotamian myths and the
stories in the Hebrew Bible have their origins in the simple fact that
it was this region that first saw the flowering of agriculture, both
back during the original neolithic revolution around 10,000 b.c. and
then again during the introduction of irrigation during the fourth
millennium b.c.
So where is, or was, the Garden of Eden? The available evidence is
rather thin, and so this may be the least satisfying of our quests.
However, there is—or at least there was before the beginning of the
second Gulf War in 2003—a battered sign standing at the site of Querna
in Iraq, where the Tigris and the Euphrates join near the modern (and
ancient) cities of Basra and Ur, welcoming travelers to the “Original
Garden of Eden.” Is this merely wishful thinking? Is it merely
coincidence that this is the same general region where Speiser suggested
that the Garden of Eden would have been?
Bearing in mind that every suggestion that has been made to date is
merely a hypothesis, I think that those suggestions that take into
account both the textual evidence of earlier Mesopotamian literature and
the archaeological data concerning the origins of agriculture and the
domestication of animals in the Fertile Crescent, as well as the
introduction of irrigation, are most likely to be on the right track.
Thus, I would follow Speiser and suggest that the Garden of Eden, if it
existed, is most likely to have been located somewhere in the region of
Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent, perhaps even near the site of
Querna, just as the battered sign says.
However, if Zarins is correct that portions of Mesopotamia were flooded
at some point, then his proposal that the Garden of Eden lies in this
general region but under the headwaters of the Persian Gulf is
reasonably plausible. Sauer’s suggestion of the Arabian Peninsula as the
location of the Garden of Eden is also conceivable, while Rohl’s
suggestion of Iran, Sanders’s suggestion of Turkey, and Greenberg’s
suggestion of Egypt follow in descending order of plausibility. Joseph
Smith’s suggestion of Jackson County, Missouri, lags far behind, but is
kept company by numerous other similarly implausible suggestions that we
will not discuss here.
In the end, we are left with a final compelling question: How can anyone
really hope to find the Garden of Eden, especially given what has been
said about the Primeval History within the Book of Genesis? Even if the
garden once was a real place, and even if we know the general location
for where it might have been, how would we know its physical parameters,
since there were no ancient signs or inscriptions at the entrance to
the garden (for writing hadn’t been invented yet)?
So how will we know if we really found it? The answer is that we won’t.
As Victor Hurowitz, professor of Bible and ancient Near Eastern studies
at Ben-Gurion University, once said: “I doubt we’ll ever find Eden
outside the pages of the Bible.”
Source: http://www.bibleinterp.com/articles/eden357918.shtml
Friday, 10 September 2010
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