Eden in Easton's Bible Dictionary
            delight. (1.) The garden in which our first parents dewlt 
(Gen.
 2:8-17). No geographical question has been so much 
discussed as
 that bearing on its site. It has been placed in 
Armenia, in the
 region west of the Caspian Sea, in Media, near 
Damascus, in
 Israel, in Southern Arabia, and in Babylonia. The 
site must
 undoubtedly be sought for somewhere along the course 
of the
 great streams the Tigris and the Euphrates of 
Western Asia, in
 "the land of Shinar" or Babylonia. The region from 
about lat. 33
 degrees 30' to lat. 31 degrees, which is a very rich 
and fertile
 tract, has been by the most competent authorities 
agreed on as
 the probable site of Eden. "It is a region where 
streams abound,
 where they divide and re-unite, where alone in the 
Mesopotamian
 tract can be found the phenomenon of a single river 
parting into
 four arms, each of which is or has been a river of 
consequence."
 Among almost all nations there are traditions of the 
primitive
 innocence of our race in the garden of Eden. This 
was the
 "golden age" to which the Greeks looked back. Men 
then lived a
 "life free from care, and without labour and sorrow. 
Old age was
 unknown; the body never lost its vigour; existence 
was a
 perpetual feast without a taint of evil. The earth 
brought forth
 spontaneously all things that were good in profuse 
abundance."
 (2.) One of the markets whence the merchants of Tyre 
obtained
 richly embroidered stuffs (Ezek. 27:23); the same, 
probably, as
 that mentioned in 2 Kings 19:12, and Isa. 37:12, as 
the name of
 a region conquered by the Assyrians.
 (3.) Son of Joah, and one of the Levites who 
assisted in
 reforming the public worship of the sanctuary in the 
time of
 Hezekiah (2 Chr. 29:12).
                          
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