Difference between revisions of "12. Edin"

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Edin was the wild, uncultivated grassland of the south t, and the natural landscape which layed outside the artificial landscape of the city. In the bible, it is more commonly referred to as Eden. Edin is meant to signify the beauty of the natural world. It is also symbolic to the bible in the sense that when civilization began, (when Adam and Eve ate the apple), it was the beginning and fall of paradise. As we can see today, modern cities have nearly wiped out all of the uncultivated land.
 
Edin was the wild, uncultivated grassland of the south t, and the natural landscape which layed outside the artificial landscape of the city. In the bible, it is more commonly referred to as Eden. Edin is meant to signify the beauty of the natural world. It is also symbolic to the bible in the sense that when civilization began, (when Adam and Eve ate the apple), it was the beginning and fall of paradise. As we can see today, modern cities have nearly wiped out all of the uncultivated land.
  
http://moriahlpurdy.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/img_0842.jpg?w=600&h=450
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[[Image:http://moriahlpurdy.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/img_0842.jpg?w=600&h=450]]
  
 
=Sources=
 
=Sources=

Revision as of 05:30, 7 November 2011

Edin was the wild, uncultivated grassland of the south t, and the natural landscape which layed outside the artificial landscape of the city. In the bible, it is more commonly referred to as Eden. Edin is meant to signify the beauty of the natural world. It is also symbolic to the bible in the sense that when civilization began, (when Adam and Eve ate the apple), it was the beginning and fall of paradise. As we can see today, modern cities have nearly wiped out all of the uncultivated land.

File:Http://moriahlpurdy.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/img 0842.jpg?w=600&h=450

Sources

[www.allaboutgod.com/garden-of-eden.htm]

Manuel 50

http://moriahlpurdy.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/img_0842.jpg?w=600&h=450