The location of the Garden of Eden remains the subject of much controversy and speculation. There are hypotheses that place Eden at the headwaters of the Tigris and Euphrates (northern Mesopotamia), in Iraq (Mesopotamia), Africa, and the Persian Gulf. For many medieval writers, the image of the Garden of Eden also creates a location for human love and sexuality, often associated with the classic and medieval trope of the locus amoenus. Garden of Eden is described as being the place where the first man, Adam, and his wife, Eve, lived after they were created by God. The structure and order defined by God in the Garden of Eden is also believed to have been the early structure for the Kingdom of God. Immediately following the creation of Man, God commands them to "fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air and over every living creature that moves on the ground" . This passage appears to have been added at a later date, most likely to show the exact location of the Garden of Eden, which was in the region of Pamir, far east of Mesopotamia, as is usually understood in error, two substantial errors in translation, the word Assyria is a corruption of the intended, although in Hebrew the spellings are similar, Ashur, the man Assyria was named after, was not yet born. This named land is far older than Assyria, and by geography was a region called Xinjiang Uyghur autonomous region or the Tarim Basin, northwestern China, like in the Garden, the trees represented races, and the word Assyria, and the name of the man Ashur are both the same, and so also is the country founded by Ashur also called Assyria, not anywhere near China, called so after the name of their patriarch, from the Chaldean, the word means cedar, like the large tree, the large race, or in the case of Asshur, he was named after a tree.....
At the end of the 19th and the first few decades of the 20th century,scientific and archaeological expeditions to the region along the Silk Road in East Turkestan led to the discovery of numerous Uyghur cave temples, monastery ruins, wall paintings, statues, frescoes, valuable manuscripts, documents and books. Members of the expedition from Great Britain, Sweden, Russia, Germany, France, Japan, and the United States were amazed by the treasure they found there, and soon detailed reports captured the attention on an interested public around the world. The relics of these rich Uyghur cultural remnants brought back by Sven Hedin of Sweden, Aurel Stein of Great Britain, Gruen Wedel and Albert von Lecoq from Germany, Paul Pelliot of France, Langdon Warner of the United States, and Count Ottani from Japan can be seen in the Museums of Berlin, London, Paris, Tokyo, Leningrad and even in the Museum of Central Asian Antiquities in New Delhi. The manuscripts, documents and the books discovered in Eastern Turkestan proved that the Uyghurs had a very high degree of civilization.
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