- Pishon
The Pishon is one of four
river s (along with theTigris ,Euphrates , andGihon ) mentioned in the Biblical Genesis (2:11). In that passage, it is described as branching off from a single river within Eden. The river is described as encircling "the entire land ofHavilah ", which cannot be positively identified.The only two identified rivers of the four streams said to issue forth from Eden, the Tigris ("Hiddekel", from Genesis 2:14) and the Euphrates, do not now rise in the same place. It must therefore be assumed that either the
topography of the area has changed, or the geographical notions of the Genesis writer(s) were inaccurate. However, some scholars have questioned English translations that say the rivers issued forth from Eden, and claim Hebrew renderings are more flexible in their description. This interpretation would allow Eden to be a confluence point for four rivers originating elsewhere.In the Biblical
Table of Nations , Havilah is associated withArabia . If the two can be equated, the Pishon may correspond to an ancientdry riverbed that rose in theHejaz region (coord|24|30|0|N|41|45|0|E|) and flowed north east for 600 miles through theWadi Al-Batin and terminated in thePersian Gulf , supporting the 'Persian Gulf' theory propounded byJuris Zarins . Evidence of this river was first discovered by Farouk El-Baz ofBoston University researching satellite photos which showed the course across the desert and a telltale, fan-shaped delta of gravel deposits at the old river mouth. Such identification is necessarily tentative. This research also places the source of the Pishon, also dubbed theKuwait River , in the region of the Cradle of Gold atMahd adh Dhahab . Archaeological research indicates that the river system was active 2,500-3000 BC. [ [http://focusmagazine.org/Articles/pishoriver.htm Salabach, C. A. "The Pishon River--Found!" "Focus Magazine"] ]Together with the Tigris, the river Pishon is briefly mentioned in the book of
Ecclesiasticus (24:25), but this reference throws no more light on the location of the river. "Calumet, A. D. 1672-1757, Rosebmuller, 1768-1835, Kell, 1807-1888, and some other scholars believed the source river [for Eden] was a region of springs. The Pishon and Gihon were mountain streams. The former may have been the Phasis orAraxes , and the latter theOxus ." [Duncan, George S. (October 1929) "The Birthplace of Man" "The Scientific Monthly" 29(4): pp. 359-362, p. 360.]The Jewish-Roman historian
Flavius Josephus , in the beginning of "Antiquities of the Jews " (1st century AD) identified the Pishon with theGanges .David Rohl identified Pishon with the Uizhun and placed Havilah to the northeast ofMesopotamia . The Uizhun is known locally as the Golden River. Rising near Mt.Sahand , it meanders between ancientgold mine s and lodes oflapis lazuli before feeding theCaspian Sea . Such natural resources correspond to the ones associated with the land of Havilah in the Genesis account (2:11).Certain
Christian fundamentalists have sometimes appealed to the effects of the Noachian Flood to explain the seeming disappearance of the Pishon river and the supposed change in the upper courses of the Tigris and the Euphrates. Names from the Bible like Havilah and Cush have come to mean different places at different times.ee also
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Gihon
*al-Qurnah References
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