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Eve

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

An artistic depiction of Eve from Armenian Christian tradition, showing her in a garden setting surrounded by symbolic elements.

Eve is a well-known figure from the Book of Genesis in the Old Testament. She is an important person in the stories of the Abrahamic religions.

According to these stories, Eve was the very first woman ever made by God. She is famous for being the wife of Adam.

Her name means “living one” or “source of life.” Some people think her name sounds a bit like the name of an ancient goddess named Ḫepat from a faraway place called Hurrian. This goddess was honored in Jerusalem a very long time ago. Scholars have also noticed that Eve’s name might sound similar to an old word for “snake.”

Etymology

See also: Serpents in the Bible § Hebrew Bible

The name "Eve" comes from the Hebrew word "Ḥawwāh", which means "living one" or "source of life". This word is related to the Hebrew root word "ḥāyâ", meaning "to live".

Some believe the name sounds like the Hurrian goddess Ḫepat, who was worshipped in Jerusalem long ago. Others think it may be linked to an old Aramaic word for "snake". Scholars have also compared Eve's story to an ancient tale from Mesopotamia, where a goddess helps heal someone.

In Genesis

Creation Story

Main article: Genesis creation narrative

Creation of Eve, marble relief by Lorenzo Maitani on the Orvieto Cathedral, Italy

The book of Genesis tells how God made the world and all living things. It says God made the first humans, a man and a woman, at the same time.

It also tells how God made a man named Adam and then made a woman to be his helper. This woman was later named Eve. She was made from one of Adam’s ribs, just for him. Later, Eve and Adam lived in a beautiful garden called Eden.

Expulsion from Eden

For the Christian doctrines, see Fall of man and Original sin.

In the story, Eve talks to a serpent who convinces her to eat fruit that God had told them not to eat. Eve eats the fruit and shares it with Adam. Because of this, they are sent away from the garden of Eden. Eve is told she will have pain when her children are born and will need to listen to her husband.

Mother of humanity

Eve and Adam have two sons named Cain and Abel. After this, Eve has another son named Seth. Seth is the ancestor of many people, including Noah. Adam and Eve also had other sons and daughters after Seth.

In other works

Many stories about Eve come from old books that are not part of the Book of Genesis or the Torah. These stories include ideas such as the serpent being Satan or Eve’s sin involving temptation. These ideas appeared in Jewish writings and later influenced Christian beliefs.

Eve is mentioned in a book called De Mulieribus Claris by Giovanni Boccaccio, a Florentine writer. This book is one of the first collections of biographies about women. Other writings in Greek, Latin, and other languages also discuss Eve and Adam.

Main articles: Lilith, Torah, De Mulieribus Claris, Florentine, Giovanni Boccaccio, extant literature, Conflict of Adam and Eve with Satan, Ge'ez, Solomon Caesar Malan, Cave of Treasures, August Dillmann, The Alphabet of Ben-Sira, Life of Adam and Eve, Apocalypse of Moses, pseudepigraphical, deuterocanonical, Book of Tobit

Religious views

Judaism

The story of creation in Genesis says that God made humans as both male and female at the same time. Another part of the story tells how God made Eve from one of Adam’s ribs because Adam felt lonely. Some Jewish teachers thought that Eve and another woman mentioned in the creation story were two different people.

Jewish teachings explain Eve’s creation by saying God thought about what part of Adam to use to make a woman. God decided not to use Adam’s head, because that might make her too proud, or his eye, which might make her too curious. After considering many parts, God chose a rib because it is hidden and not very noticeable.

Eve in paradise. Armenian icon, 1305. Bodleian Library

There are also stories that Eve had sisters for both Adam’s sons. Jewish tradition says Eve is buried in a special cave.

Christianity

Early Christian teachers thought that because Eve was persuaded by a clever trick to break a rule and influence Adam to do the same, women should stay quiet and obey men.

Eve confronts an Eve-like serpent, in a 15th century Old Testament illustrated by Berthold Furtmeyr

A famous teacher named Augustine blamed Adam for humans’ mistakes instead of Eve. He believed Adam made the choice to break the rule, knowing what he was doing, while Eve was tricked.

The Catholic Church has a special day to remember Adam and Eve on December 24, the day before Christmas, to show Christ as a “new Adam.”

Gnosticism

Islamic illustration of Hawwa sitting next to Adam in the Garden

In Gnostic belief, Eve represents an important female spirit. Some Gnostic writings say she is connected to a powerful female figure called Barbelo or to Zoe, who means “life.”

Islam

In Islamic teaching, Adam’s wife is mentioned in the Quran but is not named “Eve.” The name Eve comes from later traditions. The Quran tells a story where both Adam and his wife ate the forbidden fruit and were both at fault.

Baháʼí Faith

In the Baháʼí Faith, the story of Eve is seen as a symbol. It is thought to hold deep meanings about the human soul.

Historicity

Main article: Historicity of the Bible

Eve In Eden, 19th century painting by Gustave Surand

Many people believe the stories in the Book of Genesis were written by Moses and are true. But many scholars think these stories are old tales about how life began, like other ancient myths.

Some ideas suggest the stories in Genesis came from many different traditions put together later. For example, the flood story in Genesis is similar to an older story called the Epic of Gilgamesh.

In modern times, Jewish thinkers often see the creation story in Genesis as a way to explain science in a simple way from long ago.

Some scientists once thought people came from many different pairs. But later discoveries showed all humans share common ancestors from long ago. Scientists sometimes call these ancestors "Y-chromosomal Adam" for men and "Mitochondrial Eve" for women, but they are not the same as the Adam and Eve from the Bible.

Literature

Adam and Eve by William Blake (1808)

Milton's Eve

In the famous epic poem Paradise Lost by John Milton, Eve’s story is told using ideas from the Genesis account in the Hebrew Bible. In the poem, Eve talks about the moment she first saw herself and felt alone. A voice then guided her to meet Adam. Even though she liked looking at her own reflection, she decided to stay with Adam.

The poem also describes how Adam asked God for a companion, and Eve was created from Adam’s rib, just like in the Genesis story. Milton’s version of Eve shows her trying to balance her own desires with her connection to Adam.

Family tree of Adam and Eve

In stories from the Book of Genesis, Eve is the first woman God ever made. She is also Adam’s wife, and he was the first man. Their story is important in many religious beliefs.

Images

A Renaissance artwork showing Adam and Eve with a serpent, created to celebrate a historical event in Florence.
A 19th-century painting showing Eve from the Bible being tempted, created by artist George Frederic Watts.
Artistic depiction of Adam and Eve at the entrance of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Eve, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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