Garden of Eden
0 sources
Garden of Eden
Summary
Garden of Eden is a garden[1]. It ranks in the top 0.49% of garden entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,944 views/month, #1 of 206).[2]
Key Facts
- Garden of Eden is the creator of God[3].
- Garden of Eden's religion is recorded as Islam[4].
- Garden of Eden's religion is recorded as Judaism[5].
- Garden of Eden's religion is recorded as Christianity[6].
- Garden of Eden's image is recorded as Hieronymus Bosch - The Garden of Earthly Delights - The Earthly Paradise (Garden of Eden).jpg[7].
- Garden of Eden's instance of is recorded as garden[8].
- Garden of Eden's instance of is recorded as mythical location[9].
- Garden of Eden's instance of is recorded as biblical place[10].
- Garden of Eden's instance of is recorded as biblical concept[11].
- Garden of Eden's GND ID is recorded as 4173252-2[12].
- Garden of Eden's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh85040949[13].
- Garden of Eden's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 11981249n[14].
- Garden of Eden's IdRef ID is recorded as 02786118X[15].
- Garden of Eden's DOI is recorded as 10.1163/1875-3922_DQU_SIM_001117[16].
- Garden of Eden's part of is recorded as Christian mythology[17].
- Garden of Eden's part of is recorded as Jewish mythology[18].
- Garden of Eden's part of is recorded as Islamic mythology[19].
- Garden of Eden's Commons category is recorded as Garden of Eden[20].
- Garden of Eden's pronunciation audio is recorded as LL-Q13955 (ara)-Spotless Mind1988-جنات عدن.wav[21].
- Garden of Eden's said to be the same as is recorded as Q783249[22].
- Garden of Eden's said to be the same as is recorded as paradise[23].
- Garden of Eden's BNCF Thesaurus ID is recorded as 30557[24].
- Garden of Eden's has part is recorded as tree of life[25].
- Garden of Eden's has part is recorded as houri[26].
- Garden of Eden's has part is recorded as wildan mukhalladun[27].
Body
Identity
Part of include Christian mythology[17], a mythology[28]; Jewish mythology[18], a mythology by ethnic group[29]; and Islamic mythology[19].
Brands and Namesakes
Things named for Garden of Eden include Eden[30], a film[31], directed by Ron Howard[32]; In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida[33], a musical work/composition[34]; Adam in Islam[35], a prophet of Islam[36]; it[37], a film[38], directed by Max Nosseck[39]; Eve in Islam[40], an Islamic term[41]; Eden Games[42], a video game developer[43], in France[44], founded in 1998[45], headquartered in Lyon[46]; and The it[47], a film[48], directed by Lewis Milestone[49].
Why It Matters
Garden of Eden ranks in the top 0.49% of garden entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,944 views/month, #1 of 206).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[50] It is known by 52 alternative names across languages and contexts.[51]
Entities named for it include Eden[30], a film[31], directed by Ron Howard[32]; In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida[33], a musical work/composition[34]; Adam in Islam[35], a prophet of Islam[36]; it[37], a film[38], directed by Max Nosseck[39]; Eve in Islam[40], an Islamic term[41]; and Eden Games[42], a video game developer[43], in France[44], founded in 1998[45], headquartered in Lyon[46].