Edna (Daughter of Azrial)

Female

Edna (Daughter of Azrial) can be found in the following chapters:

Parents:

 and 

?

Lifespan:

Birth: 

Unknown, but likely around 764

Death: 

Unknown, but likely around 1656

Marriage:

Children:

Lamech (Seth’s line) (Genesis 5:25, Jasher 3:13, Jubilees 4:27)
Eliakim (Seth’s line) (Jasher 5:35)

Description:

Interesting Facts

  • Edna was the wife of Methuselah.
  • Her father was Azrial.
  • She was the daughter of Methuselah’s father’s brother, making her his cousin.
  • Her marriage to Methuselah occurred in the fourteenth jubilee, in the third week, in the first year of that week, which corresponds to the year 652 A.M..

Genealogy

  • Edna’s father was Azrial.
  • Her mother is not named in the provided sources.
  • She was the daughter of Methuselah’s father’s brother, making her Methuselah’s cousin.
  • She married Methuselah in the year 652 A.M..
  • The sources do not mention any offspring resulting from her marriage to Methuselah. However, Methuselah later had a son named Lamech. It is not specified if Edna was Lamech’s mother.

Historical Context

Edna lived in a period following the initial descent of the Watchers and the birth of the Giants. While the immediate chaos and violence of that era might have lessened, the knowledge and corruption introduced by the fallen angels likely still persisted. Her marriage to Methuselah occurred well into Enoch’s life, after Enoch had already fathered Methuselah. Enoch was known for walking with God and teaching righteousness. Thus, Edna’s life would have been influenced by the contrasting realities of a world still tainted by the Watchers’ transgressions and the righteous example of her husband’s father, Enoch. The sources indicate a continued decline in the ways of men even during Methuselah’s later years. Therefore, Edna’s life spanned a significant period marked by the ongoing struggle between righteousness and corruption before the impending judgment of the Flood.

Narrative

Edna’s individual narrative within the provided sources is limited to the account of her marriage to Methuselah. She is primarily significant as Methuselah’s wife, marking a genealogical connection within the righteous line of Seth. The text notes the specific timing of their marriage within the jubilee calendar, highlighting the importance of such unions within the chronological framework of the narrative. While no specific actions or dialogues of Edna are recorded, her marriage to Methuselah, a key figure in the lineage leading to Noah, places her within the context of the preservation of a righteous line in a progressively wicked world. Her existence contributes to the unfolding of the genealogical narrative leading up to the Flood and the subsequent new beginning through Noah’s family.