Everyone currently living on this planet.
Cain was the son of the first human couple, Adam and Eve, from whom we are all ultimately descended and so are related to Cain. This is further detailed in the records around the time of the flood, which indicate that only Noah and his wife and their three sons and their wives were aboard the ark. Everyone else perished in the global catstrophe.
Further to this, Noah and his family were from the line of derscent from Seth and not that of Cain and so any relationship with people today is only, strictly speaking, indirect.
By way of confirmation, historical records of the ancient Britons, which pre-date any contact with Christianity and The Bible also contain many of the same persons from the ancient Biblical genealogies.
As to the actual correct description of the kinship relationship, it would not be regarded as being any kind of close relative, and certainly not a cousin. There have been around 80 generations since that time.
According to the Bible, Cain married one of his sisters after being banished from the garden. It is commonly believed that Adam and Eve had other children besides Cain and Abel, so Cain would have married one of his sisters.
It is not proper to date your first cousin. He is part of your family and a close relative-- too close to date.
A first cousin twice removed does not have a particularly close genetic relationship.
Depends on where they live. Relationship wise, they aren't a close relative, but they aren't that distant.
== No, a first cousin twice removed is a fairly close relative from a genetics perspective. The grandchild of your first cousin would be this relative. == Whether any particular cousin is a distant relative or a near relation is mostly a matter of how you and your family choose to define the terms. Some families have no knowledge of the grand children of their cousins and consider them distant relatives. Some families see them every day and consider them close relations.
Any realtive who is not closely related to you is a distant relative. Who si distant and who is close depends on how your family functions and what you think is distant ro close.
You can't marry a relative closer than your first cousin.
"Close" and "distant" are relative... no pun intended... terms, and it's not clear what you intend the distinction between the two to be. Your first cousin twice removed would be either the first cousin of one of your grandparents, or the grandchild of one of your first cousins.
The surname Cousins is of English origin and is derived from the Old French word "co(u)sin," meaning "cousin." It likely started as a nickname for someone who was a close relative or cousin.
Yes, a cousin-in-law is considered a relative by marriage, not by blood.
Adam and Eve. This was before incest was a sin. God did not forbid marrying ones close relatives until the time of Moses. This early on in history the gene pool was so diverse that there was no harm in marrying siblings.
cousin because your cousins son is your 2 cousin