English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2007-02-10 04:17:18 · 13 answers · asked by xX_aZn_mu$ikK_Xx 1 in Arts & Humanities History

13 answers

If we make the assumption that Atlantis was a real place, it seems logical that it could be found west of the Straight of Gibraltar near the Azores Islands.

In 1882 a man named Ignatius Donnelly published a book titled "Atlantis, the Antediluvian World". Donnelly, an American politician, had come to the belief that Plato's story represented actual historical fact.

He located Atlantis in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, suggesting the Azores Islands represented what remained of the highest mountain peaks.

Donnelly said he had studied zoology and geology and had come to the conclusion that civilization itself had begun with the Atlantians and had spread out throughout the world as the Atlantians established colonies in places like ancient Egypt and Peru. Donnelly's book became a world-wide best seller, but researchers could not take Donnelly's theories seriously as he offered no proof for his ideas.

As time when on it became obvious that Donnelly's theories were faulty. Modern scientific surveys of the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean shows it is covered with a blanket of sediment that must have taken millions of years to accumulate. There is no sign of a sunken island continent.

People have made cases for places as diverse as Switzerland, in the middle of Europe, and New Zealand, in the Pacific Ocean. The explorer, Percy Fawcett, thought that it might be located in Brazil.

One of the most convincing arguments, though, came from K.T. Frost, a professor of history at the Queen's University in Belfast. Later, Spyridon Marinatos, an archaeologist, and A.G. Galanopoulos, a seismologist, added evidence to Frost's ideas.

Frost suggested that instead of being west of the Pillars of Hercules, Atlantis was east. He also thought that the catastrophic end of the island had come not 9000 years before Plato's time, but only 900. If this was true, the land of Atlantis might already be a well-known place even in Plato's time: the island of Crete.

Hope that helps. :)

2007-02-10 04:32:07 · answer #1 · answered by Matty A 3 · 0 0

Atlantis is a myth. There have been lost cities, but the story of Atlantis is more the realm of sci-fi television than actually history. You might as well look for Valhalla. What we have of Atlantis is bits of suggestion from writings about other things by people like Plato, but no real historically significant proof of such a civilization. There are some supposed ruins that treasure hunters have found in the Mediterranean basin, but they are a couple columns and some pottery, hardly enough to validate the notion that there is a lots continent out there in the ocean somewhere.

2007-02-10 05:21:16 · answer #2 · answered by Been There 4 · 0 0

quoting myself from another thread :

It doesn't exist
Basic source of the atlantis legend are Platons books Kritias and Timaios.
First of all, we need to know that Platon was not a historian, but a philosopher and didn't care for historical correctness.
He describes Atlantis to praise Athens (his hometown), so its quite easy to unmask as propaganda.
In brief, he says :
Atlantis existed 9500 BC. and conquered most of europe and the north of africa (unlikely in itself)
Athens beat Atlantis and stopped it from conquering Greece (unlikely, 9500 BC. Athens was no more than a small village, if it had existed at that time at all)
Atlantis was bigger than Libya and Asia together (oh come on)
and was destroyed by a floowave and an earthquake that destroyed Greece as well.
All that knowledge was being kept by the egyptian city of Sais
which was founded 1000 years after Atlantis,according to Plato ,was destroyed)

You see, pretty hard to believe.

The only ones who still believe it, are non-academic treasure hunters and dreamers

2007-02-10 04:29:20 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It is Crete. Everything we know about Minoan Crete matches, except that in the story which Solon got from the Egyptian priest, the lost city or island of Atlantis:

a. was ten times further away
b. was ten times bigger
c. had ten times as many people, cattle, riches etc.
d. was destroyed ten times as long ago.

The story says Atlantis was destroyed about 9500 BC, 9000 years before the telling. Minoan Crete was destroyed by a huge eruption of Thera (Santorini) and tidal wave about 1450 BC, only 900 years before the telling.

By assuming that Solon made a simple mistake in converting Egyptian numbers, plus only a very little dramatic exaggeration, everything is explained. By assuming the story was true as passed on by Solon, there are lots of near-impossible things to be explained. Take your pick.

2007-02-10 06:46:53 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i've got not got faith in corporation solutions yet after 50+ years I would desire to assert i've got not got faith in an Atlantis of pyramids and roads and potential crystals. Plato replace into describing a civilization which began with morally more desirable persons. They weren't so technologically more desirable they could no longer be crushed via modern-day Athenians, and in actuality the story replace into informed to Solon via fact the priests have been so grateful to Athens for what that victory meant to them. Ignatius Donnelly and Lewis Spence produced some exciting thoughts relating to the mummy Civilization of Atlantis theory, yet they have been precisely no longer convincing to me via fact they have been so time-sure and airtight. Their techniques of what replace into more desirable weren't Plato's in any respect and neither have been many of their different definitions. i've got continually had a confusing time pertaining to the two and my issues have grown, provided that i've got entered my dotage. The pilots sightings are too easily explainable: Ice is made up of crystals and lines, probable forming shapes, and the "artifacts" can with ease be a right away consequence of imperfections interior the crystalline shape of the glaciers. If there is going to be evidence, it has to return from someplace else. i visit assert i've got faith in Atlantis. Plato mentioned it replace into genuine and who am I to argue with a Champion Olympic Wrestler? yet i've got not got faith in this present day theory of it anymore.

2016-11-03 01:59:19 · answer #5 · answered by doti 4 · 0 0

PLato puts it

West of the straits of Gibraltar
others say off cuba or cyprus
there is even a lost kingdom off India
and others argue that it is in black sea
here is an interesting blurb

Look here http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3227295.stm


They might be more than one since it is a myth which could pertain to more than once city. ie mankind has lost more than one city to the sea, exp. New Orelans,usa

Cheers Zonkvert

2007-02-10 05:25:32 · answer #6 · answered by zonkvert 1 · 0 0

Atlantis (Greek: Ἀτλαντὶς νῆσος, "Island of Atlas") is the name of an island first mentioned and described by the classical Greek philosopher Plato in the dialogues Timaeus and Critias. In Plato's account, Atlantis, lying "beyond the pillars of Hercules", was a naval power which conquered many parts of western Europe and Africa 9000 years before Plato's own time--approximately 9400 BC. After a failed attempt to invade Athens, Atlantis sank into the ocean "in a single day and night of misfortune." As a story embedded in Plato's dialogues, Atlantis is generally seen as a myth created by Plato to illustrate his political theories. Although the function of the story of Atlantis seems clear to most scholars, they dispute whether and how much Plato's account was inspired by older traditions. Some scholars argue Plato drew upon memories of past events such as the Thera eruption or the Trojan War, while others insist that he took inspiration of contemporary events like the destruction of Helike in 373 BC or the failed Athenian invasion of Sicily in 415–413 BC.

The possible existence of Atlantis was actively discussed throughout the classical antiquity, but it was usually rejected and occasionally parodied. While basically unknown during the Middle Ages, the story of Atlantis was rediscovered by Humanists at the very beginning of modern times. Plato's description inspired the utopian works of several Renaissance writers, like Francis Bacon's "New Atlantis". To this day, Atlantis inspires today's literature, from science fiction to comic books and movies.

Since Donnelly's day, there have been dozens—perhaps hundreds—of locations proposed for Atlantis. Some are scholarly or archaeological works whilst others have been made by psychic or other pseudoscientific means. Many of the proposed sites share some of the characteristics of the Atlantis story (water, catastrophic end, relevant time period), but none has been proven conclusively to be the historical Atlantis. Most of the historically proposed locations are in or near the Mediterranean Sea, either islands such as Sardinia, Crete and Santorini, Cyprus, Malta, and Ponza or as land based cities or states such as Troy, Tartessos or Tantalus (in the province of Manisa), Turkey, and the new theory of Israel-Sinai or Canaan as possible locations.[citation needed] The massive Thera eruption, dated either to the 17th or the 15th century BC, caused a massive tsunami that experts hypothesize devastated the Minoan civilization on the nearby island of Crete, further leading some to believe that this may have been the catastrophe which inspired the story.

A. G. Galanopoulos argued that the time scale has been distorted by an error in translation, probably from Egyptian into Greek, which produced "thousands" instead of "hundreds"; this same error would rescale Plato's Kingdom of Atlantis to the size of Crete, while leaving the city the size of the crater on Thera. 900 years before Solon would be the 15th century BC. [15]

Locations as wide-ranging as Andalusia, Antarctica, Indonesia, underneath the Bermuda Triangle, and the Caribbean have been proposed as the true site of Atlantis. In the area of the Black Sea at least three locations have been proposed: Bosporus, Sinop and Ancomah (a legendary place near Trabzon). The nearby Sea of Azov was proposed as another site in 2003.[16] In Northern Europe, Sweden (by Olof Rudbeck in "Atland", 1672-1702), Ireland, and the North Sea have been proposed (the Swedish geographer Ulf Erlingsson combines the North Sea and Ireland in a comprehensive hypothesis).[citation needed] Areas in the Pacific and Indian Ocean have also been proposed including Indonesia, Malaysia or both (i.e. Sundaland) and stories of a lost continent off India named "Kumari Kandam" have drawn parallels to Atlantis.[citation needed] Even Cuba and the Bahamas have been suggested. Some believe that Atlantis stretched from the tip of Spain to Central America.[citation needed] According to Ignatius L. Donnelly in his book Atlantis: The Antediluvian World, there is a connection between Atlantis and Aztlan (the ancestral home of the Aztecs).[citation needed] He claims that the Aztecs pointed east to the Caribbean as the former location of Aztlan. Some have considered the Philippines to be the possible site of Atlantis, and proposed that the islands were remnants of Atlantis's mountains.

The Canary Islands have also been identified as a possible location, West of the Straits of Gibraltar but in close proximity to the Mediterranean Sea.[citation needed] Various islands or island groups in the Atlantic were also identified as possible locations, notably the Azores (Mid-Atlantic islands which are a territory of Portugal), and even several Caribbean islands.[citation needed] The submerged island of Spartel near the Strait of Gibraltar would coincide with some elements of Plato's account, matching both the location and the date of submersion given in the Critias. Popular culture increasingly places Atlantis in the Atlantic Ocean and perpetuates the original Platonic ideal.

2007-02-10 19:13:37 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Personally I believe it was in the atlantic ocean. Perhaps somwhere near or in the Bermuda Triangle and that may be what causes some of the wierd events there.

2007-02-10 04:25:44 · answer #8 · answered by Brian Byrd 3 · 0 0

Actually no one knows where it is. But there are a few guesses. :D

Seriously speaking, there's a WHOLE bunch of guesses, ranging from Andalusia to Antarctica and even Indonesia.

So just check out the wiki link, ya?

2007-02-10 04:30:18 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's somewhere in the Mediterranean basin. There's a good possibility it was in the Adriatic Sea. Exact location remains unproven, but there are a couple of possibilities.

2007-02-10 04:22:29 · answer #10 · answered by loryntoo 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers