The
Lost Continent: Atlantis
Quick
Facts
|
A legendary
civilization that sank into the sea 11,000 years ago. |
The Atlantis
culture was supposedly very technically advanced and their
capital city was composed of a series of ringed canals
and islands. |
The story
of Atlantis is only known through the writings of the
Greek philosopher Plato. |
It is unknown
if Atlantis ever existed. Plato may have created the story
only as a device in his writings to discuss his ideas
on government. |
Plato's writings
suggest that the continent was located in the Atlantic
Ocean just west of the Strait of Gibraltar, but there
is no scientific evidence of this. |
Different
theories place Atlantis everywhere from South America
to Antarctica. |
One of the
best cases is that Atlantis is actually the Minoan culture
on the island of Crete which was destroyed by a tsunami
around 1500 BC. |
The
idea of a lost, but highly advanced civilization has captured
the interest of people for centuries. Perhaps the most compelling
of these tales is the story of Atlantis. The story appears again
and again in books, television shows and movies. Where did the
story originate and is any of it true?
VIDEO: Atlantis
the Lost Continent
Plato's Atlantis
The story of the
lost continent of Atlantis starts in 355 B.C. with the Greek
philosopher Plato. Plato had planned to write a trilogy of books
discussing the nature of man, the creation of the world, and
the story of Atlantis, as well as other subjects. Only the first
book was ever completed. The second book was abandoned part
way through, and the final book was never even started.
Plato used dialogues
to express his ideas. In this type of writing, the author's
thoughts are explored in a series of arguments and debates between
various characters in the story. Plato often used real people
in his dialogues, such as his teacher, Socrates, but the words
he gave them were his own. In
Plato's book, Timaeus,
a character named Kritias tells an account of Atlantis that
has been in his family for generations. According to the character,
the story was originally told to his ancestor, Solon, by a priest
during Solon's visit to Egypt.
There had been a
powerful empire located to the west of the "Pillars of Hercules"
(what we now call the Straight of Gibraltar) on an island in
the Atlantic Ocean. The nation there had been established by
Poseidon, the God of the Sea. Poseidon fathered five sets of
twins on the island. The firstborn, Atlas, had the continent
and the surrounding ocean named for him. Poseidon divided the
land into ten sections, each to be ruled by a son, or his heirs.
The capital city
of Atlantis was a marvel of architecture and engineering. The
city was composed of a series of concentric walls and canals.
At the very center was a hill, and on top of the hill a temple
to Poseidon. Inside was a gold statue of the God of the Sea
showing him driving six winged horses.
About 9000 years
before the time of Plato, after the people of Atlantis became
corrupt and greedy, the gods decided to destroy them. A violent
earthquake shook the land, giant waves rolled over the shores,
and the island sank into the sea, never to be seen again.
So, is the story
of Atlantis just a fable used by Plato to make a point? Or is
there some reason to think he was referring to a real place?
Well, at numerous points in the dialogues, Plato's characters
refer to the story of Atlantis as "genuine history" and it being
within "the realm of fact." Plato also seems to put into the
story a lot of detail about Atlantis that would be unnecessary
if he had intended to use it only as a literary device.
On the other hand
according to the writings of the historian Strabo, Plato's student
Aristotle remarked that Atlantis was simply created by Plato
to illustrate a point. Unfortunately, Aristotle's writings on
this subject, which might have cleared the mystery up, have
been lost eons ago.
Location, Location,
Location
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 went 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.
Are there any other
candidates for the location of Atlantis? 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.
Atlantis in Spain?
Recently a research
team led by Professor Richard Freund at the University of Hartford,
has claimed that they have found evidence that the city may
be buried not under the ocean, but along the coast of Spain
in marshlands of the Doņana National Park. Geological studies
have shown that at one time this marsh was a huge bay connected
to the Atlantic Ocean. The team, using radar technology, digital
mapping and satellite imagery believes that they can see signs
of a ringed city that once occupied the bay with canals similar
to those described by Plato. There is evidence that a number
of tsunamis have swept this area over the centuries and Freund
thinks that it is one of these destroyed the city. After the
disaster survivors may have moved inland and created a number
of what Freund thinks are memorial sites to Atlantis.
Other scientists
that have explored the area do not agree with Freund's conclusion,
though they admit that a city by the name of Tartessos occupied
the area around the 4th century B.C.. Freund believes that Tartessos
and Atlantis may just be different names for the same city.
As far back as the 1920's historian Adolf Schulten had suggested
that Plato had used the real city of Tartessos as the source
for his Atlantis legend.
The strongest evidence
for a real Atlantis, however, is not in Spain, but closer to
Plato's home in Greece. This idea started with 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.
The Minoan Connection
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.
Crete is now a part
of modern Greece and lies just south of Athens across part of
the Mediterranean Sea. Before 1500 B.C. it was the seat of the
Minoan Empire. The Minoans dominated the eastern Mediterranean
with a powerful navy and probably extracted tribute from other
surrounding nations. Archaeological excavations have shown that
Minoan Crete was probably one of the most sophisticated cultures
of its time. It had splendid architecture and art. A code of
laws gave women equal legal status to men. Agriculture was highly
developed and an extensive irrigation system existed.
Then, seemingly in
a blink of an eye, the Minoan Civilization disappeared. Geological
studies have shown that on an island we now know as Santorinas,
located just eighty miles to the north of Crete, a disaster
occurred that was very capable of toppling the Minoan state.
Santorinas today
is a lush Mediterranean paradise consisting of several islands
in a ring shape. Twenty-five hundred years ago, though, it was
a single large island with a volcano in the center. The volcano
blew itself apart in a massive explosion around 1500 B.C.
To understand the
effect of such an explosion, scientists have compared it with
the most powerful volcanic explosion in historic times. This
occurred on the Island of Krakatoa in 1883. There a giant wave,
or tsunami, 120 feet high raced across the sea and hit neighboring
islands, killing 36,000 people. Ash thrown up into the air blackened
the skies for three days. The sound of the explosion was heard
as far away as 3,000 miles.
The explosion at
Santorinas was four times as powerful as Krakatoa.
The tsunami that
hit Crete must have traveled inland for over half a mile, destroying
any coastal towns or cities. The great Minoan fleet of ships
were all sunk in a few seconds. Overnight the powerful Minoan
Empire was crushed and Crete changed to a political backwater.
One can hardly imagine a catastrophe more like Plato's description
of Atlantis' fate than the destruction of Crete."
The Minoan civilization
is also the source of the legend of the haf man/half bull Minotaur.
Many of the details of the Atlantis story fit with what is now
known about Crete. Women had a relatively high political status,
both cultures were peaceful, and both enjoyed the unusual sport
of ritualistic "bull leaping" (where an unarmed man wrestled
and jumped over a bull).
If the fall of the
Minoans is the story of Atlantis, how did Plato get the location
and time wrong? Galanopoulos suggested there was a mistake during
translation of some of the figures from Egyptian to Greek and
an extra zero added. This would mean 900 years ago became 9000,
and the distance from Egypt to "Atlantis" went from 250 miles
to 2,500. If this is true, Plato (knowing the layout of the
Mediterranean Sea) would have been forced to assume the location
of the island continent to be squarely in the Atlantic Ocean.
Not everyone accepts
the Minoan Crete theory of the story of Atlantis, but until
a convincing case can be made for some other place, it, perhaps,
remains science's best guess.
Copyright
Lee Krystek 1997-2006