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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: ARN-AUD |
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ATLANTIS, ATALANTIS, or ATLANTICA , a legendary island in the Atlantic Ocean, first mentioned by Plato in the Timaeus. Plato describes how certain Egyptian priests, in a conversation *ith Solon, represented the island as a country larger than Asia Minor and Libya united, and situated just beyond the Pillars of Hercules (Straits of Gibraltar). Beyond it lay an archipelago of lesser islands. According to the priests, Atlantis had been a powerful kingdom nine thousand years before the birth
8.58 bordered the Mediterranean. Athens alone had withstood them with success. Finally the sea had overwhelmed Atlantis, and had thenceforward become unnavigable owing to the shoals which marked the spot. In the Critias
separate
Homer
coast
Breton city of Is, and of Mayda or Asmaidethe French Isle Verte and Portuguese Ilha Verde or " Green Island "which appears in many folk-tales from Gibraltar to the Hebrides, and until 1853 was marked on English charts as a rock
interest
For the theory that Atlantis is to be identified with Crete in the Minoan period, see " The Lost Continent " in The Times (London) for the 19th of February 1909. See also " Dissertation sur l'Atlantide " in T. H. Martin's Etudes sur le Timee (1841). End of Article: ATLANTIS, ATALANTIS, or ATLANTICA If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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