Dispatches: Reflections on the Atlantic World

Page 5

Sunken Island, Surfaced Legend: The Influence of Atlantis and its Lost People

ENDNOTES

Somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean, prosperous and advanced, the legendary island of Atlantis was said to have sunk under the ocean. As the myth depicts, Atlanteans thrived on their island which had filled up the expanse of water between Africa and the Americas, advancing in knowledge and power1 until an earthquake plunged an entire civilization into the depths of the Atlantic.2 As a legend dating back to ancient Greece, retaining connections which spanned even further back to the time of the Flood, the notion of lost Atlantis subtly brought explorers to the coasts of the Atlantic world. As the lure of the unknown brought explorers west, interactions between Europeans and Indigenous Americans urged the question of whether the descendants of the lost civilization still prospered on the other side of the ocean, commonly known as the Mayas.3 The civilization of Atlantis, recorded in a fictional account from Plato’s Timaeus, is described by the Greek philosopher to have lived on an island making up the expanse of the Atlantic Ocean, which “there could be crossed, since it had an island before the mouth of the strait which is called, as ye say, the pillars of Herakles.”4 According to Plato, Atlantis was home to a city of wealth and royalty which connected the continents and “all this power gathered itself together, and your country and ours and the whole region within the strait it sought with one single swoop to enslave.”5 With unfortunate luck, the might of Atlantis drowned as it sank, swept to the bottom of the ocean by an earthquake and a flood, believed for centuries to be the Great Flood in the Book of Genesis.6 According to legend retold by Plato, the Atlantic Ocean overtook the mighty civilization of Atlantis, “eat[ing] away the best part of it.”7 Plato’s description gave rise to other interpretations of the legend, as well as the desire to find the lost city and its civilization. In the sixteenth century, most Europeans traversed the Atlantic for settlement, trade, and conquest. Some contemporary writers such as the explorer Francisco Lopez de Gómara and the abbot Charles-Etienne Brasseur de Bourbourg studied the legend of Atlantis and theorized that it was located in the Americas. During expeditions, Gómara examined the similarities found in mythologies and religions. He noted, for instance, the customs of the Indigenous empires to be “the product of men who shared a common lineage,”8 supposedly as descendants of a once-great Atlantean civilization. As the Atlantis legend came to be analyzed by scholars over the centuries, the interactions and similarities between religions regarding flood myths created an apparent connection between Plato’s account and Gómara’s deductions. The common assumption emerged that the western and eastern continents were previously interconnected. While traversing the Americas, the missionary Joseph-François Lafitau examined the cultural and religious similarities between the Indigenous myths and those in Europe and concluded that, in addition to Europe, “the ancients knew this part of the world.”9 Indigenous flood myths shared similarities with those in the east, seeming to suggest that Atlantis had been the land believed to bridge the gap between the continents in ancient years.10 One Aztec legend recorded in the Codex of Chimalpopoca refers to a flood brought to earth by gods, as“‘the sky came nearer the water’” and“‘all was lost, and the day Nahui-xochitl, ‘flower,’ destroyed all our flesh.’”11

Amar Preciado, Boy in Traditional Mayan Dress, from Pexels.com

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Endnotes

37min
pages 98-117

Sea Shanties: A Microcosm of Exchange

7min
pages 90-93

Gorée Island, Senegal: The Doorway to the Transatlantic Slave Trade

6min
pages 86-89

Spirituals: Faithful Voices in the Midst of Oppression

7min
pages 94-97

Port Royal: Shaky Morals, Shaky Ground

6min
pages 82-85

The Inca Roads and the Atlantic Network

4min
pages 80-81

To Vax or Not to Vax: The Debate as Old as Vaccines Themselves

7min
pages 76-79

Empire in a Glass Case: The Diaspora of Atlantic Artifacts in the British Museum

13min
pages 69-75

The Determined, Decisive, and Diverse: Women of the Atlantic World

11min
pages 63-68

The False Promise of Liberty: Slavery and the American Revolution

5min
pages 58-59

Notorious Pirates of the Caribbean: Blackbeard and Anne Bonny

21min
pages 48-57

The French Revolution: An Atlantic Perspective

4min
pages 60-62

Privateers and Pirates in the Spanish Atlantic

5min
pages 44-47

Sabotage, Suicide, and Flight: Slave Resistance and Resiliency in the Atlantic World

14min
pages 37-43

Second-hand Smoke: Tobacco and the Lingering Seeds of the Columbian Exchange

15min
pages 29-36

The Forgotten History of Trade Languages

4min
pages 26-28

“The Eldorado Spirit”: The Lure of the Man, Lake, and Myth of El Dorado

3min
pages 10-11

The Impacts of Invaders: Invasive Species in the Atlantic World

2min
pages 14-15

One Mosquito Bite Away from Colonization: Malaria Resistance in Africa due to Sickle Cell Anemia

6min
pages 22-25

Not a Drop to Drink: The Fountain of Youth and the Quest for Eternal Life

3min
pages 12-13

The Influence of Atlantis and its Lost People

3min
pages 5-7

Microscopes on the Past Animal Spotlight—Bluebuck

14min
pages 16-19

of Prester John and his Kingdom

3min
pages 8-9
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