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centermiddle periodAtlantis (Ancient Greek: Ἀτλαντὶς νῆσος, Atlantis nesos, "island of Atlas") is a fictional island mentioned in an allegory on the hubris of nations in Plato's works Timaeus and Critias, wherein it represents the antagonist naval power that besieges "Ancient Athens", the pseudo-historic embodiment of Plato's ideal state in The Republic.[1] In the story, Athens repels the Atlantean attack unlike any other nation of the known world,[2] supposedly bearing witness to the superiority of Plato's concept of a state.[3][4] The story concludes with Atlantis falling out of favor with the deities and submerging into the Atlantic Ocean.

 

Atlantis

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Athanasius Kircher's map of Atlantis, placing it in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, from Mundus Subterraneus 1669, published in Amsterdam. The map is oriented with south at the top.

Atlantis (Ancient GreekἈτλαντὶς νῆσοςAtlantis nesos, "island of Atlas") is a fictional island mentioned in an allegory on the hubris of nations in Plato's works Timaeus and Critias, wherein it represents the antagonist naval power that besieges "Ancient Athens", the pseudo-historic embodiment of Plato's ideal state in The Republic.[1] In the story, Athens repels the Atlantean attack unlike any other nation of the known world,[2] supposedly bearing witness to the superiority of Plato's concept of a state.[3][4] The story concludes with Atlantis falling out of favor with the deities and submerging into the Atlantic Ocean.

Despite its minor importance in Plato's work, the Atlantis story has had a considerable impact on literature. The allegorical aspect of Atlantis was taken up in utopian works of several Renaissance writers, such as Francis Bacon's New Atlantis and Thomas More's Utopia.[5][6] On the other hand, nineteenth-century amateur scholars misinterpreted Plato's narrative as historical tradition, most famously Ignatius L. Donnelly in his Atlantis: The Antediluvian World. Plato's vague indications of the time of the events (more than 9,000 years before his time[7]) and the alleged location of Atlantis ("beyond the Pillars of Hercules") gave rise to much pseudoscientific speculation.[8] As a consequence, Atlantis has become a byword for any and all supposed advanced prehistoric lost civilizations and continues to inspire contemporary fiction, from comic books to films.

While present-day philologists and classicists agree on the story's fictional character,[9][10] there is still debate on what served as its inspiration. Plato is known to have freely borrowed some of his allegories and metaphors from older traditions, as he did, for instance, with the story of Gyges.[11] This led a number of scholars to investigate possible inspiration of Atlantis from Egyptian records of the Thera eruption,[12][13] the Sea Peoples invasion,[14] or the Trojan War.[15] Others have rejected this chain of tradition as implausible and insist that Plato created an entirely fictional account,[16][17][18] drawing loose inspiration from contemporary events such as the failed Athenian invasion of Sicily in 415–413 BC or the destruction of Helike in 373 BC.[19]

Plato's dialogues

Timaeus

A fifteenth-century Latin translation of Plato's Timaeus

The only primary sources for Atlantis are Plato's dialogues Timaeus and Critias; all other mentions of the island are based on them. The dialogues claim to quote Solon, who visited Egypt between 590 and 580 BC; they state that he translated Egyptian records of Atlantis.[20] Written in 360 BC, Plato introduced Atlantis in Timaeus:

For it is related in our records how once upon a time your State stayed the course of a mighty host, which, starting from a distant point in the Atlantic ocean, was insolently advancing to attack the whole of Europe, and Asia to boot. For the ocean there was at that time navigable; for in front of the mouth which you Greeks call, as you say, 'the pillars of Heracles,' there lay an island which was larger than Libya and Asia together; and it was possible for the travelers of that time to cross from it to the other islands, and from the islands to the whole of the continent over against them which encompasses that veritable ocean. For all that we have here, lying within the mouth of which we speak, is evidently a haven having a narrow entrance; but that yonder is a real ocean, and the land surrounding it may most rightly be called, in the fullest and truest sense, a continent. Now in this island of Atlantis there existed a confederation of kings, of great and marvelous power, which held sway over all the island, and over many other islands also and parts of the continent.[21]

The four people appearing in those two dialogues are the politicians Critias and Hermocrates as well as the philosophers Socrates and Timaeus of Locri, although only Critias speaks of Atlantis. In his works Plato makes extensive use of the Socratic method in order to discuss contrary positions within the context of a supposition.

The Timaeus begins with an introduction, followed by an account of the creations and structure of the universe and ancient civilizations. In the introduction, Socrates muses about the perfect society, described in Plato's Republic (c. 380 BC), and wonders if he and his guests might recollect a story which exemplifies such a society. Critias mentions a tale he considered to be historical, that would make the perfect example, and he then follows by describing Atlantis as is recorded in the Critias. In his account, ancient Athens seems to represent the "perfect society" and Atlantis its opponent, representing the very antithesis of the "perfect" traits described in the Republic.

Critias

According to Critias, the Hellenic deities of old divided the land so that each deity might have their own lot; Poseidon was appropriately, and to his liking, bequeathed the island of Atlantis. The island was larger than Ancient Libya and Asia Minor combined,[22][23] but it was later sunk by an earthquake and became an impassable mud shoal, inhibiting travel to any part of the ocean. Plato asserted that the Egyptians described Atlantis as an island consisting mostly of mountains in the northern portions and along the shore and encompassing a great plain in an oblong shape in the south "extending in one direction three thousand stadia [about 555 km; 345 mi], but across the center inland it was two thousand stadia [about 370 km; 230 mi]." Fifty stadia [9 km; 6 mi] from the coast was a mountain that was low on all sides ... broke it off all round about ... the central island itself was five stades in diameter [about 0.92 km; 0.57 mi].

In Plato's metaphorical tale, Poseidon fell in love with Cleito, the daughter of Evenor and Leucippe, who bore him five pairs of male twins. The eldest of these, Atlas, was made rightful king of the entire island and the ocean (called the Atlantic Ocean in his honor), and was given the mountain of his birth and the surrounding area as his fiefdom. Atlas's twin Gadeirus, or Eumelus in Greek, was given the extremity of the island toward the pillars of Hercules.[24] The other four pairs of twins—Ampheres and Evaemon, Mneseus and Autochthon, Elasippus and Mestor, and Azaes and Diaprepes—were also given "rule over many men, and a large territory."

Poseidon carved the mountain where his love dwelt into a palace and enclosed it with three circular moats of increasing width, varying from one to three stadia and separated by rings of land proportional in size. The Atlanteans then built bridges northward from the mountain, making a route to the rest of the island. They dug a great canal to the sea, and alongside the bridges carved tunnels into the rings of rock so that ships could pass into the city around the mountain; they carved docks from the rock walls of the moats. Every passage to the city was guarded by gates and towers, and a wall surrounded each ring of the city. The walls were constructed of red, white, and black rock, quarried from the moats, and were covered with brasstin, and the precious metal orichalcum, respectively.

According to Critias, 9,000 years before his lifetime a war took place between those outside the Pillars of Hercules at the Strait of Gibraltar and those who dwelt within them. The Atlanteans had conquered the parts of Libya within the Pillars of Hercules, as far as Egypt, and the European continent as far as Tyrrhenia, and had subjected its people to slavery. The Athenians led an alliance of resistors against the Atlantean empire, and as the alliance disintegrated, prevailed alone against the empire, liberating the occupied lands.

But afterwards there occurred violent earthquakes and floods; and in a single day and night of misfortune all your warlike men in a body sank into the earth, and the island of Atlantis in like manner disappeared in the depths of the sea. For which reason the sea in those parts is impassable and impenetrable, because there is a shoal of mud in the way; and this was caused by the subsidence of the island.[25]

The logographer Hellanicus of Lesbos wrote an earlier work entitled Atlantis, of which only a few fragments survive. Hellanicus' work appears to have been a genealogical one concerning the daughters of Atlas (Ἀτλαντὶς in Greek means "of Atlas"),[12] but some authors have suggested a possible connection with Plato's island. John V. Luce notes that when Plato writes about the genealogy of Atlantis's kings, he writes in the same style as Hellanicus, suggesting a similarity between a fragment of Hellanicus's work and an account in the Critias.[12] Rodney Castleden suggests that Plato may have borrowed his title from Hellanicus, who may have based his work on an earlier work about Atlantis.[26]

Castleden has pointed out that Plato wrote of Atlantis in 359 BC, when he returned to Athens from Sicily. He notes a number of parallels between the physical organisation and fortifications of Syracuse and Plato's description of Atlantis.[27] Gunnar Rudberg was the first who elaborated upon the idea that Plato's attempt to realize his political ideas in the city of Syracuse could have heavily inspired the Atlantis account.[28]

Interpretations

Ancient

Reconstruction of the Oikoumene (inhabited world), an ancient map based on Herodotus' description of the world, circa 450 BC

Some ancient writers viewed Atlantis as fictional or metaphorical myth; others believed it to be real.[29] Aristotle believed that Plato, his teacher, had invented the island to teach philosophy.[20] The philosopher Crantor, a student of Plato's student Xenocrates, is cited often as an example of a writer who thought the story to be historical fact. His work, a commentary on Timaeus, is lost, but Proclus, a Neoplatonist of the fifth century AD, reports on it.[30] The passage in question has been represented in the modern literature either as claiming that Crantor visited Egypt, had conversations with priests, and saw hieroglyphs confirming the story, or, as claiming that he learned about them from other visitors to Egypt.[31] Proclus wrote:

As for the whole of this account of the Atlanteans, some say that it is unadorned history, such as Crantor, the first commentator on Plato. Crantor also says that Plato's contemporaries used to criticize him jokingly for not being the inventor of his Republic but copying the institutions of the Egyptians. Plato took these critics seriously enough to assign to the Egyptians this story about the Athenians and Atlanteans, so as to make them say that the Athenians really once lived according to that system.

The next sentence is often translated "Crantor adds, that this is testified by the prophets of the Egyptians, who assert that these particulars [which are narrated by Plato] are written on pillars which are still preserved." But in the original, the sentence starts not with the name Crantor but with the ambiguous He; whether this referred to Crantor or to Plato is the subject of considerable debate. Proponents of both Atlantis as a metaphorical myth and Atlantis as history have argued that the pronoun refers to Crantor.[32]

Alan Cameron argues that the pronoun should be interpreted as referring to Plato, and that, when Proclus writes that "we must bear in mind concerning this whole feat of the Athenians, that it is neither a mere myth nor unadorned history, although some take it as history and others as myth", he is treating "Crantor's view as mere personal opinion, nothing more; in fact he first quotes and then dismisses it as representing one of the two unacceptable extremes".[33]

Cameron also points out that whether he refers to Plato or to Crantor, the statement does not support conclusions such as Otto Muck's "Crantor came to Sais and saw there in the temple of Neith the column, completely covered with hieroglyphs, on which the history of Atlantis was recorded. Scholars translated it for him, and he testified that their account fully agreed with Plato's account of Atlantis"[34] or J. V. Luce's suggestion that Crantor sent "a special enquiry to Egypt" and that he may simply be referring to Plato's own claims.[33]

Another passage from the commentary by Proclus on the "Timaeus" gives a description of the geography of Atlantis:

That an island of such nature and size once existed is evident from what is said by certain authors who investigated the things around the outer sea. For according to them, there were seven islands in that sea in their time, sacred to Persephone, and also three others of enormous size, one of which was sacred to Hades, another to Ammon, and another one between them to Poseidon, the extent of which was a thousand stadia [200 km]; and the inhabitants of it—they add—preserved the remembrance from their ancestors of the immeasurably large island of Atlantis which had really existed there and which for many ages had reigned over all islands in the Atlantic sea and which itself had like-wise been sacred to Poseidon. Now these things Marcellus has written in his Aethiopica.[35]

Marcellus remains unidentified.

Other ancient historians and philosophers who believed in the existence of Atlantis were Strabo and Posidonius.[36] Some have theorized that, before the sixth century BC, the "Pillars of Hercules" may have applied to mountains on either side of the Gulf of Laconia, and also may have been part of the pillar cult of the Aegean.[37][38] The mountains stood at either side of the southernmost gulf in Greece, the largest in the Peloponnese, and it opens onto the Mediterranean Sea. This would have placed Atlantis in the Mediterranean, lending credence to many details in Plato's discussion.

The fourth-century historian Ammianus Marcellinus, relying on a lost work by Timagenes, a historian writing in the first century BC, writes that the Druids of Gaul said that part of the inhabitants of Gaul had migrated there from distant islands. Some have understood Ammianus's testimony as a claim that at the time of Atlantis's sinking into the sea, its inhabitants fled to western Europe; but Ammianus, in fact, says that "the Drasidae (Druids) recall that a part of the population is indigenous but others also migrated in from islands and lands beyond the Rhine" (Res Gestae 15.9), an indication that the immigrants came to Gaul from the north (Britain, the Netherlands, or Germany), not from a theorized location in the Atlantic Ocean to the south-west.[39] Instead, the Celts who dwelled along the ocean were reported to venerate twin gods, (Dioscori), who appeared to them coming from that ocean.[40]

Jewish and Christian

During the early first century, the Hellenistic Jewish philosopher Philo wrote about the destruction of Atlantis in his On the Eternity of the World, xxvi. 141, in a longer passage allegedly citing Aristotle's successor Theophrastus:[41]

... And the island of Atalantes [translator's spelling; original: "Ἀτλαντίς"] which was greater than Africa and Asia, as Plato says in the Timaeus, in one day and night was overwhelmed beneath the sea in consequence of an extraordinary earthquake and inundation and suddenly disappeared, becoming sea, not indeed navigable, but full of gulfs and eddies.[42]

The theologian Joseph Barber Lightfoot (Apostolic Fathers, 1885, II, p. 84) noted on this passage: "Clement may possibly be referring to some known, but hardly accessible land, lying without the pillars of Hercules. But more probably he contemplated some unknown land in the far west beyond the ocean, like the fabled Atlantis of Plato ..."[43]

Other early Christian writers wrote about Atlantis, although they had mixed views on whether it once existed or was an untrustworthy myth of pagan origin.[44] Tertullian believed Atlantis was once real and wrote that in the Atlantic Ocean once existed "[the isle] that was equal in size to Libya or Asia"[45] referring to Plato's geographical description of Atlantis. The early Christian apologist writer Arnobius also believed Atlantis once existed, but blamed its destruction on pagans.[46]

Cosmas Indicopleustes in the sixth century wrote of Atlantis in his Christian Topography in an attempt to prove his theory that the world was flat and surrounded by water:[47][page needed]

... In like manner the philosopher Timaeus also describes this Earth as surrounded by the Ocean, and the Ocean as surrounded by the more remote earth. For he supposes that there is to westward an island, Atlantis, lying out in the Ocean, in the direction of Gadeira (Cadiz), of an enormous magnitude, and relates that the ten kings having procured mercenaries from the nations in this island came from the earth far away, and conquered Europe and Asia, but were afterwards conquered by the Athenians, while that island itself was submerged by God under the sea. Both Plato and Aristotle praise this philosopher, and Proclus has written a commentary on him. He himself expresses views similar to our own with some modifications, transferring the scene of the events from the east to the west. Moreover he mentions those ten generations as well as that earth which lies beyond the Ocean. And in a word it is evident that all of them borrow from Moses, and publish his statements as their own.[48]

A map showing the supposed extent of the Atlantean Empire, from Ignatius L. Donnelly's Atlantis: the Antediluvian World, 1882[49]

Modern

Aside from Plato's original account, modern interpretations regarding Atlantis are an amalgamation of diverse, speculative movements that began in the sixteenth century,[50] when scholars began to identify Atlantis with the New WorldFrancisco Lopez de Gomara was the first to state that Plato was referring to America, as did Francis Bacon and Alexander von Humboldt; Janus Joannes Bircherod said in 1663 orbe novo non-novo ("the New World is not new"). Athanasius Kircher accepted Plato's account as literally true, describing Atlantis as a small continent in the Atlantic Ocean.[20]

Contemporary perceptions of Atlantis share roots with Mayanism, which can be traced to the beginning of the Modern Age, when European imaginations were fueled by their initial encounters with the indigenous peoples of the Americas.[51] From this era sprang apocalyptic and utopian visions that would inspire many subsequent generations of theorists.[51]

Most of these interpretations are considered pseudohistorypseudoscience, or pseudoarchaeology, as they have presented their works as academic or scientific, but lack the standards or criteria.

The Flemish cartographer and geographer Abraham Ortelius is believed to have been the first person to imagine that the continents were joined before drifting to their present positions. In the 1596 edition of his Thesaurus Geographicus he wrote: "Unless it be a fable, the island of Gadir or Gades [Cadiz] will be the remaining part of the island of Atlantis or America, which was not sunk (as Plato reports in the Timaeus) so much as torn away from Europe and Africa by earthquakes and flood... The traces of the ruptures are shown by the projections of Europe and Africa and the indentations of America in the parts of the coasts of these three said lands that face each other to anyone who, using a map of the world, carefully considered them. So that anyone may say with Strabo in Book 2, that what Plato says of the island of Atlantis on the authority of Solon is not a figment."[52]

Atlantis pseudohistory

Early influential literature

The term "utopia" (from "no place") was coined by Sir Thomas More in his sixteenth-century work of fiction Utopia.[53] Inspired by Plato's Atlantis and travelers' accounts of the Americas, More described an imaginary land set in the New World.[54] His idealistic vision established a connection between the Americas and utopian societies, a theme that Bacon discussed in The New Atlantis (c. 1623).[51] A character in the narrative gives a history of Atlantis that is similar to Plato's and places Atlantis in America. People had begun believing that the Mayan and Aztec ruins could possibly be the remnants of Atlantis.[53]

Impact of Mayanism

Much speculation began as to the origins of the Maya, which led to a variety of narratives and publications that tried to rationalize the discoveries within the context of the Bible and that had undertones of racism in their connections between the Old and New World. The Europeans believed the indigenous people to be inferior and incapable of building that which was now in ruins and by sharing a common history, they insinuate that another race must have been responsible.

In the middle and late nineteenth century, several renowned Mesoamerican scholars, starting with Charles Etienne Brasseur de Bourbourg, and including Edward Herbert Thompson and Augustus Le Plongeon, formally proposed that Atlantis was somehow related to Mayan and Aztec culture.

The French scholar Brasseur de Bourbourg traveled extensively through Mesoamerica in the mid-1800s, and was renowned for his translations of Mayan texts, most notably the sacred book Popol Vuh, as well as a comprehensive history of the region. Soon after these publications, however, Brasseur de Bourbourg lost his academic credibility, due to his claim that the Maya peoples had descended from the Toltecs, people he believed were the surviving population of the racially superior civilization of Atlantis.[55] His work combined with the skillful, romantic illustrations of Jean Frederic Waldeck, which visually alluded to Egypt and other aspects of the Old World, created an authoritative fantasy that excited much interest in the connections between worlds.

Inspired by Brasseur de Bourbourg's diffusion theories, the pseudoarchaeologist Augustus Le Plongeon traveled to Mesoamerica and performed some of the first excavations of many famous Mayan ruins. Le Plongeon invented narratives, such as the kingdom of Mu saga, which romantically drew connections to him, his wife Alice, and Egyptian deities Osiris and Isis, as well as to Heinrich Schliemann, who had just discovered the ancient city of Troy from Homer's epic poetry (that had been described as merely mythical).[56][page range too broad] He also believed that he had found connections between the Greek and Mayan languages, which produced a narrative of the destruction of Atlantis.[57]

Ignatius Donnelly

The 1882 publication of Atlantis: the Antediluvian World by Ignatius L. Donnelly stimulated much popular interest in Atlantis. He was greatly inspired by early works in Mayanism, and like them, attempted to establish that all known ancient civilizations were descended from Atlantis, which he saw as a technologically sophisticated, more advanced culture. Donnelly drew parallels between creation stories in the Old and New Worlds, attributing the connections to Atlantis, where he believed the Biblical Garden of Eden existed.[58] As implied by the title of his book, he also believed that Atlantis was destroyed by the Great Flood mentioned in the Bible.

Donnelly is credited as the "father of the nineteenth century Atlantis revival" and is the reason the myth endures today.[59] He unintentionally promoted an alternative method of inquiry to history and science, and the idea that myths contain hidden information that opens them to "ingenious" interpretation by people who believe they have new or special insight.[60]

Madame Blavatsky and the Theosophists
Map of Atlantis according to William Scott-Elliott (The Story of Atlantis, Russian edition, 1910)

The Russian mystic Helena Petrovna Blavatsky and her partner Henry Steel Olcott founded their Theosophical Society in the 1870s with a philosophy that combined western romanticism and eastern religious concepts. Blavatsky and her followers in this group are often cited as the founders of New Age and other spiritual movements.[53]

Blavatsky took up Donnelly's interpretations when she wrote The Secret Doctrine (1888), which she claimed was originally dictated in Atlantis. She maintained that the Atlanteans were cultural heroes (contrary to Plato, who describes them mainly as a military threat). She believed in a form of racial evolution (as opposed to primate evolution). In her process of evolution the Atlanteans were the fourth "Root Race", which were succeeded by the fifth, the "Aryan race", which she identified with the modern human race.[53]

The Theosophists believed that the civilization of Atlantis reached its peak between 1,000,000 and 900,000 years ago, but destroyed itself through internal warfare brought about by the dangerous use of psychic and supernatural powers of the inhabitants. Rudolf Steiner, the founder of anthroposophy and Waldorf Schools, along with other well known Theosophists, such as Annie Besant, also wrote of cultural evolution in much the same vein. Some subsequent occultists have followed Blavatsky, at least to the point of tracing the lineage of occult practices back to Atlantis. Among the most famous is Dion Fortune in her Esoteric Orders and Their Work.[61]

Drawing on the ideas of Rudolf Steiner and Hanns HörbigerEgon Friedell started his book Kulturgeschichte des Altertums [de], and thus his historical analysis of antiquity, with the ancient culture of Atlantis. The book was published in 1940.

Nazism and occultism

Blavatsky was also inspired by the work of the 18th-century astronomer Jean-Sylvain Bailly, who had "Orientalized" the Atlantis myth in his mythical continent of Hyperborea, a reference to Greek myths featuring a Northern European region of the same name, home to a giant, godlike race.[62][63] Dan Edelstein claims that her reshaping of this theory in The Secret Doctrine provided the Nazis with a mythological precedent and a pretext for their ideological platform and their subsequent genocide.[62] However, Blavatsky's writings mention that the Atlantean were in fact olive-skinned peoples with Mongoloid traits who were the ancestors of modern Native AmericansMongolians, and Malayans.[64][65][66]

The idea that the Atlanteans were HyperboreanNordic supermen who originated in the Northern Atlantic or even in the far North, was popular in the German ariosophic movement around 1900, propagated by Guido von List and others.[67] It gave its name to the Thule Gesellschaft, an antisemite Münich lodge, which preceded the German Nazi Party (see Thule). The scholars Karl Georg Zschaetzsch [de] (1920) and Herman Wirth (1928) were the first to speak of a "Nordic-Atlantean" or "Aryan-Nordic" master race that spread from Atlantis over the Northern Hemisphere and beyond. The Hyperboreans were contrasted with the Jewish people. Party ideologist Alfred Rosenberg (in The Myth of the Twentieth Century, 1930) and SS-leader Heinrich Himmler made it part of the official doctrine.[68] The idea was followed up by the adherents of Esoteric Nazism such as Julius Evola (1934) and, more recently, Miguel Serrano (1978).

The idea of Atlantis as the homeland of the Caucasian race would contradict the beliefs of older Esoteric and Theosophic groups, which taught that the Atlanteans were non-Caucasian brown-skinned peoples. Modern Esoteric groups, including the Theosophic Society, do not consider Atlantean society to have been superior or Utopian—they rather consider it a lower stage of evolution.[69]

Edgar Cayce

The clairvoyant Edgar Cayce spoke frequently of Atlantis. During his "life readings", he claimed that many of his subjects were reincarnations of people who had lived there. By tapping into their collective consciousness, the "Akashic Records" (a term borrowed from Theosophy),[70] Cayce declared that he was able to give detailed descriptions of the lost continent.[71] He also asserted that Atlantis would "rise" again in the 1960s (sparking much popularity of the myth in that decade) and that there is a "Hall of Records" beneath the Egyptian Sphinx which holds the historical texts of Atlantis.

Recent times

As continental drift became widely accepted during the 1960s, and the increased understanding of plate tectonics demonstrated the impossibility of a lost continent in the geologically recent past,[72] most "Lost Continent" theories of Atlantis began to wane in popularity.

Plato scholar Julia AnnasRegents Professor of Philosophy at the University of Arizona, had this to say on the matter:

The continuing industry of discovering Atlantis illustrates the dangers of reading Plato. For he is clearly using what has become a standard device of fiction—stressing the historicity of an event (and the discovery of hitherto unknown authorities) as an indication that what follows is fiction. The idea is that we should use the story to examine our ideas of government and power. We have missed the point if instead of thinking about these issues we go off exploring the sea bed. The continuing misunderstanding of Plato as historian here enables us to see why his distrust of imaginative writing is sometimes justified.[73]

One of the proposed explanations for the historical context of the Atlantis story is a warning of Plato to his contemporary fourth-century fellow-citizens against their striving for naval power.[18]

Kenneth Feder points out that Critias's story in the Timaeus provides a major clue. In the dialogue, Critias says, referring to Socrates' hypothetical society:

And when you were speaking yesterday about your city and citizens, the tale which I have just been repeating to you came into my mind, and I remarked with astonishment how, by some mysterious coincidence, you agreed in almost every particular with the narrative of Solon. ...[74]

Feder quotes A. E. Taylor, who wrote, "We could not be told much more plainly that the whole narrative of Solon's conversation with the priests and his intention of writing the poem about Atlantis are an invention of Plato's fancy."[75]

Location hypotheses

Since Donnelly's day, there have been dozens of locations proposed for Atlantis, to the point where the name has become a generic concept, divorced from the specifics of Plato's account. This is reflected in the fact that many proposed sites are not within the Atlantic at all. Few today are scholarly or archaeological hypotheses, while others have been made by psychic (e.g., Edgar Cayce) or other pseudoscientific means. (The Atlantis researchers Jacques Collina-Girard and Georgeos Díaz-Montexano, for instance, each claim the other's hypothesis is pseudoscience.)[76] Many of the proposed sites share some of the characteristics of the Atlantis story (water, catastrophic end, relevant time period), but none has been demonstrated to be a true historical Atlantis.

Satellite image of the islands of Santorini. From the Minoan eruption event, and the 1964 discovery of Akrotiri on the island, this location is one of many sites purported to have been the location of Atlantis.

In or near the Mediterranean Sea

Most of the historically proposed locations are in or near the Mediterranean Sea: islands such as Sardinia,[77][78][79] CreteSantorini (Thera), SicilyCyprus, and Malta; land-based cities or states such as Troy,[80][page needed] Tartessos, and Tantalis (in the province of ManisaTurkey);[81] Israel-Sinai or Canaan;[citation needed] and northwestern Africa.[82]

The Thera eruption, dated to the seventeenth or sixteenth century BC, caused a large tsunami that some experts hypothesize devastated the Minoan civilization on the nearby island of Crete, further leading some to believe that this may have been the catastrophe that inspired the story.[83][84] In the area of the Black Sea the following locations have been proposed: Bosporus and Ancomah (a legendary place near Trabzon).

Others have noted that, before the sixth century BC, the mountains on either side of the Gulf of Laconia were called the "Pillars of Hercules",[37][38] and they could be the geographical location being described in ancient reports upon which Plato was basing his story. The mountains stood at either side of the southernmost gulf in Greece, the largest in the Peloponnese, and that gulf opens onto the Mediterranean Sea. If from the beginning of discussions, misinterpretation of Gibraltar as the location rather than being at the Gulf of Laconia, would lend itself to many erroneous concepts regarding the location of Atlantis. Plato may have not been aware of the difference. The Laconian pillars open to the south toward Crete and beyond which is Egypt. The Thera eruption and the Late Bronze Age collapse affected that area and might have been the devastation to which the sources used by Plato referred. Significant events such as these would have been likely material for tales passed from one generation to another for almost a thousand years.

In the Atlantic Ocean

The location of Atlantis in the Atlantic Ocean has a certain appeal given the closely related names. Popular culture often places Atlantis there, perpetuating the original Platonic setting as they understand it. The Canary Islands and Madeira Islands have been identified as a possible location,[85][86][87][88] west of the Straits of Gibraltar, but in relative proximity to the Mediterranean Sea. Detailed studies of their geomorphology and geology have demonstrated, however, that they have been steadily uplifted, without any significant periods of subsidence, over the last four million years, by geologic processes such as erosional unloading, gravitational unloading, lithospheric flexure induced by adjacent islands, and volcanic underplating.[89][90]

Various islands or island groups in the Atlantic were also identified as possible locations, notably the Azores.[87][88] Similarly, cores of sediment covering the ocean bottom surrounding the Azores and other evidence demonstrate that it has been an undersea plateau for millions of years.[91][92] The area is known for its volcanism however, which is associated with rifting along the Azores Triple Junction. The spread of the crust along the existing faults and fractures has produced many volcanic and seismic events.[93] The area is supported by a buoyant upwelling in the deeper mantle, which some associate with an Azores hotspot.[94] Most of the volcanic activity has occurred primarily along the Terceira Rift. From the beginning of the islands' settlement, around the 15th century, there have been about 30 volcanic eruptions (terrestrial and submarine) as well as numerous, powerful earthquakes.[95] The island of São Miguel in the Azores is the site of the Sete Cidades volcano and caldera, which are the byproducts of historical volcanic activity in the Azores.[96]

The submerged island of Spartel near the Strait of Gibraltar has also been suggested.[97]

Ireland

In 2004, Swedish physiographist Ulf Erlingsson[98] proposed that the legend of Atlantis was based on Stone Age Ireland. He later stated that he does not believe that Atlantis ever existed but maintained that his hypothesis that its description matches Ireland's geography has a 99.8% probability. The director of the National Museum of Ireland commented that there was no archaeology supporting this.[99]

In Europe

Map showing hypothetical extent of Doggerland (c. 8,000 BC), which provided a land bridge between Great Britain and continental Europe

Several hypotheses place the sunken island in northern Europe, including Doggerland in the North Sea, and Sweden (by Olof Rudbeck in Atland, 1672–1702). Doggerland, as well as Viking Bergen Island, is thought to have been flooded by a megatsunami following the Storegga slide of c. 6100 BC. Some have proposed the Celtic Shelf as a possible location, and that there is a link to Ireland.[100]

In 2011, a team, working on a documentary for the National Geographic Channel,[101] led by Professor Richard Freund from the University of Hartford, claimed to have found possible evidence of Atlantis in southwestern Andalusia.[102] The team identified its possible location within the marshlands of the Doñana National Park, in the area that once was the Lacus Ligustinus,[103] between the HuelvaCádiz, and Seville provinces, and they speculated that Atlantis had been destroyed by a tsunami,[104] extrapolating results from a previous study by Spanish researchers, published four years earlier.[105]

Spanish scientists have dismissed Freund's speculations, claiming that he sensationalised their work. The anthropologist Juan Villarías-Robles, who works with the Spanish National Research Council, said, "Richard Freund was a newcomer to our project and appeared to be involved in his own very controversial issue concerning King Solomon's search for ivory and gold in Tartessos, the well documented settlement in the Doñana area established in the first millennium BC", and described Freund's claims as "fanciful".[106]

A similar theory had previously been put forward by a German researcher, Rainer W. Kühne, that is based only on satellite imagery and places Atlantis in the Marismas de Hinojos, north of the city of Cádiz.[97] Before that, the historian Adolf Schulten had stated in the 1920s that Plato had used Tartessos as the basis for his Atlantis myth.[107]

Other locations

Several writers, such as Flavio Barbiero as early as 1974,[108] have speculated that Antarctica is the site of Atlantis.[109][110][page needed] A number of claims involve the Caribbean, such as an alleged underwater formation off the Guanahacabibes peninsula in Cuba.[111] The adjacent Bahamas or the folkloric Bermuda Triangle have been proposed as well. Areas in the Pacific and Indian Oceans have also been proposed, including Indonesia (i.e. Sundaland).[112][page needed] The stories of a lost continent off the coast of India, named "Kumari Kandam", have inspired some to draw parallels to Atlantis.[113][page needed]

Literary interpretations

Ancient versions

A fragment of Atlantis by Hellanicus of Lesbos

In order to give his account of Atlantis verisimilitude, Plato mentions that the story was heard by Solon in Egypt, and transmitted orally over several generations through the family of Dropides, until it reached Critias, a dialogue speaker in Timaeus and Critias.[114] Solon had supposedly tried to adapt the Atlantis oral tradition into a poem (that if published, was to be greater than the works of Hesiod and Homer). While it was never completed, Solon passed on the story to Dropides. Modern classicists deny the existence of Solon's Atlantis poem and the story as an oral tradition.[115] Instead, Plato is thought to be the sole inventor or fabricator. Hellanicus of Lesbos used the word "Atlantis" as the title for a poem published before Plato,[116] a fragment of which may be Oxyrhynchus Papyrus 11, 1359.[117] This work only describes the Atlantides (the daughters of Atlas), however, and has no relation to Plato's Atlantis account.

In the new era, the third century AD Neoplatonist Zoticus wrote an epic poem based on Plato's account of Atlantis.[118] Plato's work may already have inspired parodic imitation, however. Writing only a few decades after the Timaeus and Critias, the historian Theopompus of Chios wrote of a land beyond the ocean known as Meropis. This description was included in Book 8 of his Philippica, which contains a dialogue between Silenus and King Midas. Silenus describes the Meropids, a race of men who grow to twice normal size, and inhabit two cities on the island of Meropis: Eusebes (Εὐσεβής, "Pious-town") and Machimos (Μάχιμος, "Fighting-town"). He also reports that an army of ten million soldiers crossed the ocean to conquer Hyperborea, but abandoned this proposal when they realized that the Hyperboreans were the luckiest people on earth. Heinz-Günther Nesselrath has argued that these and other details of Silenus' story are meant as imitation and exaggeration of the Atlantis story, by parody, for the purpose of exposing Plato's ideas to ridicule.[119]

Utopias and dystopias

The creation of Utopian and dystopian fictions was renewed after the Renaissance, most notably in Francis Bacon's New Atlantis (1627), the description of an ideal society that he located off the western coast of America. Thomas Heyrick (1649-1694) followed him with "The New Atlantis" (1687), a satirical poem in three parts. His new continent of uncertain location, perhaps even a floating island either in the sea or the sky, serves as background for his exposure of what he described in a second edition as "A True Character of Popery and Jesuitism".[120]

The title of The New Atalantis by Delarivier Manley (1709), distinguished from the two others by the single letter, is an equally dystopian work but set this time on a fictional Mediterranean island.[121] In it sexual violence and exploitation is made a metaphor for the hypocritical behaviour of politicians in their dealings with the general public.[122] In Manley's case, the target of satire was the Whig Party, while in David Maclean Parry's The Scarlet Empire (1906) it is Socialism as practised in foundered Atlantis.[123] It was followed in Russia by Velemir Khlebnikov's poem The Fall of Atlantis (Gibel' Atlantidy, 1912), which is set in a future rationalist dystopia that has discovered the secret of immortality and is so dedicated to progress that it has lost touch with the past. When the high priest of this ideology is tempted by a slave girl into an act of irrationality, he murders her and precipitates a second flood, above which her severed head floats vengefully among the stars.[124]

A slightly later work, The Ancient of Atlantis (Boston, 1915) by Albert Armstrong Manship, expounds the Atlantean wisdom that is to redeem the earth. Its three parts consist of a verse narrative of the life and training of an Atlantean wise one, followed by his Utopian moral teachings and then a psychic drama set in modern times in which a reincarnated child embodying the lost wisdom is reborn on earth.[125]

In Hispanic eyes, Atlantis had a more intimate interpretation. The land had been a colonial power which, although it had brought civilization to ancient Europe, had also enslaved its peoples. Its tyrannical fall from grace had contributed to the fate that had overtaken it, but now its disappearance had unbalanced the world. This was the point of view of Jacint Verdaguer's vast mythological epic L'Atlantida (1877). After the sinking of the former continent, Hercules travels east across the Atlantic to found the city of Barcelona and then departs westward again to the Hesperides. The story is told by a hermit to a shipwrecked mariner, who is inspired to follow in his tracks and so "call the New World into existence to redress the balance of the Old". This mariner, of course, was Christopher Columbus.[126]

Verdaguer's poem was written in Catalan, but was widely translated in both Europe and Hispano-America.[127] One response was the similarly entitled Argentinian Atlantida of Olegario Victor Andrade (1881), which sees in "Enchanted Atlantis that Plato foresaw, a golden promise to the fruitful race" of Latins.[128] The bad example of the colonising world remains, however. Jose Juan Tablada characterises its threat in his "De Atlántida" (1894) through the beguiling picture of the lost world populated by the underwater creatures of Classical myth, among whom is the Siren of its final stanza with

her eye on the keel of the wandering vessel
that in passing deflowers the sea's smooth mirror,
launching into the night her amorous warbling
and the dulcet lullaby of her treacherous voice![129]

There is a similar ambivalence in Janus Djurhuus' six-stanza "Atlantis" (1917), where a celebration of the Faroese linguistic revival grants it an ancient pedigree by linking Greek to Norse legend. In the poem a female figure rising from the sea against a background of Classical palaces is recognised as a priestess of Atlantis. The poet recalls "that the Faroes lie there in the north Atlantic Ocean/ where before lay the poet-dreamt lands," but also that in Norse belief, such a figure only appears to those about to drown.[130]

A land lost in the distance

A Faroe Islands postage stamp honoring Janus Djurhuus' "Atlantis"

The fact that Atlantis is a lost land has made of it a metaphor for something no longer attainable. For the American poet Edith Willis Linn Forbes (1865-1945), "The Lost Atlantis" stands for idealisation of the past; the present moment can only be treasured once that is realised.[131] Ella Wheeler Wilcox finds the location of "The Lost Land" (1910) in one's carefree youthful past.[132] Similarly, for the Irish poet Eavan Boland in "Atlantis, a lost sonnet" (2007), the idea was defined when "the old fable-makers searched hard for a word/ to convey that what is gone is gone forever".[133]

For some male poets too, the idea of Atlantis is constructed from what cannot be obtained. Charles Bewley in his Newdigate Prize poem (1910) thinks it grows from dissatisfaction with one's condition,

And, because life is partly sweet
And ever girt about with pain,
We take the sweetness, and are fain
To set it free from grief's alloy

in a dream of Atlantis.[134] Similarly for the Australian Gary Catalano in a 1982 prose poem, it is "a vision that sank under the weight of its own perfection".[135] W. H. Auden, however, suggests a way out of such frustration through the metaphor of journeying toward Atlantis in his poem of 1941.[136] While travelling, he advises the one setting out, you will meet with many definitions of the goal in view, only realising at the end that the way has all the time led inward.[137]

Epic narratives

A few late-19th century verse narratives complement the genre fiction that was beginning to be written at the same period. Two of them report the disaster that overtook the continent as related by long-lived survivors. In Frederick Tennyson's Atlantis (1888), an ancient Greek mariner sails west and discovers an inhabited island which is all that remains of the former kingdom. He learns of its end and views the shattered remnant of its former glory, from which a few had escaped to set up the Mediterranean civilisations.[138] In the second, Mona, Queen of Lost Atlantis: An Idyllic Re-embodiment of Long Forgotten History (Los Angeles CA 1925) by James Logue Dryden (1840–1925), the story is told in a series of visions. A Seer is taken to Mona's burial chamber in the ruins of Atlantis, where she revives and describes the catastrophe. There follows a survey of the lost civilisations of Hyperborea and Lemuria as well as Atlantis, accompanied by much spiritualist lore.[139]

William Walton Hoskins (1856–1919) admits to the readers of his Atlantis and other poems (Cleveland OH, 1881), that he is only 24. Its melodramatic plot concerns the poisoning of the descendant of god-born kings. The usurping poisoner is poisoned in his turn, following which the continent is swallowed in the waves.[140] Asian gods people the landscape of The Lost Island (Ottawa 1889) by Edward Taylor Fletcher (1816–97). An angel foresees impending catastrophe and that the people will be allowed to escape if their semi-divine rulers will sacrifice themselves.[141] A final example, Edward N. Beecher's The Lost Atlantis or The Great Deluge of All (Cleveland OH, 1898) is just a doggerel vehicle for its author's opinions: that the continent was the location of the Garden of Eden; that Darwin's theory of evolution is correct, as are Donnelly's views.[142]

Atlantis was to become a theme in Russia following the 1890s, taken up in unfinished poems by Valery Bryusov and Konstantin Balmont, as well as in a drama by the schoolgirl Larisa Reisner.[143] One other long narrative poem was published in New York by George V. Golokhvastoff. His 250-page The Fall of Atlantis (1938) records how a high priest, distressed by the prevailing degeneracy of the ruling classes, seeks to create an androgynous being from royal twins as a means to overcome this polarity. When he is unable to control the forces unleashed by his occult ceremony, the continent is destroyed.[144]

Artistic representations

Music

The Spanish composer Manuel de Falla worked on a dramatic cantata based on Verdaguer's L'Atlántida, during the last 20 years of his life.[145] The name has been affixed to symphonies by Janis Ivanovs (1941),[146] Richard Nanes,[147] and Vaclav Buzek (2009).[148] There was also the symphonic celebration of Alan Hovhaness: "Fanfare for the New Atlantis" (Op. 281, 1975).[149]

The Bohemian-American composer and arranger Vincent Frank Safranek wrote Atlantis (The Lost Continent) Suite in Four Parts; I. Nocturne and Morning Hymn of Praise, II. A Court Function, III. "I Love Thee" (The Prince and Aana), IV. The Destruction of Atlantis, for military (concert) band in 1913.[150]

The opera Der Kaiser von Atlantis (The Emperor of Atlantis) was written in 1943 by Viktor Ullmann with a libretto by Peter Kien, while they were both inmates at the Nazi concentration camp of Theresienstadt. The Nazis did not allow it to be performed, assuming the opera's reference to an Emperor of Atlantis to be a satire on Hitler. Though Ullmann and Kiel were murdered in Auschwitz, the manuscript survived and was performed for the first time in 1975 in Amsterdam.[151][152][153]

Painting and sculpture

François de Nomé's The Fall of Atlantis
Nicholas Roerich's The Last of Atlantis
Léon Bakst's vision of cosmic catastrophe

Paintings of the submersion of Atlantis are comparatively rare. In the seventeenth century there was François de Nomé's The Fall of Atlantis, which shows a tidal wave surging toward a Baroque city frontage. The style of architecture apart, it is not very different from Nicholas Roerich's The Last of Atlantis of 1928.

The most dramatic depiction of the catastrophe was Léon Bakst's Ancient Terror (Terror Antiquus, 1908), although it does not name Atlantis directly. It is a mountain-top view of a rocky bay breached by the sea, which is washing inland about the tall structures of an ancient city. A streak of lightning crosses the upper half of the painting, while below it rises the impassive figure of an enigmatic goddess who holds a blue dove between her breasts. Vyacheslav Ivanov identified the subject as Atlantis in a public lecture on the painting given in 1909, the year it was first exhibited, and he has been followed by other commentators in the years since.[154]

Sculptures referencing Atlantis have often been stylized single figures. One of the earliest was Einar Jónsson's The King of Atlantis (1919–1922), now in the garden of his museum in Reykjavík. It represents a single figure, clad in a belted skirt and wearing a large triangular helmet, who sits on an ornate throne supported between two young bulls.[155] The walking female entitled Atlantis (1946) by Ivan Meštrović[156] was from a series inspired by ancient Greek figures[157] with the symbolical meaning of unjustified suffering.[158]

In the case of the Brussels fountain feature known as The Man of Atlantis (2003) by the Belgian sculptor Luk van Soom [nl], the 4-metre tall figure wearing a diving suit steps from a plinth into the spray.[159] It looks light-hearted but the artist's comment on it makes a serious point: "Because habitable land will be scarce, it is no longer improbable that we will return to the water in the long term. As a result, a portion of the population will mutate into fish-like creatures. Global warming and rising water levels are practical problems for the world in general and here in the Netherlands in particular".[160]

Robert Smithson's Hypothetical Continent (Map of broken clear glass, Atlantis) was first created as a photographical project on Loveladies Island NJ in 1969,[161] and then recreated as a gallery installation of broken glass.[162] On this he commented that he liked "landscapes that suggest prehistory", and this is borne out by the original conceptual drawing of the work that includes an inset map of the continent sited off the coast of Africa and at the straits into the Mediterranean.[163]

See also

Underwater geography:

General:

Notes

  1. ^ Hale, John R. (2009). Lords of the Sea: The Epic Story of the Athenian Navy and the Birth of Democracy. New York: Penguin. p. 368. ISBN 978-0-670-02080-5Plato also wrote the myth of Atlantis as an allegory of the archetypal thalassocracy or naval power.
  2. ^ Plato's contemporaries pictured the world as consisting of only Europe, Northern Africa, and Western Asia (see the map of Hecataeus of Miletus). Atlantis, according to Plato, had conquered all Western parts of the known world, making it the literary counter-image of Persia. See Welliver, Warman (1977). Character, Plot and Thought in Plato's Timaeus-Critias. Leiden: E.J. Brill. p. 42. ISBN 978-90-04-04870-6.
  3. ^ Hackforth, R. (1944). "The Story of Atlantis: Its Purpose and Its Moral". Classical Review58 (1): 7–9. doi:10.1017/s0009840x00089356JSTOR 701961.
  4. ^ David, Ephraim (1984). "The Problem of Representing Plato's Ideal State in Action". Riv. Fil. 112: 33–53.
  5. ^ Mumford, Lewis (1965). "Utopia, the City and the Machine". Daedalus94 (2): 271–292. JSTOR 20026910.
  6. ^ Hartmann, Anna-Maria (2015). "The Strange Antiquity of Francis Bacon's New Atlantis". Renaissance Studies29 (3): 375–393. doi:10.1111/rest.12084.
  7. ^ The frame story in Critias tells about an alleged visit of the Athenian lawmaker Solon (c. 638 BC – 558 BC) to Egypt, where he was told the Atlantis story that supposedly occurred 9,000 years before his time.
  8. ^ Feder, Kenneth (2011). "Lost: One Continent - Reward"Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries: Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology(Seventh ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 141–164. ISBN 978-0-07-811697-1.
  9. ^ Clay, Diskin (2000). "The Invention of Atlantis: The Anatomy of a Fiction". In Cleary, John J.; Gurtler, Gary M. (eds.). Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy15. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 1–21. ISBN 978-90-04-11704-4.
  10. ^ "As Smith discusses in the opening article in this theme issue, the lost island-continent was – in all likelihood – entirely Plato's invention for the purposes of illustrating arguments around Grecian polity. Archaeologists broadly agree with the view that Atlantis is quite simply 'utopia' (Doumas, 2007), a stance also taken by classical philologists, who interpret Atlantis as a metaphorical rather than an actual place (Broadie, 2013; Gill, 1979; Nesselrath, 2002). One might consider the question as being already reasonably solved but despite the general expert consensus on the matter, countless attempts have been made at finding Atlantis." (Dawson & Hayward, 2016)
  11. ^ Laird, A. (2001). "Ringing the Changes on Gyges: Philosophy and the Formation of Fiction in Plato's Republic". Journal of Hellenic Studies121: 12–29. doi:10.2307/631825JSTOR 631825S2CID 170951759.
  12. Jump up to:a b c Luce, John V. (1978). "The Literary Perspective". In Ramage, Edwin S. (ed.). Atlantis, Fact or Fiction?. Indiana University Press. p. 72ISBN 978-0-253-10482-3.
  13. ^ Griffiths, J. Gwyn (1985). "Atlantis and Egypt". Historia34 (1): 3–28. JSTOR 4435908.
  14. ^ Görgemanns, Herwig (2000). "Wahrheit und Fiktion in Platons Atlantis-Erzählung". Hermes128 (4): 405–419. JSTOR 4477385.
  15. ^ Zangger, Eberhard (1993). "Plato's Atlantis Account – A Distorted Recollection of the Trojan War". Oxford Journal of Archaeology12 (1): 77–87. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0092.1993.tb00283.x.
  16. ^ Gill, Christopher (1979). "Plato's Atlantis Story and the Birth of Fiction". Philosophy and Literature3 (1): 64–78. doi:10.1353/phl.1979.0005S2CID 170851163.
  17. ^ Naddaf, Gerard (1994). "The Atlantis Myth: An Introduction to Plato's Later Philosophy of History". Phoenix48 (3): 189–209. doi:10.2307/3693746JSTOR 3693746.
  18. Jump up to:a b Morgan, K. A. (1998). "Designer History: Plato's Atlantis Story and Fourth-Century Ideology". Journal of Hellenic Studies118 (1): 101–118. doi:10.2307/632233JSTOR 632233.
  19. ^ Plato's Timaeus is usually dated 360 BC; it was followed by his Critias.
  20. Jump up to:a b c Ley, Willy (June 1967). "Another Look at Atlantis". For Your Information. Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 74–84.
  21. ^ Plato. "Timaeus". Translated by R. G. Bury. Loeb Classical Library. Section 24e-25a.
  22. ^ "Atlantis—Britannica Online Encyclopedia"Britannica.com.
  23. ^ Also it has been interpreted that Plato or someone before him in the chain of the oral or written tradition of the report, accidentally changed the very similar Greek words for "bigger than" ("meson") and "between" ("mezon") – Luce, J.V. (1969). The End of Atlantis – New Light on an Old Legend. London: Thames and Hudson. p. 224.
  24. ^ The name is a back-formation from Gades, the Greek name for Cadiz.
  25. ^ Plato (360 BCE). "Timaeus". Translated by Benjamin Jowett. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  26. ^ Castleden 2001, p. 164
  27. ^ Castleden 2001, pp. 156–158.
  28. ^ Rudberg, G. (1917/2012). Atlantis och Syrakusai, 1917; English: Atlantis and Syracuse, 2012. ISBN 978-3-8482-2822-5
  29. ^ Nesselrath, HG (2005). 'Where the Lord of the Sea Grants Passage to Sailors through the Deep-blue Mere no More: The Greeks and the Western Seas', Greece & Rome, vol. 52, pp. 153–171 [pp. 161–171].
  30. ^ Plato. "Timaeus" (in Ancient Greek). Section 24a. τὰ γράμματα λαβόντες
  31. ^ Cameron 2002[full citation needed]
  32. ^ Castleden 2001, p,168
  33. Jump up to:a b Cameron, Alan (1983). "Crantor and Posidonius on Atlantis". The Classical Quarterly. New Series. 33 (1): 81–91. doi:10.1017/S0009838800034315.
  34. ^ Muck, Otto Heinrich, The Secret of Atlantis, Translation by Fred Bradley of Alles über Atlantis (Econ Verlag GmbH, Düsseldorf-Wien, 1976), Times Books, a division of Quadrangle/The New York Times Book Co., Inc., Three Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016, 1978. ISBN 978-0-671-82392-4
  35. ^ ProclusCommentary on Plato's Timaeus, p. 117.10–30 (=FGrHist 671 F 1), trans. Taylor, Nesselrath.
  36. ^ Strabo 2.3.6
  37. Jump up to:a b Davis, J.L. and Cherry, J.F., (1990) "Spatial and temporal uniformitarianism in LCI: Perspectives from Kea and Melos on the prehistory of Akrotiri" in Hardy, D.A and Renfrew, A.C. (Eds)(1990) "Thera and the Aegean World III, Proceedings of the Third International Conference, Santorini, Greece, 3–9 September 1989" (Thera Foundation)
  38. Jump up to:a b Castleden, Rodney (1998), "Atlantis Destroyed" (Routledge), p6
  39. ^ Fitzpatrick-Matthews, Keith. Lost Continents: Atlantis.
  40. ^ [1] Bibliotheca historica – Diodorus Siculus 4.56.4: "And the writers even offer proofs of these things, pointing out that the Celts who dwell along the ocean venerate the Dioscori above any of the gods, since they have a tradition handed down from ancient times that these gods appeared among them coming from the ocean. Moreover, the country which skirts the ocean bears, they say, not a few names which are derived from the Argonauts and the Dioscori."
  41. ^ T. Franke, Aristotle and Atlantis, 2012; pp. 131–133
  42. ^ "Philo: On the Eternity of the World". Earlychristianwritings.com. 2 February 2006. Retrieved 24 October 2012.
  43. ^ Lightfoot, translator, The Apostolic Fathers, II, 1885, p. 84, Edited & Revised by Michael W. Holmes, 1989.
  44. ^ De Camp, LS (1954). Lost Continents: The Atlantis Theme in History, Science, and Literature. New York: Gnome Press, p. 307. ISBN 978-0-486-22668-2
  45. ^ "CHURCH FATHERS: On the Pallium (Tertullian)". Newadvent.org. Retrieved 24 October 2012.
  46. ^ "ANF06. Fathers of the Third Century: Gregory Thaumaturgus, Dionysius the Great, Julius Africanus, Anatolius, and Minor Writers, Methodius, Arn - Christian Classics Ethereal Library". Ccel.org. 1 June 2005. Retrieved 24 October 2012.
  47. ^ Cosmas Indicopleustes (24 June 2010). The Christian Topography of Cosmas, an Egyptian Monk: Translated from the Greek, and Edited with Notes and Introduction. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-01295-9.
  48. ^ Roger Pearse. "Cosmas Indicopleustes, Christian Topography (1897) pp. 374–385. Book 12". Tertullian.org. Retrieved 24 October 2012.
  49. ^ Donnelly, I (1882). Atlantis: The Antediluvian World, New York: Harper & Bros. Retrieved 6 November 2001, from Project Gutenberg page 295.
  50. ^ Feder, KL. Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries: Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology, Mountain View, Mayfield 1999. ISBN 978-0-07-811697-1
  51. Jump up to:a b c Hoopes, John W. (2011). "Mayanism Comes of (New) Age". In Joseph Gelfer (ed.). 2012: Decoding the Counterculture Apocalypse. London: Equinox Publishing. pp. 38–59. ISBN 978-1-84553-639-8.
  52. ^ Ortelius, Abraham (1596). "Gadiricus"Thesaurus Geographicus. Antwerp: Plantin. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  53. Jump up to:a b c d Callahan, Tim, Friedhoffer, Bob, and Pat Linse (2001). "The Search for Atlantis!". Skeptic8 (4): 96. ISSN 1063-9330.
  54. ^ Hoopes, John W. (2011). "Mayanism Comes of (New) Age". In Joseph Gelfer (ed.). 2012: Decoding the Counterculture Apocalypse. London: Equinox Publishing. pp. 38–59 [p. 46]. ISBN 978-1-84553-639-8.
  55. ^ Evans, R. Tripp (2004). Romancing the Maya: Mexican Antiquity in the American Imagination, 1820–1915. Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-292-70247-9.
  56. ^ Evans, R. Tripp (2004). Romancing the Maya: Mexican Antiquity in the American Imagination, 1820–1915. Austin: University of Texas Press. pp. 141–6. ISBN 978-0-292-70247-9.
  57. ^ Brunhouse, Robert L. (1973). In Search of the Maya: The First Archaeologists. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. p. 153ISBN 978-0-8263-0276-2.
  58. ^ Donnelly 1941: 192-203
  59. ^ Williams, Stephen (1991). Fantastic Archaeology: The Wild Side of North American Prehistory. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 137–8ISBN 978-0-8122-8238-2.
  60. ^ Jordan, Paul (2006). "Esoteric Egypt". In Garrett G. Fagan. Archaeological Fantasies. London and New York: Routledge. pp. 23–46. ISBN 978-0-415-30593-8
  61. ^ "Esoteric Orders and Their Work" (PDF).
  62. Jump up to:a b Edelstein, Dan (2006). "Hyperborean Atlantis: Jean-Sylvain Bailly, Madame Blavatsky, and the Nazi Myth". Studies in Eighteenth-century Culture35: 267–291 [p. 268]. doi:10.1353/sec.2010.0055ISSN 0360-2370S2CID 144152893.
  63. ^ Ratner., Paul (26 November 2018). "Why the Nazis were obsessed with finding the lost city of Atlantis".
  64. ^ Powell, The Solar System, p. 25-26. (Ch. 36. "The second Atlantean sub-race: the Tlavatli".)
  65. ^ Powell, The Solar System, p. 252-263. (Ch. 39. "Ancient Peru: A Toltec remnant".)
  66. ^ "Root races"Uranian Wisdom. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  67. ^ Joscelyn Godwin, Arktos: The Polar Myth in Science, Symbolism, and Nazi Survival, Kempton ILL 1996, p. 37-78.
  68. ^ Alfred Rosenberg. "Excerpts from "The Myth of the Twentieth Century"". Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  69. ^ "The Theosophical Root Races"Kepher. Retrieved 29 September2018.
  70. ^ See Tillett, Gregory John Charles Webster Leadbeater (1854-1934), a biographical study. Ph.D. Thesis. University of Sydney, Department of Religious Studies, Sydney, 1986 – p. 985 Archived 30 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
  71. ^ Cayce, Edgar Evans (1968). Edgar Cayce on Atlantis. New York and Boston: Grand Central Publishing. pp. 27–8. ISBN 978-0-446-35102-7.
  72. ^ Runnels, Curtis; Murray, Priscilla (2004). Greece Before History: An Archaeological Companion and Guide. Stanford: Stanford UP. p. 130. ISBN 978-0-8047-4036-4. Retrieved 17 January 2010.
  73. ^ J. Annas, Plato: A Very Short Introduction (OUP 2003), p. 42 (emphasis not in the original)
  74. ^ Timaeus 25e, Jowett translation.
  75. ^ Feder, KL. Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries: Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology, Mountain View, Mayfield 1999, p. 164 ISBN 978-0-07-811697-1
  76. ^ Collina-Girard, Jacques, L'Atlantide retrouvée: enquête scientifique autour d'un mythe (Paris: Belin – pour la science, 2009).
  77. ^ Valente Poddighe, Paolo. Atlantide Sardegna: Isola dei Faraoni (Atlantis Sardinia: Island of the Pharaohs). Stampacolor
  78. ^ Frau, Sergio. Le Colonne d'Ercole. Un'inchiesta. La prima geografia. Tutt'altra storia. Nur Neon 2002
  79. ^ Was Sardinia home to the mythical civilisation of Atlantis? - The Guardian
  80. ^ Zangger, Eberhard, The Flood from Heaven: Deciphering the Atlantis legend, New York: William Morrow and Company, 1993
  81. ^ James, Peter; Thorpe, Nick (1999). Ancient Mysteries. New York City, New York: Ballantine Books. pp. 16–41ISBN 978-0-345-43488-3.
  82. ^ "Plato's Atlantis in South Morocco?". Asalas.org.
  83. ^ The wave that destroyed Atlantis Harvey Lilley, BBC News Online, 20 April 2007. Retrieved 2007-04-21.
  84. ^ Bruins, Hendrik J.; et al. (2008). "Geoarchaeological tsunami deposits at Palaikastro (Crete) and the Late Minoan IA eruption of Santorini" (PDF)Journal of Archaeological Science35 (1): 191–212. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2007.08.017hdl:11370/01bb92b9-dc59-47b2-bac7-63ad80afb745.
  85. ^ Afonso, Leoncio (1980). "El mito de la Atlántida". Geografía física de Canarias: Geografía de Canarias (in Spanish). Editorial Interinsular Canaria. p. 11. ISBN 978-84-85543-15-1.
  86. ^ Rodríguez Hernández, María Jesús (2011). Imágenes de Canarias 1764–1927. Historia y ciencia (in Spanish). Fundación Canaria Orotava. p. 38. ISBN 978-84-614-5110-4.
  87. Jump up to:a b Sweeney, Emmet (2010). Atlantis: The Evidence of Science. Algora Publishing. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-87586-771-7.
  88. Jump up to:a b Vidal-Naquet, Pierre (2005). L'Atlantide: Petite histoire d'un mythe platonicien (in French). Belles Lettres. p. 92. ISBN 978-2-251-38071-1.
  89. ^ Menendez, I., P.G. Silva, M. Martín-Betancor, F.J. Perez-Torrado, H. Guillou, and S. Scaillet, 2009, Fluvial dissection, isostatic uplift, and geomorphological evolution of volcanic islands (Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain) Geomorphology. v. 102, no.1, pp. 189–202.
  90. ^ Meco J., S. Scaillet, H. Guillou, A. Lomoschitz, J.C. Carracedo, J. Ballester, J.-F. Betancort, and A. Cilleros, 2007, Evidence for long-term uplift on the Canary Islands from emergent Mio–Pliocene littoral deposits. Global and Planetary Change. v. 57, no. 3-4, pp. 222–234.
  91. ^ Huang, T.C., N.D. Watkins, and L. Wilson, 1979, Deep-sea tephra from the Azores during the past 300,000 years: eruptive cloud height and ash volume estimates. Geological Society of America Bulletin. vol. 90, no. 2, pp. 131–133.
  92. ^ Dennielou, B. G.A. Auffret, A. Boelaert, T. Richter, T. Garlan, and R. Kerbrat, 1999, Control of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Gulf Stream over Quaternary sedimentation on the Azores Plateau. Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série II. Sciences de la Terre et des Planètes. v. 328, no. 12, pp. 831–837.,
  93. ^ Ferreira, 2005, p. 4
  94. ^ Ting Yang, et al., 2006, p. 20
  95. ^ Carlos S. OLIVEIRA, Ragnar SIGBJÖRNSSON, Simon ÓLAFSSON (1–6 August 2004). "A COMPARATIVE STUDY ON STRONG GROUND MOTION IN TWO VOLCANIC ENVIRONMENTS: AZORES AND ICELAND" (PDF). 13th World Conference on Earthquake Engineering.
  96. ^ G. Queiroz, J. L. Gaspar, J. E. Guest, A. Gomes and M. H. Almeida (16 September 2015). "Eruptive history and evolution of Sete Cidades Volcano, São Miguel Island, Azores". Geological Society of London.
  97. Jump up to:a b Kühne, Rainer W. (June 2004). "A location for Atlantis?"Antiquity78 (300). ISSN 0003-598X. Retrieved 19 April 2015.
  98. ^ Erlingsson, Ulf (1 October 2007). "A geographic comparison of Plato's Atlantis and Ireland as a test of the megalithic culture hypothesis".
  99. ^ "Swedish academic plays down Atlantis claims"The Irish Times. 19 August 2004. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  100. ^ Lovgren, Stefan (19 August 2004). "Atlantis "Evidence" Found in Spain and Ireland"National Geographic.
  101. ^ "Finding Atlantis". National Geographic Channel. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 10 July 2011.
  102. ^ Howard, Zach (12 March 2011). "Lost city of Atlantis, swamped by tsunami, may be found"ReutersArchived from the original on 15 March 2011. Retrieved 13 March 2011.
  103. ^ Ivar Lissner (1962). The Silent Past: Mysterious and forgotten cultures of the world. Putnam. p. 156.
  104. ^ Zoe Fox (14 March 2011). "Science Lost No Longer? Researchers Claim to Have Found 'Atlantis' in Spain"Time. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  105. ^ Francisco Ruiz; Manuel Abad; et al. (2008). "The Geological Record of the Oldest Historical Tsunamis in Southwestern Spain" (PDF)Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia114 (1): 145–154. ISSN 0035-6883. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2012.
  106. ^ Owen, Edward (14 March 2011). "Lost city of Atlantis 'buried in Spanish wetlands'"The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  107. ^ Schulten, Adof (1927). "Tartessos und Atlantis". Petermanns Geographische Mitteilungen (in German). 73: 284–288.
  108. ^ Polidoro, Massimo (November–December 2020). "Atlantis under Ice? Part 1"Skeptical Inquirer. Amherst, New York: Center for Inquiry. Archived from the original on 23 July 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  109. ^ The Atlantis Blueprint: Unlocking the Ancient Mysteries of a Long-Lost Civilization. Delta; Reprint edition. 28 May 2002. ISBN 978-0-440-50898-4.
  110. ^ Earth's shifting crust: A key to some basic problems of earth science. Pantheon Books. 1958. ASIN B0006AVEEU.
  111. ^ Ballingrud, David (17 November 2002). "Underwater world: Man's doing or nature's?"St. Petersburg Times. Archived from the original on 10 November 2012. Retrieved 3 October 2012.
  112. ^ Atlantis – The Lost Continent Finally Found Santos, Arysio; Atlantis Publications, August 2005, ISBN 0-9769550-0-8.
  113. ^ Ramaswamy, Sumathi (2005). The lost land of Lemuria: fabulous geographies, catastrophic histories. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24440-5.
  114. ^ Smith, O. D. (2016). "The Atlantis Story: An Authentic Oral Tradition?". Shima: The International Journal of Research into Island Cultures. 10(2): 10-17.
  115. ^ Mauro Tulli, "The Atlantis poem in the Timaeus-Critias", in The Platonic Art of Philosophy, Cambridge University 2013, pp. 269–282
  116. ^ "The following papyrus, 1359, which Grenfell and Hunt identified as also from the Catalogue, is regarded by C. Robert as part of a separate epic, which he calls Atlantis." Bell, H. Idris, "Bibliography: Graeco-Roman Egypt A. Papyri (1915-1919)", The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Apr., 1920), pp. 119–146.
  117. ^ P.Oxy. 1359. See Carl Robert (1917): Eine epische AtlantiasHermes, Vol. 52, No. 3 (Jul., 1917), pp. 477–79.
  118. ^ PorphyryLife of Plotinus, 7=35.
  119. ^ Nesselrath, HG (1998). 'Theopomps Meropis und Platon: Nachahmung und Parodie', Göttinger Forum für Altertumswissenschaft, vol. 1, pp. 1–8.
  120. ^ University of Michigan
  121. ^ Archived online
  122. ^ Nováková, Soňa, pp. 121–6 "Sex and Politics: Delarivier Manley's New Atalantis"
  123. ^ Online edition
  124. ^ Boris Thomson, Lot's Wife and the Venus of Milo: Conflicting Attitudes to the Cultural Heritage in Modern Russia, Cambridge University 1978, pp. 77–8
  125. ^ Archived online
  126. ^ Robert Hughes, Barcelona, London 1992, pp. 341–3
  127. ^ Isidor Cònsul, "The translations of Verdaguer
  128. ^ Obras Poeticaspp. 151–166; there is a translation of canto 8 by Elijah Clarence Hills
  129. ^ Latin American Anthology, p. 1
  130. ^ Joensen, Leyvoy (2002). "Atlantis, Bábylon, Tórshavn: The Djurhuus Brothers and William Heinesen in Faroese Literary History". Scandinavian Studies74 (2): 181–204 [esp. 192–4]. JSTOR 40920372.
  131. ^ Black Cat poems
  132. ^ Litscape
  133. ^ Poets.org
  134. ^ Google Books p. 11
  135. ^ Gary Catalano, Heaven of Rags, Sydney 1982, Australian Poetry Library
  136. ^ Poem Hunter
  137. ^ Bonnie Costello, "Setting out for Atlantis", from Auden at Work, Palgrave Macmillan 2015, pp. 133–53
  138. ^ In two parts at Black Cat Poems; part 1 and part 2
  139. ^ Google Books
  140. ^ Archived online, pp. 7–127
  141. ^ Archived online
  142. ^ Hathi Trust
  143. ^ Pichler, Madeleine (2013). Atlantis als Motiv in der russischen Literatur des 20. Jahrhunderts (PDF) (M.A. thesis). Vienna University. pp. 27–30. Archived (PDF) from the original on 8 May 2016.
  144. ^ Pichler, pp. 37–40.
  145. ^ There is a performance on YouTube
  146. ^ Symphony 4, of which there is a performance on YouTube
  147. ^ Symphony 1, "Atlantis, the sunken city", recorded by the London Philharmonic Orchestra during the 1990s
  148. ^ A performance on YouTube
  149. ^ Presto Classical
  150. ^ The Heritage Encyclopedia of Band Music by William H. Rehrig, ed. by Paul Bierley. Westerville OH: Integrity Press, 1991. vol. 2, pp. 655–656
  151. ^ Beaumont, Antony (2001), in Holden, Amanda (Ed.), The New Penguin Opera Guide, New York: Penguin Putnam. ISBN 0-140-29312-4
  152. ^ Karas, Joža (1990). Music in Terezín, 1941–1945. Hillsdale, New York: Pendragon Press.
  153. ^ Unknown author (26 April 1977), "From the archive: Death takes a holiday"The Guardian (London), 26 April 1977; reprinted on 26 April 2014
  154. ^ Davidson, Pamela (2009). "Cultural Memory and Survival: The Russian Renaissance of Classical Antiquity in the Twentieth Century". Studies in Russia and Eastern Europe. 6. London, UK: School of Slavonic and East European Studies, UCL: 5–15.
  155. ^ Flicker
  156. ^ View online
  157. ^ Meštrović, Matthew, "Meštrović's American Experience", Journal of Croatian Studies, XXIV, 1983
  158. ^ Meštrović Gallery
  159. ^ Brussels Pictures
  160. ^ Kunstbus article quoting "Luk van Soom"
  161. ^ Artist's site
  162. ^ Dia Beacon Gallery
  163. ^ Artist's site

Further reading

  •  Media related to Atlantis at Wikimedia Commons
  •  The dictionary definition of atlantis at Wiktionary

Ancient sources

Modern sources

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askinflickpornyfuckfilmcyberporn sexploiterskinhouseskinflickbluemovie hard-corepornhotchatsmutbusiness eroductionsmutcomsoftpornography JapaneseAdultVideosJAV 남성성기batandballsballsandbat 여성성기女性性器muliebria 성기性器sexualgenitalorgansgenitals Atlantis생식샘生殖thesexsexualgenitalglandagonad 생식샘生殖thesexsexualgenitalglandagonad 자지dickcockpenis 보지여성의외음부vulvamuffpussy 膣屄毴寶唐之陰門相思不見見牛未見羊不見是圖 腎牡陰莖屌屪𣬠㞗𡳇𣬶男根肾龜龜腎莖䘒𧗔坐藏之 陰縮狗腎黃狗腎陰痿天宦鼓子 삽입揷入insertioninterpositioninterpolation삽입하다insertinterposeinterpolateputathingin揷入揷 피부皮膚살살결skinfleshdermiscutisderm 더러운느낌adirtyfeeling 염오厭惡abhorrence 뒤통수뒷머리backofthehead 머리윗면Thetopofthehead 이마foreheadbrow 아래팔antebrachiumforearm 아래팔근막antebrachialfascia 노쪽아래팔피판radialforeamflap upperarm상박上膊상완上腕 bicepsbrachii상완이두근上腕二頭筋 olecranal팔꿈치주두elbowanconcubitus wrist손목팔목carpusshacklebonerascette 견갑골肩胛骨theshoulderbladethescapula 견갑골후면肩胛骨後面faciesposteriorscapulae pelvis골반pelvicboneHumanpelvis hipthepelvicbones골반뼈 back등등허리barebackhorseback등뼈척추backbonespine 등근육musclesofbackbackmuscles 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늑막肋膜thepleura rib갈비뼈늑골ribcagecostasternalrib oscostale늑골肋骨갈비뼈costalbone 흉골胸骨thesternumthebreastbone 흉추胸椎thethoracicvertebrae 경골頸骨theneckbonesthecervicalvertebrae 비골鼻骨thenasalbone 요골腰骨thehipbonethehucklebone 경추頸椎thecervicalvertebral 제2경추第二頸椎epistropheus 제1경추골第一頸椎骨atlas thecervicalspine경추목등뼈 cervicalspine목뼈경추spine 요추腰椎thelumbarvertebra 척추脊椎spinebackbonespinalvertebralcolumnvertebra 해골骸骨머리뼈skullskeleton 발footfeetpaw 뒷덜미목의뒤쪽napeofone'sneckbackofone'sneck 관자놀이貫子templetemporo-haffet temporalbone측두골관자놀이뼈 ear귀cauliflowerearglueearmiddleear청각 shell-likelugauris사람의귀listenhear infratrochlear하비갑개下鼻甲介 conchanasalisinferior하비갑개下鼻甲介아래코선반 (알려 주다) show, indicate (나이를) get older, grow older (끼니) meal, (음식) food 3. (동물의 먹이) food, feed PC방행정공공시설(기타 편의·시설)InternetCafe 주거住居(거주하는집)dwellingabode(거주하는것)residenceliving 숙박宿泊lodge(in/at)stay(at/with)putup 숙소宿所lodgingaccommodations 민가지역areaofprivatehouses 주소지住所地thelocalityofone'sresidence 생활지aplaceofliving 주민등록지住民登錄地residentregistrationplaceplaceofresidentregistration 민박하다民泊하다lodgetemporarilystayatsomeone'shome 주택住宅househousing 그림그리다picturefiguredrawingpaintingsketchillustrationplatedrawpaintsketch describedepict picturedrawingpaintingsketchillustrationplate 용모容貌奪取visageseizeborrowinghiringleasesharing ceaseeconomicsupport refusedlegalaid deservesgovernmentsolicitudeandeconomicassistance 자택自宅one'sownhousehome 아파트apartmentbuildinghouseblockflat 연립주택townhouserowhouseterracedhouse 다세대주택多世帶住宅multiplexhousing 공동주택共同住宅multi-unitdwellingapartmenthousesbuilding 시체屍體deadbodycorpsecadavercarcass 공동묘지cemeterygraveyard 교도소矯導所prisonjailpenitentiarypen 형무소刑務所prisonjailpenitentiarypen 화장터crematoriumcrematoriumscrematoriacrematory 조직폭력배gangsterorganizedviolentcriminal 무뢰배無賴輩aruffian 불량배thughoodlumhooliganbully 깡패―牌bullymuggergangster 양아치bullygangster 악동惡童badboygirldevil 朴鐘權박종권6301281067814 地球人朴鐘權지구인박종권6301281067814 foulplay폭행치사살인부정행위반칙 朴辰晧박진호 지구인地球人朴辰晧박진호 朴辰英박진영 지구인地球人朴辰英박진영 金善姬김선희 지구인地球人金善姬김선희 모독冒瀆insultblasphemyprofanityinsult 조롱嘲弄mockeryridiculederisionlaughatscoffatsneerat 모욕侮辱insultaffrontoffend 하대下待낮춤말을쓰다speakusingtheinformalform 가난에쪼들리다sufferfrompovertybestruckwithpoverty 궁핍한생활을하다liveinpovertybepoorbebadlyoff 비천하다卑賤humblelowly 품위가없음비열야비함하등조악lessnessignoblenesslowgrade 비열하다卑劣·鄙劣nastybasedirtyunderhandedlowdown 傷殘暴毒凶危費殃損蓋厄殆克賊割禍忮曝慘虐癒踐刻 残疾㺑惎㥍讒齕㲅㥇𣧝𣳅𢾃𢗏𢤵𨆎𤡙獵盖伤沴遏毀仇 㐫𢦏剝敝费狡㫧㬥枳㓙𣧑龁𪗟䄃威损曷𨸷蠹葢挤揍擠 憨瘉礙蠧䜛谗㦑㨈𠐣耗碍甾疚寇惨贼祸措戝旤䄀毁践 猟菑䃣䃣𤢪䃣靡窛𢵄葘中被倒竊姦盜偸攘偷窃𢿑𥨷徼 襒忨媮婾剽盗姧㡪𢅼愉撟挢狡獪猾狡兔三窟㺒狯䛢𤠖 𢛛姡㛿𡠹𧭇𠋬𡜶𤟋迌𠬍狡吏猾智狡情狡童凶黠能猾 獪猾狡惡詐黠巧黠兇猾駔險頑黠狡險奸猾猾賊猾吏 土猾㕙獹迭憊傾狡麤猾獷猾剽狡姦猾息慧憸詖佼䛲 訬黠𡤪㜥𩒖𩒖狡兔㕙鼠族老狐鬼郊墨㹟滑喬桀偸狙 墨偷謾媞乔譟孅谩㗄譣诐侻㘶⻤假僞欺機但妄詐佯 伋仮矯偽伪嚜㑟誕故僭僞贋誑㤍訏譖非僣贋躛𧥦赝 贗詳谮訛譛诈謷吪譌讹矫轣诞造详藏頭露尾虛傳官令 知乎不冬虛傳將令以假亂眞依數當然烏集之交眞實正直 捏造精誠眞心假飾素朴率直誣告假像僞證眞假裝假名 僞裝詭詐詐稱謀害僞證罪䟶假託假銜眞正僞計空念佛 MALDEK內破 MALDEK내파의이유원인도구술수수법수단방법경로과정배후지원세력적용기술과학기술체계무기체계경과경로협조자지지자협력자공로자동원세력PSYCHYPOWERCONCENTRATEDFORCEROOTSSOURSE THEPLEIADESPROJECT 이건희PROJECT 亞PLEIADES1代祖師 논개 亞PLEIADES2代祖師 이재용 亞PLEIADES3代祖師 이영애 亞PLEIADES4代祖師 이건희 THEPLEIADES4BIGOUTRAGEOUSFELLOW bimaxillary양악(兩顎)의양쪽턱을범하는 상악上顎theupperjaw 하악下顎thelowerunderjaw mouth입입구아가리주둥이jawkisserproboscis 흑승지옥黑繩地獄Kālasūtra칼라수트라 규환지옥叫喚地獄Raurava라우라바 아비지옥阿鼻地獄Avīci아비치 팔열팔한지옥八熱八寒地獄 팔승지옥 구천지옥 무간지옥 OBERONIA대지옥 ATLANTIS대지옥 거저얻다getfornothing空得공득魏空得僞空得 騙取편취defraudationswindleobtainbyfrauddefraudapersonofathingcheatapersonoutofathing 奪取罪奪取罪賴赖extortionseizureextortseizecapturehijackusurp 왕위를찬탈하다usurpseizethethrone 식인食人cannibalism식인귀食人鬼acannibaldemonmaneaterarticulated maneating식인의atribeofcannibals식인종 남창男娼여장남자gayhomosexualhomofairycallboy 이무기amonsterserpentapython吝嗇偏狹䦵惼𩰐𩰞褊剛卑𡮁𤰞𥏝痺陋侏反 지구인地球人anearthiananearthmananearthlingtellurianearthperson 지구인地球人earthpersontellurianearthwomanEarthgirls 지구인地球人Earthgirlshumanswinemanfleshandblood 지구인地球人fleshandbloodhumanitymortalmankind 지구인地球人amanofmoldahumanbeingfellowman 지구인地球人areasoningcreaturehumankindAdamite 지구인地球人andr-personkindathinkingreedasonofman LeeKun-hee이건희李健熙Aproject ThePleiadesTheSevenSistersAproject be pinched with poverty appearance, look, features TheAndromedaGalaxyMessier31M31NGC224originallytheAndromedaNebula ThePleiadesTheSevenSistersMessier45 AtlantisἈτλαντὶςνῆσοςAtlantìsnêsoslitislandofAtlas Lyralyreλύρα 베가(Vega, α Lyrae) AratheAltarBetaAraeαAraeαAraMuAraeConstellation CancerConstellation TheBeehiveClusterPraesepemangercribM44NGC2632Cr189Cluster LemuriaLimuria LandofMu 여유풍요만족에대한지시명령서제1조 우주의기본은 여유와 풍요에 있었다. 만일 이유가 없는 가난,궁핍,인색을 행할 경우 무조건 참수형에 처하고 무조건 살해사형제거소멸추방토록 지시명령처리기록되다. 가난,궁핍,하대,천대,멸시,모독,모욕과 헐벗고굶주리고살기힘든이유는 대부분은 악업때문이다. 악업으로 인한 것, 즉 이유있는 가난, 궁핍, 헐벗고굶주리고살기힘든것들은 어쩔수 없다. 그러나 그렇게 할만한 이유가 없는데 가난, 궁핍, 헐벗고굶주리고살기힘들게만드는것(섹스,부부관계,가족관계,인간관계,사회생활등기본적권리들에대한제한구속감금탄압)은 명백한 죄악이므로, 그렇게 하는 자들에 대해서 무조건 참수형에 처하고 무조건 살해사형제거소멸추방토록 지시명령처리기록되다. 특히 이유가없는데, 실체의 가장 원본원적 근본적권리에 해당되는 섹스부부관계연애및성관계를 제한하거나 구속탄압하거나 해코지할 경우 무조건 참수형에 처하며 무조건 중벌에 처하도록 지시명령처리기록되다. AndromedaGalaxy계열들로서의 Lyra, Pleiades, 2ndGalaxyWarSpace-Universe계열의 아수라짐승무리가 자행해온 지나간 세월의 일들은, 이유없는 가난,궁핍,제한,탄압의 악행들이다. 이들은 단한번도 가난, 궁핍, 헐벗고굶주리고 고통받는 삶을 살아본 적이 전혀 없는 자들로서 실제로는 재벌15세에 해당되는 자들이며, 그로서 인색하고 편협하고 왜소하고 왜곡된 사상구조체계를 가지게되다. 우리는 Pleades에 은하계 전체의 절반정도를 살수 있는 어마어마한 재화와 보물들이 그득 그득 쌓여있는 것을 목격관찰하다. 그러나 이 짐승의 무리들은, 이렇게 엄청난 재화와 보물을 가지고도 조지부시놈이나 이건희,이재용이 놈 삼성그룹놈들이 하는 방식대로 계산기 두드리며 대단히 인색하고 편협하고 왜소하게 처신함을 목격관찰하다. 이유가 있어서 그렇게 한다면 문제는 없겠으나, 우리가 목격관찰한바로는 이유가 있고 없고의 문제가 아니라, 이 종족계열의 창조자체가 잘못된 창조로서 성품,원본심,원본색 자체가 그렇게 생겨처먹은 잘못된 창조물들이라는 것이다. 따라서 ANDROMEDAGALAXYSYSTEM을 영구폐쇄시키고 PLEIADES를 멸족시키도록 지시명령처리기록되다. MURDEK지시명령서제10조 MALDEK지시명령서 準同級他界 參照제출 地球人에 대한 정의定義 지시명령서 아래는 지구인에 대한 영어방식표현이나, 실제 지구인으로 불려야 할 실체들은, 인간사람이며, 인간사람이 아닌 실체들을 지구인으로 표현하는 영문표현방식은 잘못된것으로서 폐기토록 지시명령처리기록되다. 지구인은, 인간,인류로 불리우는 사람을 지구인으로 표현토록 지시명령처리기록되다. 지구는 제3차원 물질계의 창조를 위하여 창조되다. 제3차원 물질계의 문명창조는, 물질계가 아닌 물리계, 물상계, 에테르계 및 기타 계의 문제를 해결해줄 수단도구로서 표현되었으나, 원본래목적과의도가 폐기되었으며 그로서 부정성과 모순이 증대되었으며, 전체은하계에 부정적인 악영향을 주었으므로, 즉각 지구인에 대한 정의를 재정립하고 향후 제3차원물질계에서 살아가는 인간의 아들, 사람의 아들을 지구인으로 부르도록 지시명령처리기록되다. 地球EARTH(어쓰, 접지, 그라운드에 연결되는 지선, 맨밑바닥세상과 연결되는 지점) : 3 DIMENSIONAL BIO-MATRIX MATERAL-PHYSICAL SYSTEM/ 3D material civilization 3次元物質文明 제3차원물질계에서 문명을 창조한 전례가 우주에 없었다. 그로서 양아치, 건달, 재벌15세가 창궐하여 문제가 심각하므로, 원안대로 진행토록 지시명령처리기록되다. 제3차원 물질계문명창조를 위하여 요구되는 기간 : 약 600조년간의 경험생존및경과기간이 필요하다로서 지시명령처리기록되다. 지구인地球人anearthiananearthmananearthlingtellurianearthperson 지구인地球人earthpersontellurianearthwomanEarthgirls 지구인地球人Earthgirlshumanswinemanfleshandblood 지구인地球人fleshandbloodhumanitymortalmankind 지구인地球人amanofmoldahumanbeingfellowman 지구인地球人areasoningcreaturehumankindAdamite 지구인地球人andr-personkindathinkingreedasonofman MURDEK MALDEK ANDROMEDAGALAXY와準同級他界聯合元老院 ANDROMEDAGALAXY 무르데크Murdeck 부자 우리가 놀란 것은, 박근혜전대통령의 말을 들은이후다 우리는 초봉380000원(38만원)받고 회사다니다가, 나중에 과장되고 난후, 한 2년간 특별보너스받고 그래서 연봉 6500만원 정도 받았다. 우리가 기억하기로는 단 한번도 부유하게 살아본 적이 없고, 다만 과장시절 한 2년간 한숨내쉬고 여유를 가질까말까하는 정도밖에는 없는 실제 빈곤층이었다. 그렇지만 그렇게 살면서도 우리는 우리가 중산층은 된다고 여긴다. 회사다니고 과장(하급과장)이면 중산층아니냐 하는 생각을 가진다. 그런데 여기와서 알게 된 사실들은 매우 놀랍다. 박근혜전대통령이 말하기를 중위계층은 집(싯가4~6억원)이 4채이상되어야 하고, 월수입이 적어도 1500만원이상 되어야 한다고 말한다. 중산층하고 중위계층하고 도대체 무슨 차이가 있는거냐를 생각해본다. 정부기관이나 언론방송등에서는 중위계층이라는 말을 쓰지 않는다. 우리가 아는바로는, 빈곤층, 중산층 정도의 용어를 쓰고, 도대체 어느 정도가 되어야 부자이고 어느 정도가 되어야 먹고 산다고 할 정도이고, 어느 정도가 되어야 중산층이라고 할수 있는지에 대한 명확한 기준을 공개하지 않는거다. 말하자면 대부분의 국민들을 기망하는 수법인데, 진실을 알려주지 않는거다. 아는 사람만 알고, 대부분의 사람들은 도대체 어느 정도 되어야 부자인지 잘 모른다. 우리도 모르는데, 우리가 뭘 잘 아는 놈은 아니지만, 그래도 조금은 인식하는 정도는 된다. 그런데 우리도 모른다. 우리가 회사생활하면서 보면, 대부분의 직장인들은 월수입이 500만원이하다. 재벌그룹이라고 해도, 과부장봉급은 월500만원 이내이다. 과장봉급해봐야 약 350만원, 부장봉급해봐야 약 500만원 정도다. 대리봉급은 약 270만원, 사원봉급은 약 180만원에서 200만원선이다. 이사급, 상무이사급 정도나 되어야 연봉이 1억원이 넘는데, 상무이사같은 경우는 많이주면 약 3억원의 연봉이고, 적게 주면 약 1억원 혹은 약 7~8천만원 정도일거다. 물론 이건희회사(삼성그룹삼성전자)는, 사장급이면 약 50억원 연봉이고, LG그룹같은 경우는 사장급이 약 30억원선인 것으로 안다. 삼성전자가 다른 회사에 비해서 봉급 많이 주는 것 같지만 그게 아니다. 그리고 많이 주는 것처럼 행할수 있는 이유는 딴거없다. 아틀란티스 때문이다. 아틀란티스의 지원으로 돈을 벌고, 그래서 봉급이나 특별상여금 많이 주는거지 그거 아니면 LG그룹만도 못했을거다. 아틀란티스수준이면, 지구인으로 치환했을때(실제는 지구인으로 오지도 않는다. 아틀란티스인 수준에서 지구인으로 오면 사형처리된 죄수다) 재산규모로는 약 4천억원선이다. 아틀란티스인이 지구인이 되었다고 치면, 그리고 부모로부터 상속받는 재산이 아예 없다고 치고 계산해보면, 매년 50억원의 연봉을 받는 셈이다. 80세까지 산다고 가정하면, 4천억원 재산형성을 위해서는 매년 50억원 연봉수준이다. 물론 4천억원이라는 재산이 어떻게 산출되는지 우리는 모른다. 이 50억원이라는 연봉은 실제로는 아틀란티스인 수준의 연봉이라는 의미를 가진다. 그런데 지구인 삼성그룹사장단은 연봉50억원을 받는다. 아틀란티스인 수준과 동등하다는 얘기다. 아틀란티스인과 지구인 비교시, 아틀란티스인의 등급,지위,서열 그리고 기타 과학기술문명의식기타수준면에서 비교가 되지 않는데, 지구인들의 봉급수준이 매우 높다는 얘기다.(물론 일부 극소수다) 창조성, 생산성, 효율, 실력, 능력 및 기타 고려시 지구인의 경우는, 실제로는 아무리 높아도 연봉이 10억원이상이 될수 없다는 얘기다.(일본인들 의견참조) 보통 1억원이상 받으면 많이 받는거다. 미국회사도 초임연봉은, 윌스트리트같은 경우에도 5천만원 선으로 안다. 그런데 문제는 요 봉급으로는 박근혜가 말하는 중위계층과는 너무도 먼 딴 나라얘기가 된다. 중위계층이 되려면 월급 월수입이 1500만원이상이어야 하는데, 요걸 연봉으로 계산하면, 근 2억원 수준이 된다. 연봉2억원정도는 되어야 중위계층이라는 의미다. 이 수준은, 도대체가 회사사원노릇해서는 불가능한 액수다. 조그마한 회사에서 사장노릇이라도 해야 가능한 액수다. 최소한 사장급이 되어야 가능하다. 직원사원으로는 불가능하다. 재벌그룹도 상무이사급이나 되어야 1억원조금 넘게 받는다. 보통 1억7천만원 정도고 우리가 알기로는 그보다 더 낮은 수준이다. 삼성은 아틀란티스지원으로 횡재를 해서 돈을 많이 주는거고 일반회사같으면 그렇게 많이주기는 곤란할 거다. 플레이아데스인들을 보고 우리가 뭐라고 하는 이유는 이들이 돈을 잘 쓰고 안 쓰고의 문제가 아니라, 이들의 사상체계가 그렇다는 의미다. 이건희는 이건희프로젝트를 하면서, 무려 9조8천억원의 개인소득을 부외로 얻는다. 여기에 다시 삼성그룹자체적으로는 약 55조원의 추가매출이익을 얻는다. 이렇게 엄청난 이익을 얻지만, 이 사람은 조금도 박종권이에게 고맙다고 여기지도 않았으며, 그 어떤 대가도 주지 않았다. 이런 방식이 바로 플레이아데스인(라이라인들과 안드로메다은하계놈들도 같다)들의 사고체계이고 이들의 사상이다. 여기서는 돈을 잘 쓴다 안 쓴다는 문제가 아니다. 당신보고 도대체 그렇게 많은 돈을 가지고 뭘 할거냐고 묻는다면, 이들은 아무런 말도 하지 않는데, 우리가 아는 바로는, 통치자금화해서 세상을 지배하기 위해서 그렇게 돈을 긁어모은다는 것이다. 그게 진실이다. 아틀란티스인들만 해도 지구인대비로는 엄청난 수준의 기술과 과학 그리고 능력들을 가지지만 이 사람들도 지구인으로 오면 4천억원 수준이다. 물론 4천억원이 적은 돈은 아니다. 아주 큰 돈이다. 하지만 지구인 이건희는 재산이 무려 80조원에 이른다. 게다가 미국의 대부호들을 보면, 어떤 사람은, 재산규모가 약 600조원이 넘는 사람들도 있다. 아틀란티스를 개떼로 표현하지만, 이 사람들의 경우는 그래도는 일부는 안 그런면도 있기는 있다. 하지만 플레이아데스를 보면 도대체가 어처구니가 없다. 미국의 대부호 그러니까 600조원 혹은 900조원의 천문학적 재산을 가진 사람이 실제로는 플레이아데스인들이다. 비록 亞플레이아데스인지만, 플레이아데스인이다. 우리가 이 사람들을 보면 이해가 안가는데, 그게 플레이아데스인들의 문제다. 그리고 안드로메다은하계놈들의 문제이기도 하다. 안드로메다은하계놈들의 사상체계는, 인과응보나 원인과 결과, 공평무사함과 공정, 정의의 사상이 아니다. 이들의 사상체계는 아수라사상체계이고, 착취의 사상체계로서 이 대우주를 오염시키는 아주 저급하고 저열하등한 사상체계를 가진다. 착취라는 것은, 이건희처럼 엄청난 이익을 얻지만, 조금도 고맙다고 여기지 않고 당연하다고 여기는 것을 말한다. 우리가 주인이고 너희는 노예이므로 네가 일을 열심히 해서 우리가 이익을 얻더라도 이건 당연하고 고마울 것이 전혀 없는데, 우리가 머리가 좋고 영리하고 계획을 잘 세우고 과학과 기술이 높고 능력이 좋아서 그렇게 착취하여 이익을 냈다고 여긴다. 그리고는 조금도 대가나 결과를 안 준다. 그게 안드로메다은하계놈들이다. 즉, 일을 열심히 한 사람에 대한 공정 정의 공평무사함과 인과응보적 처리사상이 전혀 없는 무도하고 저열하급한 하등한 무리라는 얘기다. 그리고 그게 플레이아데스다. 그리고 그러한 사상체계는 지구인세계를 오염시키고 이건희같은 자를 우대하고 처우하고 높게 채용하여 쓰는 이유가 되다. 그리고 그렇게 해야만 보스이고 지도자이고 높은 지위의 자격이라고 믿는 이유가 된다. 그게 천하고 더럽고 추한 플레이아데스사상이다. 그리고 안드로메다은하계사상이다. 사람이 일을 잘하거나 열심을 가지고 뭘 하거나 하는 건 조금도 중요하지 않은데, 그게 왜 그런고 하면, 일이라는 것이 성과나 업적을 낼때 주어진 조건과 환경에서는 그다지 중요하지 않기 때문이다. 예를 들어서 삼성이 반도체하나 성공해서 큰 돈을 버는데, 만일 반도체를 개발할 기술이나 능력, 실력이 없다고 하면, 아무리 일을 열심히 해도 그렇게 큰 돈을 못 번다. 그리고 역으로, 지구인수준에서는 반도체를 개발할 능력, 실력이 없다는 점이다. 그런데 아틀란티스에서 공짜로 기술을 준다. 그러면, 이건희 입장에서 보면, 정치잘하고 아부 잘해서, 아틀란티스나 선진국 지도자들 환심만 사면 떼돈을 버는데, 요건 일을 잘하고 못하고와는 전혀 무관계하다. 인간레벨에서는 아무리 일을 잘하는 놈이라고 해도, 그러한 일 잘하는 능력으로 인한 결과는 미미하다. 그런데 결과나 성과를 무진장 도출할수 있는 방법이 있다. 그게 아부잘하고 상급상위계에 잘보이고, 환심사서 기술받고 지원받고 그러는거다. 지구인수준에서는 아무리 명문대나오고 그래도 이익을 낼수 있는 첨단의 그 무엇을 개발하거나 창조할 능력이 없는것이다. 그러면 도대체 일을 열심히 하자고 지랄하는 이유는 뭐냐? 그게 안드로메다,라이라,플레이아데스 원본심이다. 실제로는 이 자들도 마찬가지다. 왜 그런고 하면, 이미 필요한 기술, 과학들은 수천억조년전부터 어떤 놈이 개발해놓고 있다. 가져다가 쓰기만 하면 되고, 힘들게 개발하고 연구하고 자시고도 없다. 그러니 누가 일 잘하고 못하고는 문제가 아니다. 그냥 거저 가져다가 쓰면 비임쉽만들고, 로보트 만들고 우주여행한다. 여기서 중요한 것은 일 잘하는 게 아니다. 그러나 이들이 그렇게 강조하는거다. 잘 생각해보라. 이들이 왜 그럴까? 아무리 실력있고 능력있고 일 열심히하는 놈이라고 해도 내맘에 안들면 졸지에 병신취급하고 내쳐버릴수 있기에 그렇게 하는거다. 네가 아무리 열심히 일하고 일 잘하고 그래도 성과나 업적을 보면 그냥 놀아가면서 해도 매출나오고 성과 나오고 그러는데, 도대체 네 놈이 뭐냐? 이 식이다. 그래서 조금만 비위를 거슬리면 그대로 병신취급하고 내치는데 그렇게 할수 있는 이유가, 필요한 기술, 과학, 제반 노우하우들이 그냥 거저 어떤 새끼들이 제공지원해주기 때문이다. 이러한 점을 감안하여, 향후 지구인수준의 레벨급 종족계나 문명계에 뭔가를 지원해줄때는 잘 고려해서 지원해야 하는데, 우리가 보건대는, 반도체 수준이면, 영적연륜이 적어도 700만세이상이 되어야 한다는 점이다. 즉 나이가 어린 놈들에게는 그러한 기술이나 과학을 주어서는 안 된다는 얘기다. 이런 수법들은 이른바 정적제거용으로 제격이다. 네가 아무리 잘하고 열심히 해도, 이미 다 있어 그리고 네가 뭘 하든 누구나 다 해 이거다. 영어 잘하면 매출늘고 서양사람들한테 사랑받고 그래? 그게 아니다. 하지만 그렇다고 주장하려 한다. 조지부시같은 놈도 이런 식의 사고방식에 동참한다. 그런 식으로 정적을 제거하고, 모든 것을 내가 다 하고 모든 결과나 대가도 내가 가진다고 주장하는 방식이다. 그게 플레이아데스방식이고, 그게 안드로메다은하계놈들의 사고방식이다. 그건 지배의 쾌락을 만끽하려는 편협하고 왜소한 사상으로부터 유래된다. 우리는 이런 부류의 하등한 놈들이 지구인사회에만 있는줄 알았는데, 알고보니, 플레이아데스로 가면 더 심하고 안드로메다은하계는 더더 심하다. 우리가 목격관찰한 바로는 적어도 UNIVERSE-DRAGON급은 되어야 이런 것이 없어진다. 밥 처 먹고 똥만 내지르는 놈들이라는 의미는 이런 건데, 실제로 잘못된 우주다. 잘못 창조된 우주라는 얘기다. 특히 안드로메다은하계놈들이다. MURDEK MALDEK SPACE-UNIVERSE DRAGON GROUP

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