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Legendary islands of the Atlantic; a study in medieval geography

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Autolocus
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« Reply #30 on: July 19, 2009, 02:58:32 am »

26 ATLANTIS

that it is not impossible (save Brasil and the land between Teelin
and the Stags of Broadhaven) that islands may have existed
within traditional memory at all the alleged sites." 19 In some
cases considerable inroads of the ocean are perfectly well known
to have occurred within relatively recent historic centuries. The
same on a large scale is certainly true of Holland witness
Haarlem Lake and the Zuyder Zee. Other countries, perhaps
most countries, might be called as witnesses.

In these considerations of known facts and legends still re-
peated we are dealing mostly with events of periods not exces-
sively remote, but the same laws must have been at work and the
same phenomena occurring in earlier millenniums.

If there were men to observe, the legend would follow the
subsidence; and Phoenician or other voyagers would naturally
bear it back to the Eastern Mediterranean, to Plato or the
sources from which Plato derived it.

In any such case the submergence would most likely be exag-
gerated and made a great catastrophe, but there were special
reasons why the exaggeration should be enormous in this par-
ticular story. It is the office of a myth or legend to explain. We
see that in Plato's time the Atlantic Ocean was believed, in part
at least, to be no longer navigable, and with some modifications
this idea persisted far down into the Middle Ages, involving at
least a conviction of abnormal obstacles hardly to be overcome.
The account of Critias is: "Since that time the sea in those quar-
ters has become unnavigable; vessels cannot pass there because
of the sands which extend over the site of the buried isle." This
item differs from the other features of the narration put into his
mouth by Plato, in that it related to a present and continuing
condition and in a way challenged investigation which would
have to be at a distant and ill-known region but was not really
impracticable. It must be evident that Plato would not have
written thus unless he relied on the established general repute of
that part of the ocean for difficulty of navigation.

19 T. J. Westropp: Brasil and the Legendary Islands of the North Atlantic:
Their History and Fable, Proc. Royal Irish Acad., Vol. 30, Section C, 1912-13, pp.
223-260; reference on p. 249.
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