The Legendary Cities of Atlantis and Ubar: "In History, Mythology Often Reflects Reality"
The Legendary Cities of Atlantis and Ubar: "In History, Mythology Often Reflects Reality"
The Legendary Cities of Atlantis and Ubar: "In History, Mythology Often Reflects Reality"
Geological evidence indicates a long history of tsunamis hitting the coastline of the region, with the ability to tear apart the city, possibly pulling the island into the sea. Using aerial photography, the team were also able to detect evidence of walls and a deep-water port. However, due to underground bore water at the site, further excavations have proven to be difficult and expensive, and therefore the progress of ongoing investigations is extremely slow. Some people also believe that the biblical city of Tarshish (AKA Tartessos) was another name for the city of Atlantis. Tarshish was thought to be located in southern Spain, but all records of it suddenly ceased, supporting the theory that it was Atlantis, and indeed was lost to the sea. Both the mysterious cities Computer graphic showing were told to have access to concentric rings of Atlantis that may massive resources of gold, have existed in ancient times silver or copper, and the hills just upriver from the Doana marshlands are also mined for gold, silver and copper, and evidence of 5000 years of mining has been found. According to Plato, Atlantis was a port city, where deep water ships would come on three-year journeys, and according to the Bible, ships would also come on a three-year journey to Tarshish. Stone carving of Atlantis 200 km inland from the coast of Spain, the team discovered a series of found at Cancho Roano villages, called Cancho Roano, with a culture far different from others of the time. This suggests a cataclysmic event forced the Atlanteans to move further inland. However, due to the lack of significant residential areas, with mainly temples, it is possibly a miniature replica or ritual city of Atlantis, used to commemorate the lost kingdom. At the entrance to Cancho Roano was a large stone stele with a carving of a man with his sword drawn, next to a series of concentric circles (symbolising Atlantis), showing one path in and out of the city, with a central shrine in the centre. An ancient Egyptian symbol used on metal work was also found, connecting Tarshish and Atlantis together, as well as reiterate the Egyptian ties to the city, as told by Solon and Plato. Another historical example of mythology reflecting reality is the legendary city of Ubar. It is located on the Arabian Peninsula, in a desert called, Rub al Khali, known in English as the Arabian Empty Quarter, in the state of Oman. According to legend, the land was an important trade centre on the Incense route that flourished from around 850 BC to 400 AD, founded by the people of Ad. Although the city was commonly known as Ubar, historians now speculate that it is also a city referred to Iram, or Iram of the Pillars in the Qur an, and Ubar was the name of the region. According to the Qur an, the people of Ad grew greedy and rebelled against Allah. As punishment, Allah wiped out the Ad with a An artists impression of Ubar severe sandstorm, *the+ Ad, were destroyed by a furious wind, exceedingly violent; He made it rage against them seven nights and eight days in succession: so that though couldst see the people lying prostate in its [path], as they had been roots of hollow palm-trees
tumbled down. Then seest thou any of them left surviving? (Surat al-Haaqqa: 6-8.) According to myth, Ubar was a place of greed and wickedness, and the inhabitants were known to care nothing for immoral acts. Ubar was one of the oldest trading posts in the region, and the people of the land grew rich on the trade of frankincense, a resin grown only in Southern Arabia, which in the day, was as precious and valuable as gold. During the time of the Ad, the area was not as dominated by desert as it is today, but was described by the Roman writer, Pliny, as very fertile and mist-covered, with forested mountains and rivers. Pliny also recorded stories told by the local Bedouin Arabs, about Ubars legendary ruins and precious lost treasures, which ignited the imaginations of adventurers and archeologist for centuries. Since the 1930s, many noted explorers and adventurers, such as Bertram Thomas, T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia) and Wilfred Thesiger, have attempted to find the lost city of Ubar. However, the first to succeed was a team of hightechnology explorers in the 1980s and 1990s, lead by author, filmmaker, adventurer and amateur archaeologist, Nicholas Clapp. Clapp utilized the technology of the day by Map showing the proposed location of using NASA remote sensing satellites, GPR, SPOT data, the ancient people of Ad in Ubar Landsat program data and images taken from the Space Shuttle Challenger to identify old camel train routes and their point of convergence to locate the legendary trading centre. The expedition team, lead by Clapp, and included Juris Zarins, Ranulph Fiennes and Dr Ronal Blom, uncovered a large octagonal fortress at Ash Shisar that dated to around 2,000 years ago. Artefacts such as Greek, Roman and Syrian pottery were found, suggesting the site had been a major centre for trade, and is probably the fabled city of Ubar, or at least a city in the region of Ubar. The city was built over a large underground limestone cave (called a sinkhole), which, although provided the inhabitants with their valuable water supply, also lead to the citys collapse when it crumpled. In conclusion, substantial evidence has come to light about the existence of the cities of Atlantis and Ubar, while for thousands of years they were considered pure myth. This demonstrates that there is at least some truth in most myths. Through these archeological discoveries, it is now evident that when studying history, mythology often reflects reality.
Satellite photographs showing the roads converging on the excavation site at Ubar
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