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To the Ends of the Earth
Quest for the Lost
City
Other lost cities
Cities are usually
called 'lost' for one of two reasons:
- They were once
great but went into decline after a natural catastrophe, such as a volcanic
explosion or drought, and were abandoned by their population, only to
be rediscovered by modern archaeologists.
- They are imaginary
cities, which only ever existed in the minds of poets and story-tellers
as powerful symbols of the human desire for a perfect civilisation,
a heaven on earth, or as places of great wealth, ripe for the picking.
Often, intrepid explorers have refused to believe that these are just
fantasies and have sought them in obscure and inaccessible parts of
the globe.
Lost and found
Babylon The
biblical story of the Tower of Babel, which gives a mythical explanation
of why so many different languages exist, is one of the clues that remained
after the city of Babylon disappeared from history when famine, disease
and other calamities struck it during the first millennium. Thanks to
the Bible and ancient Greek writers such as Herodotus, Babylon continued
to be remembered as a symbol of the oppression of the Jews. However, it
was not until modern archaeologists excavated its buried sites, on the
Euphrates River south-west of Baghdad in Iraq, that this ancient Mesopotamian
and Assyrian city was brought to life again. The supposed discovery of
the Hanging Gardens of Babylon one of the Seven Wonders of the
World remains controversial, but archaeologists have found the
remains of a ziggurat a stepped tower that probably inspired
the mythical Tower of Babel.
Troy The legendary
city of Troy fascinated generations of Europeans because it was here that
the events of Homer's epic poem, the Iliad, with its stories of ancient
Greek heroes and gods fighting the Trojan wars, took place. In 1870, the
German scholar Heinrich Schliemann began excavating the mound of Hissarlik
overlooking the Dardanelles in Turkey, which had traditionally been seen
as the site of Troy. Schliemann eventually dug down through nine cities,
one on top of the other, and in the second oldest (that is, the one that
was second from the bottom), he found a hoard of treasures nearly
9,000 objects including some of gold and silver. This, he claimed, was
the Troy of the Iliad. However, since then, this level has been identified
as too early for Homer's Troy (it actually dates from about 2500 BC).
The seventh city, which was destroyed by fire in about 1250 BC, now seems
to be the best candidate, although it still hasn't been absolutely proved
that this is where Helen was held captive and Achilles and Hector fought.
Pompeii The
ancient Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum just south of Naples
in Italy were buried under lava and ash when the nearby volcano
Mount Vesuvius erupted on 24 August AD 79. Survivors abandoned the site,
which was rediscovered by chance during the 18th century. Since then,
excavations have yielded unique evidence of life during Roman times. Because
of the suddenness of the eruption, many of the inhabitants were trapped
and all the objects they had been using when the catastrophe happened
remained where they were. These have been preserved in the volcanic ash
and provide a fabulous record of daily life almost 2,000 years ago.
Paradise on earth
Atlantis First
mentioned by the Greek philosopher Plato, the city of Atlantis was, legend
says, the source of fabulous wealth until it was covered by a flood of
biblical proportions. Some dreamers locate Atlantis in the middle of the
Atlantic, where the depth of the water makes any exploration impossible,
while others believe that it was a real Mediterranean city that was destroyed
by an earthquake or other natural disaster. Whether it actually existed
or not, the legend continues to inspire believers.
Shangri-La
First made famous by James Hilton's 1933 novel Lost Horizons (and
the 1937 film of the same title), this hidden valley in the Himalayas,
where beautiful people are so healthy that death is endlessly postponed,
seems like an alluring detour for any trekker. In most versions of the
legend, the paradise is found by a stray plane crash-landing in the mountains,
which are also home to such fascinating creatures as the Yeti, or Abominable
Snowman. Sadly, modern satellite mapping techniques mean that such obscure
valleys and hidden cities are unlikely to exist.
Utopia 'Utopia'
from the Greek for 'no place' was invented by the statesman
and scholar Sir Thomas More in his book of the same name, published in
1516. Like all such visionary conjectures, Utopia was an imaginative fantasy
created by More in order to criticise what he saw as the wickedness and
corruption of his own times. Although nowadays 'utopian' generally means
'optimistic', the details of More's own version of paradise on earth may
strike modern readers as unappealing: celibacy, hard work and moral rectitude
are the order of the day and men rule women with a firm hand.
El Dorado The
name which means, in Spanish, the 'gilded one' was originally
given to the king of the fabulous city of Manoa, supposedly located on
the Amazon in the South American interior. The king was said to be periodically
covered with oil and then powdered with gold dust literally 'gilded'.
The name El Dorado eventually became interchangeable with that of Manoa
(where, it was rumoured, all the houses had gold roofs). It was the focus
of a number of expeditions by English adventurers, including Sir Walter
Raleigh, and became almost an obsession with the Spanish. One such was
Gonzalez Pizarro, brother of the conqueror of Peru, who in 1560 led an
unsuccessful search for the city of gold in the dense rainforest. This
foray inspired the 1972 film Aguirre, The Wrath of God, directed
by Werner Herzog.
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