Prime Day

Como cliente Amazon Prime obtén 3 meses de Audible gratis

Diseño de la portada del título The Lost City of Atlantis

The Lost City of Atlantis

10 Facts About the Legend and the Search for It

Muestra
Compra por 5,88 € y comienza la oferta Pagar 4,89 € con prueba
Oferta válida hasta el 12 de diciembre de 2025 a las 23:59 h.
Después de los 30 días, 9,99 €/mes. Cancela tu siguiente plan mensual cuando quieras.
Ahorra más del 90% en tus primeros 3 meses.
Escucha todo lo que quieras de entre miles de audiolibros, podcasts y Audible Originals incluidos.
Escucha cuando y donde quieras, incluso sin conexión.
Sin compromisos. Cancela mensualmente.
Disfruta de más de 90.000 títulos de forma ilimitada.
Escucha cuando y donde quieras, incluso sin conexión
Sin compromiso. Cancela tu siguiente plan mensual cuando quieras.

The Lost City of Atlantis

De: Bastian Locke
Narrado por: Rick Romero
Compra por 5,88 € y comienza la oferta Pagar 4,89 € con prueba

Paga 0,99 € por los primeros 3 meses y 9,99 €/mes después. Posibilidad de cancelar cada mes. Oferta válida hasta el 12 de diciembre de 2025.

Después de los 30 días, 9,99 €/mes. Cancela cuando quieras.

Compra ahora por 6,99 €

Compra ahora por 6,99 €

3 meses por 0,99 €/mes Oferta válida hasta el 12 de diciembre de 2025. Paga 0,99 € por los primeros 3 meses y 9,99 €/mes después. Se aplican condiciones.Empieza a ahorrar

Acerca de este título

The legend of Atlantis is one of the most captivating and enduring stories ever told. For over two thousand years, it has stirred the imagination of philosophers, explorers, mystics, and dreamers. A city swallowed by the sea in a single day and night, a mighty civilisation punished for its hubris, a radiant island where power and beauty thrived before vanishing without a trace — Atlantis is both a cautionary tale and a timeless riddle. But what do we really know about it?

This book takes listeners on a clear, engaging journey through ten essential facts about Atlantis, each chapter peeling back another layer of myth and speculation. Written in a style that balances scholarship with listenability, it helps you navigate centuries of debate and wonder without drowning in academic jargon.

We begin with the very foundation: everything we know about Atlantis starts with a single source — the writings of Plato. His dialogues Timaeus and Critias created the entire story, complete with concentric rings of canals, powerful kings descended from Poseidon, and a civilisation so ambitious it tried to conquer the Mediterranean. But Plato’s purpose was not simply to entertain. He designed Atlantis as the villain of a moral lesson, a civilisation destroyed by the gods as punishment for arrogance. In that sense, Atlantis is less history and more philosophy, a teaching story meant to reflect human weakness and political folly.

Yet once Plato set pen to papyrus, the story slipped beyond his control. Generations began to treat Atlantis as if it were more than an allegory. Some dismissed it as fantasy, but others searched for the ruins of a real sunken land. For two millennia, most scholars considered Atlantis nothing more than a fable. Then, in the 19th century, a politician named Ignatius Donnelly reimagined it as a literal lost civilisation, the ancestor of all ancient cultures. His book ignited a frenzy of speculation that continues today.

We explore how possible real-world disasters might have inspired the tale. The volcanic eruption of Thera (modern Santorini) devastated the Minoans in the Aegean, leaving echoes of a destroyed island civilisation that could have reached Plato’s ears centuries later. Rising sea levels at the end of the Ice Age also swallowed coastlines and villages, events that may have fused into collective memory. Atlantis, in this light, may not be a single lost city but a symbolic composite of many ancient catastrophes.

Modern interpretations have only made the myth more colourful. From psychics who filled Atlantis with crystals and flying machines, to science-fiction writers who placed it in the depths of the Atlantic or even Antarctica, the legend has become a blank canvas for imagination. Explorers have claimed to locate it in the Mediterranean, the Caribbean, and the Sahara Desert. Technology has even pushed the search beneath the waves with sonar and satellite scans, though no credible evidence has ever surfaced. Still, the hunt continues.

But perhaps the true importance of Atlantis is not about maps and ruins at all. Atlantis is a powerful idea, not a physical place. It is the dream of a golden age, a paradise lost, a society undone by its own excesses. It is a myth that reflects our hopes for hidden wisdom and our fears of repeating history’s mistakes. In imagining Atlantis, we hold up a mirror to ourselves.

©2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK (P)2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK
Antigua Ciencias sociales Europa Grecia
No hay reseñas aún