EXTRACT:
Atlantis |
by Plato [360 B.C]
The two dialogs of Plato which contain the primary ancient account of Atlantis.
There is a short framing story about Solon in Egypt in Timaeus, and Critias, which contains the description of Atlantis, breaks off mid-narrative. Did Plato mean the tale literally or as an allegory?
These books, which were written at the end of the 19th century, are the core texts of the modern Atlantis mythos.
by Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton [1871]
The Victorian science fiction novel from which introduced the concept of 'Vril.'
by Wiliam R. Sandbach [1876]
A purported chronicle of the descendants of the lost Atlantis--of the North Sea.
by Ignatius Donnelly [1882]
The complete text of the 19th Century bestseller that started the modern Atlantis craze.
Required reading for anyone interested in Atlantis, in spite of much dated and incorrect information. This etext was scanned at sacred-texts and appears here in its entirety for the first time on the Internet. This text is also available through the Project Gutenberg (thanks to Norman Wolcott, for working on the text version of this file). The illustrations, proofing and formatting of this etext were revised as of July 2003.
by Ignatius Donnelly [1883]
A sensational description of how a cometary impact could have destroyed an unknown prehistoric civilization.
Donnelly ties his comet impact into the death of Atlantis, and the lost origins of our own civilization. A perennially rediscovered hypothesis.
by H.P. Blatavsky [1888]
Blatavskys' channeled sacred text from Lemuria.
This excerpt from Helena Blatavskys' "The Secret Doctrine" is supposed to be an actual book from Lemuria summarizing occult knowledge about the evolution of the universe. In reality it was 'channeled'. The Theosophists greatly elaborated the Atlantis story, adding numerous additional lost continents such as Hyperborea, Lemuria, Daitya, Ruta, Poseidonis; and peopled them with an entire succession of pre-human species. (See the Scott-Elliot text, below).
by W. Scott-Elliot [1896]
An imaginative Theosophic history of the Earth, the Theosophic concept of human evolution and everyday life in old Atlantis.
by Cutcliffe Hyne [1900]
The decline and fall of decadent Atlantis; a cruel queen, and ancient magic: a long-forgotten swashbuckling adventure.
by W. Scott-Elliot [1904]
A short essay by Scott-Elliot on the lost continent which preceeded Atlantis in Theosophic beliefs: Lemuria.
by Frederick S. Oliver [1905]
A very influential speculative novel of Atlantis and points beyond, purportedly composed via automatic writing by a teenager in the shadow of Mount Shasta.
by Paul Schliemann [1912]
A famous and often cited Atlantis hoax, republished at sacred-texts for the first time in over ninety years.
by J. Allan Dunn [1916]
A pulp-fiction era Atlantis in South America yarn.
by Pierre Benoit, tr. by Mary C. Tongue and Mary Ross [1920]
A harrowing trip through the Sahara to ... Atlantis, and the strange allure of its ultimate queen.
by James Churchward [1933]
Mu, the other lost continent, and its sacred symbology.
by Clara Iza von Ravn [1937]
The history of Atlantis, told as a channeled vision of an ancient sage.
by Richard S. Shaver [1948]
Beware the devolved tunnel-dwellers who rule the earth: the dress-rehearsal for the UFO craze.
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