Unsolved:Atlantis: The Antediluvian World
This article includes a list of references, but its sources remain unclear because it has insufficient inline citations. (April 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) |
Cover of the first edition | |
| Author | Ignatius L. Donnelly |
|---|---|
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Subject | Atlantis |
| Publisher | Harper & Brothers |
Publication date | 1882 |
| Followed by | Unsolved:Ragnarok: The Age of Fire and Gravel |
Atlantis: The Antediluvian World is a pseudoarchaeological book published in 1882 by Minnesota populist politician Ignatius L. Donnelly. Donnelly considered Plato's account of Atlantis as largely factual and suggested that all known ancient civilizations were descended from this lost land through a process of hyperdiffusionism.[1]
Content
Author's stated intentions
Donnelly discusses many aspects of his proposed theory in extreme detail. He includes many illustrations as well as charts with lingual similarities. With his book he states that he is trying to prove thirteen distinct hypotheses:[2]
- There once existed in the Atlantic Ocean, opposite the Mediterranean Sea, a large island, which was the remnant of an Atlantic continent, and known to the ancients as Atlantis.
- That the description of this island given by Plato is not fable, as has been long supposed, but veritable history.
- That Atlantis was the region where man first rose from a state of barbarism to civilization.
- That it became, in the course of ages, a populous and mighty nation, from whose emigrants the shores of the Gulf of Mexico, the Mississippi River, the Amazon River, the Pacific coast of South America, the Mediterranean, the west coast of Europe and Africa, the Baltic, the Black Sea, and the Caspian were populated by civilized nations.
- That it was the true Antediluvian world: the Garden of Eden; the Gardens of Hesperides; the Elysian Fields; the Gardens of Alcinous; the Mesomphalos, the Olympos; the Asgard of the traditions of the ancient nations. That it represented a universal memory of a great land, where early mankind dwelt for ages in peace and happiness.
- That the gods and goddesses of the ancient Greeks, the Phoenicians, the Hindus, and the Scandinavians were simply the kings, queens, and heroes of Atlantis; and the acts attributed to them in mythology are a confused recollection of real historical events.
- That the mythology of Egypt and Peru represented the original religion of Atlantis, which was sun-worship.
- That the oldest colony formed by Atlantis was probably Egypt, whose civilization was a reproduction of that Atlantic island.
- That the implements of the "Bronze Age" of Europe were derived from Atlantis. The Atlanteans were also the first manufacturers of iron.
- That the Phoenician alphabet, parent of all the European alphabets, was derived from an Atlantis alphabet, which was also conveyed by them from Atlantis to the Mayans of Central America.
- That Atlantis was the original seat of the Aryan or Indo-European family of nations, as well as of the Semitic peoples, and possibly also of the Turanian races.
- That Atlantis perished in a terrible convulsion of nature, in which the whole island sunk into the ocean, with nearly all its inhabitants.
- That a few persons escaped in ships and on rafts, and carried to the nations east and west the tidings of the appalling catastrophe, which has survived to our own time in the Flood and Deluge legends of the different nations of the old and new worlds.
Criticisms and responses
Carl Abott from the Public Domain Review claims that Ignatius Donnelly's Atlantis: The Antediluvian World may have brought some relief from the turmoil of stressful times in the late 1800s, but was ultimately a reflection of the United States during a time where urbanization, industrialization, and wealth were destroying the nation's golden age of the agrarian frontier. Abbott refers to Donnely as a "Master of Disaster," due to the fact that Antediluvian World and his other two novels seemed to highlight catastrophe. In Antediluvian World specifically, Abbott claims that Donnely cites deluge myths and legends from the world rather than recreating catastrophe in his own words.[3]
Author and researcher Jason Colavito refers to Atlantis, the Antediluvian World as the platonic ideal of fringe history. He notes Donnelly found interest in Plato's Timaeus and Critias not because he had an interest in prehistory, but because the dialogues reminded him of the problems in contemporary history. Colavito also states that Plato's writings about Atlantis were not the only inspiration for his book, but that Donnelly also found inspiration in John Thomas Short’s novel The North Americans of Antiquity, one that Donnelly essentially plagiarized from Short in his own writing, at times even word for word.
For Donnelly, Atlantis was a stand-in of sorts for America. He fully believed that Atlantis was dominated by a superior white race. Donnelly’s Atlantis reflected his ideal society, a society in which a white race ruled, but everyone still had a share. Colavito also claims that at the end of Donnelly’s writing, Donnelly describes the fall of Atlantis as a decline from perfection to corruption. Donnelly ultimately compared the decline of Atlantis to America and the British Empire, stating that just as Atlantis had fallen, America would too. Colavito points out the fact that most readers approach Atlantis: The Antediluvian World as a book of pseudoscience rather than a political statement of the Reconstruction era, and that politics during the time of which Donnelly wrote this novel are inseparable from the writing itself.[4]
Author Christian Lekon writes that Donnelly characterizes the ancient myths in Atlantis: The Antediluvian World as a "confused recollection of real historical events". Donnelly's writing not only references Plato's description of Atlantis, but also references Greek and Scandinavian deities, as well as various other religious motifs.[5]
The author Edward Platt at Aeon references Sprague de Camp's writings and how Camp notes that Donnelly's were either wrong or had been disproven by subsequent discoveries. Camp also notes that even if Donnelly's facts hadn’t been wrong, he had still drawn the wrong conclusions from them. Platt writes that this did not stop Antediluvian World from selling and later influencing people like Helena Petrovna Blavatsky and further ideas of Atlantis.[6]
Legacy
In 1883, a sequel or companion, Unsolved:Ragnarok: The Age of Fire and Gravel, was published.
Donnelly's work on Atlantis inspired books by James Churchward on the lost continent of Mu, also known as Lemuria. Graham Hancock's Fingerprints of the Gods proposes, like Donnelly, that civilizations in Egypt and the Americas had a common origin in a civilization lost to history, although in Hancock's book the civilization was not located in the northern Atlantic.[citation needed]
In 1890, Donnelly published Caesar's Column: A Story of the Twentieth Century, a dystopian novel that follows catastrophe similar to Atlantis: The Antediluvian World and Ragnarok: The Age of Fire and Gravel.
See also
- The Lost Continent: The Story of Atlantis
- Atlantida
References
- ↑ Ridge, Martin (1991). Ignatius Donnelly: The Portrait of a Politician (Paperback ed.). Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 978-0-87351-262-6.
- ↑ Donnelly, Ignatius (1882). Atlantis. The Antediluvian World (Paperback (2006 reprint) ed.). Echo Library. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-84702-764-1.
- ↑ Abbott, Carl (2017) Master of Disaster, "Ignatius Donnelly" The Public Domain Review
- ↑ Colavito, Jason (2018) “Ignatius Donnelly and the Politics of Atlantis”
- ↑ Lekon, Christian (2022) "A Populist Monomyth: The Hero's Journey and the Cosmogonic Cycle in the Writings of Ignatius Donnelly"
- ↑ Platt, Edward (2013) "Out of the Deep" Aeon
- Mace, Carroll Edward (1973). "Charles Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg, 1814-1874". in Cline, Howard F.. Handbook of Middle American Indians. 13. Austin: University of Texas Press. pp. 298–325.
- "Maya Codices". Mundo Maya Online - History. http://www.mayadiscovery.com/ing/history/default.htm.
Further reading
- Axelrad, Allan M. (1971). "Ideology and Utopia in the Works of Ignatius Donnelly". American Studies 12 (2): 47–65.
- Ashworth, C. E. (1980). "Flying Saucers, Spoon-Bending and Atlantis: A Structural Analysis of New Mythologies". The Sociological Review 28 (2): 353–376. doi:10.1111/j.1467-954X.1980.tb00369.x.
- Deane, B. (2008). "Imperial Barbarians: Primitive Masculinity in Lost World Fiction". Victorian Literature and Culture 36 (1): 205–225. doi:10.1017/S1060150308080121.
External links
- Entire text in HTML format from the Internet Sacred Text Archive
- Entire text in multiple formats from Project Gutenberg
- Entire scanned text from the Internet Archive
- Script error: No such module "Librivox book".
