The Atlantis Legacy
audiobook (Unabridged) ∣ Exploring the Enduring Myth of the Lost Civilization
By Vahag Avetisian
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This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
In the fourth century BCE, within the marble halls of Athens' Academy, a philosopher named Plato penned what would become one of history's most enduring mysteries. Through the dialogues of Timaeus and Critias, he introduced the world to Atlantis, a magnificent island civilization that had supposedly vanished beneath the waves nine thousand years before his time. What Plato could never have imagined was that his philosophical allegory would captivate human imagination for over two millennia, spawning countless expeditions, theories, and cultural interpretations that continue to this day.
The story, as Plato tells it, unfolds through the voice of Critias, who claims to have heard the tale from his grandfather, who in turn learned it from the great Athenian lawgiver Solon. According to this narrative chain, Solon had visited Egypt and spoke with priests in the temple of Neith at Sais, where ancient records supposedly preserved the memory of this lost civilization. The priests described Atlantis as an island larger than Libya and Asia combined, situated beyond the Pillars of Hercules in what we now know as the Atlantic Ocean.
Plato's Atlantis was no ordinary civilization. He described a society of extraordinary technological and architectural achievement, with a capital city arranged in concentric circles of alternating land and water. The Atlanteans had mastered engineering on a scale that seemed almost supernatural, creating harbors, bridges, and tunnels that connected their island's various districts. Their palaces were adorned with gold, silver, and the mysterious metal orichalcum, which Plato claimed was more precious than any metal save gold itself.