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Originally posted by jumpspace
Hi all,
Just wondering, has anyone heard of the following Ancient/Lost Cities:
Nimrol (a buried city in Egypt)
Ochunini (another buried city in Egypt)
Tridoia
...and the following seven states of Atlantis:
Artelmis
Trigas (also known as Poseidon)
Labruula
Apotemics
Nochs
Talenos (later called Astroeth)
Antipolinos
Originally posted by IndianaJoe
The only shred of evidence we have of an Atlantis even existing is predicated from Plato's Kritas,
and though he mentions that the Atlanteans did trade
Lost antlantean cities in egypt are very improbable because the Egyptians faught a documented war against an invading sea people who were fleeing their sunken home land, these sea people being presumably Atlanteans.
I think its best if we think of Atlantis as any other Bronze Age civilization who may have been adept sea farers more so then their egyptian, greek, and trojan counterparts.
Originally posted by Gazrok
I've read the dialogue many times, and I do not recall a claim of Atlantis ruling Egypt.
Do a google search on Atlantis Altiplano. Read it, then see if you disagree
All these and their descendants for many generations were the inhabitants and rulers of divers islands in the open sea; and also, as has been already said, they held sway in our direction over the country within the Pillars as far as Egypt and Tyrrhenia.
Originally posted by The Vagabond
[i am assuming this is from plato]All these and their descendants for many generations were the inhabitants and rulers of divers islands in the open sea; and also, as has been already said, they held sway in our direction over the country within the Pillars as far as Egypt and Tyrrhenia.
Maybe it stopped at Egypt?
Suppose that it was 900 years before, not 9000. I have to go right now, so could somebody else tell us what was going on in Egypt around 1800 BC, give or take 100 years?
From the wikipedia
1300's:
Cecrops II, legendary King of Athens dies after a reign of 40 years and succeeded by his son Pandion II. His brother Metion leads a successful revolt by Nobles to gain control of Athens and most of Attica, Greece while Cecrops becomes reigns from Megara.
1303 BC - Seti I becomes Pharaoh of Egypt.
*****
19th century BC
Hittite empire in Anatolia
1829 - 1818 BC -- Egyptian-Nubian war
1818 BC -- Egyptian Campaign in Palestine
1813 BC -- Amorite Conquest of Northern Mesopotamia
1800 BC -- Hittite invasion of Anatolia
and
Rule of Amenemhat III of Egypt
this webpage
makeashorterlink.com...
notes
Second dynasty of Babylon
First Bantu migrations from west Africa
Hittite Old Kingdom in Anatolia (1900 BC)
Civilization in Palestine (1800 BC)
Middle Kingdom in Egypt (2052�1570 BC)
Egyptian domination over Palestine and Syria (1600�1360 BC)
Conquest of Canaan (Palestine) by the Israelites
Mycenaean civilization (c. 1600 BC�1200 BC)
Athens founded (1235 BC)
Beginnings of Judaism (1200 BC)
Olmec civilization in Mesoamerica (1150 BC)
Fall of Troy (1184 BC)
Significant people:
Hammurabi, king of Babylon (1792�1745 BC)
Pharaohs Akhenaton and Rameses II of the Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt
Shalmaneser I, king of Assyria (1274�1275 BC)
Saul, King of Israel
Inventions, discoveries, introductions:
Indians developed caste system
Horse domesticated
Chinese record the earliest known sighting of a comet
It just came to me... Gades is supposed to be named for an Atlantean king, but it was actually a colony of Tyre.
Why include any mention of athens if it was just a 'fairy tale'? And one can find other problems with this idea. None of that tho supports the idea that it was an actual place.