Myth and legend are full of wondrous places
that capture the imagination and have inspired
generations of adventurers to explore the
world in search of their treasures.
Often they come up empty-handed, but every
once in a while there seems to be a sliver
of truth to the tales of these mythical places.
Let’s take a look at 10 that may have been
based in some degree of reality.
10.
Atlantis
The story of Atlantis can be traced to the
Greek philosopher Plato.
He spoke of the fabled land back in 360 BC.
In Plato’s telling, Atlantis was a land
of rich and powerful people who were technologically
advanced.
It was not a complimentary tale though, and
his stories about it were meant to illustrate
that their knowledge and might had corrupted
them as a people.
For most of history these tales were regarded
as allegorical, used by Plato to illustrate
a point.
There are no other writings of the time that
ever mention anything like Atlantis, so it
was generally considered just to be something
he made up to be illustrative.
Not everyone believes that was the case though.
In more recent years, the belief that Atlantis
may have been based on Minoan society has
achieved some notoriety.
The Minoan kingdom, ruled by King Minos, was
said to be remarkably wealthy and advanced
and had spread across much of Ancient Greece.
Minoans had paved roads and were believed
to have been the first Greek society to use
a written language.
And then one day they vanished.
It’s believed that sometime around 1600
BC a massive earthquake set off the volcanoes
on the Minoan island known as Thera, burying
it and destroying the culture forever.
9.
Norumbega
Norumbega was said to be a legendary land
of riches, named for an Algonquin word for
the area, discovered by the Vikings well before
North America was settled by Europeans.
It showed up on maps in the 1500s and was
situated around modern-day New England.
Archaeological evidence doesn’t support
the idea that the Vikings ever settled anywhere
that far south, and there’s only one confirmed
Viking settlement in North America that exists
in Newfoundland.
That doesn’t mean there weren’t others
though, and there is some evidence to suggest
that perhaps Vikings did in fact settle farther
north in places.
So what about Norumbega?
The people of Boston commissioned a statue
of Leif Erikson in the 1870s, in honor of
his discovery of this legendary land.
In Viking tales, North America was called
Vinland, or at least that’s what some people
believe.
Other historians who have analyzed the often
contradictory data presented in Viking sagas
have determined that Vinland couldn’t be
where the Vikings landed in Newfoundland because
of the lack of certain features like salmon
and grapes.
It’s believed that those things were found
farther south around Martha’s Vineyard,
perhaps as far down as Boston, which would
have lent itself to the Norumbega myth.
8.
Shangri-La
The legendary city of Shangri-La traces its
origins to the works of British author James
Hilton.
He wrote of the city in his 1933 novel “Lost
Horizon.”
According to Hilton, Shangri-La was essentially
an earthly paradise hidden within the Kunlun
Mountains.
While many have dismissed the story as pure
fantasy created by Hilton, others believe
that there’s some truth to them.
Especially because Tibetan myths hold that
there were several such cities hidden within
the mountains.
In 1998, explorers trekking through the area
discovered an area that they believe may have
actually inspired the Shangri-La story.
To the best of their knowledge, no Western
humans had ever set foot in this place.
Called “The Hidden Falls of the Tsangpo,”
this valley of lush greenery was hidden even
from satellite imagery in the mountains.
7.
El Dorado
The legendary city/kingdom/empire of El Dorado
is arguably one of the most interesting in
all of mythology.
Conquistadors searched throughout South America
to find this place, which was apparently a
vast city made of solid gold.
While some legendary places were based entirely
in fiction, and other places like Xanadu turned
out to actually be real, the truth about El
Dorado is a complete sidestep from either
of these things.
Perhaps the results of the same phenomena
that happens during the telephone game, when
you tell a story to one person and they tell
it to another, and they tell it to another,
and the details get muddled, the truth of
El Dorado also changed over time.
The idea that El Dorado was a golden kingdom
came from something a little less vast, but
still pretty impressive.
El Dorado was no kingdom, but a king.
Archaeological evidence shows that El Dorado
was a person who was, for all intents and
purposes, golden.
This Chieftain would be covered from head
to toe in gold and every day would bathe in
a sacred lake to wash the gold off before
applying it again the next day.
Unlike most other legends, this makes El Dorado
curiously true and false at the same time,
sort of like Schrodinger’s cat: neither
outcome was expected, but not entirely false
either.
6.
Camelot
The story of King Arthur and the Knights of
the Round Table is a pretty fantastic one,
especially when you consider it involves pulling
a magical sword from a stone, and a wizard.
These things are generally not found in real
life history.
Despite that, there’s some evidence that
Arthur’s stomping grounds, better known
as Camelot, was an actual real place at some
point in time even if Arthur was never a real
man, or perhaps a gestalt of several kings.
Retired British Professor Peter Field believed
he stumbled upon the actual location of Camelot
while doing some research.
Based on his findings, he came to the conclusion
that Camelot was a Roman fort at Slack, to
the west of Huddersfield in West Yorkshire.
The Roman fort, called Camulodunum, was strategically
placed but currently exists underneath a golf
course, so any excavation is probably going
to have to wait a few years.
5.
Hy-Brasil
Said to be located off the coast of Ireland,
the island of Brasil, sometimes called Hy-Brasil
so as to not confuse it with the South American
country, is supposedly hidden except for one
day every seven years.
You don’t need to have a degree in geography
to know that’s not a realistic feature of
most islands, which is why it’s generally
considered to be purely fictitious.
Despite the mysterious nature of the island,
there have been accounts of people discovering
similar places over the years.
The island appeared on maps as early as the
year 1325 and continued to appear on maps
all the way up to the year 1800.
Several explorers and sailors claimed to have
either seen, or even visited the island, though
most who went in search of it came back empty-handed.
It’s been theorized that the Porcupine Bank
might be the actual source of the story — a
raised shoal in the general vicinity where
Hy-Brasil was said to exist.
4.
Hanging Gardens of Babylon
Constructed in the 6th century BC by King
Nebuchadnezzar II, the legendary Hanging Gardens
of Babylon were supposed to be quite the sight
to behold.
Cascading gardens that reached 75 feet in
height and featured flowers, herbs and all
manner of exotic plant life to such an extravagant
degree they became known as one of the Seven
Wonders of the Ancient World.
And as far as anyone knew in modern times,
they had never existed at all.
In order for such a garden to have existed,
an impressive irrigation system had to have
been constructed to bring enough water into
the desert for all the plants to thrive.
No evidence in modern times has ever been
found to indicate such a massive undertaking
ever existed around Babylon.
It doesn’t necessarily mean it didn’t
exist though.
According to research by Dr. Stephanie Dalley,
the reason we never found any evidence of
the Hanging Gardens in Babylon was that they
were never in Babylon in the first place.
She believes she discovered evidence of their
existence and the ancient city of Nineveh,
part of the Assyrian Empire.
Dalley’s research shows Assyrian King Sennacherib
was responsible for an extravagant garden
about a century before the supposed Babylonian
version.
His writings describe such a thing, including
irrigation technology thought to not exist
until four centuries later.
3.
Zerzura
West of the Nile, somewhere in the desert
in Egypt or Libya, was said to be the legendary
oasis of Zerzura.
Written accounts of it can be traced back
to the 13th century, mentioning a city that
was as white as a dove.
It was said that it is ruled by a sleeping
king and queen; it was guarded by black giants,
and it was full of treasures.
Numerous European explorers set out to discover
the location of Zerzura in more modern times,
some as late as the 1930s.
It was in 1932 when Hungarian Explorer Laszlo
Almasy led an expedition through the desert
and discovered a series of wadis.
Though there was no shining white city with
a sleeping king, the truth was that they did
discover some oases in the desert that had
been clearly visited by the local Tebu nomads
who had built huts around the area.
It’s worth noting that in the recounting
of Almasy’s tale, he started his day of
discovery by dusting the desert sand off of
his plane.
Had there been something in that area in the
past it’s just as likely that the desert
had swallowed it and only the vegetation remained.
Regardless of whether there was a real city
or not, the oasis does seem to exist and it’s
possible something else may have once been
there as well.
2.
Thule
In ancient Greek and Roman writings, the farthest
north you could get was a land called Thule.
It was in the 4th century BC when Greek explorer
Pytheas came to Athens with stories of this
land where the sun never set and the land
and ocean came together in a sort of jelly-like
substance.
So that was weird.
In later years some people came to believe
that perhaps what Pytheas was describing was
Iceland or even Greenland, but the details
didn’t always line up.
In time people came to believe that perhaps
Pytheas had just made up the entire story.
The only problem was he had been consistently
reliable with what he had written about in
the past.
And the fact remains that his description
of the Arctic summer was accurate.
When you go far enough north, you will reach
places where the sun stays up for days at
a time.
It would be a remarkable thing for him to
have just guessed that.
Pytheas claims to have discovered the land
six days across the sea from the Orkney islands.
The people there were said to be fair skinned
and with light hair, and barbarians by his
description.
In later years the Nazis would latch onto
this story and mount their own expedition
to find Thule, believing it to be the birthplace
of the Aryan race.
Obviously the Nazis never found this mythical
land of Aryan supremacy, but there were enough
details of a land that clearly existed somewhere
in the Arctic to confirm that wherever Pytheas
had gone, it was likely a real place.
1.
Sodom and Gomorrah
In the biblical story of Sodom and Gomorrah,
God told Abraham that the two cities were
going to be destroyed because of how wicked
the inhabitants were.
Abraham’s nephew Lot lived in one of those
towns and Abraham didn’t really want to
see him destroyed.
Only Lot and his family were worthy enough
to live, so they were told they could flee
just as long as they didn’t look back.
But as they left, Lot’s wife took a peek
and was turned into a pillar of salt.
As for everyone else in town?
Nothing remained.
You’d think the historical evidence for
two cities destroyed by God himself would
be pretty thin.
But there is a belief that the two cities
did exist and the ruins are currently near
a former peninsula of the Dead Sea in Israel.
As for God’s wrath, it took the form of
an earthquake that was believed to hit the
region around 1900 BCE, and naturally occurring
petroleum and other gases in the area may
have actually exploded and rained fire at
the time.
