Everything about Antillia totally explained
Antillia (or
Antilia) is a
phantom island said to lie in the
Atlantic Ocean far to the west of
Portugal and
Spain. This mythical island had several other names such as
Isle of Seven Cities,
Ilha das Sete Cidades (
Portuguese),
Septe Cidades,
Sanbrandan (or
St Brendan), etc. Antillia was also identified with islands including the
Isles of the Blest and the Fortunate Islands.
The origin of the name is quite uncertain. The oldest suggested etymology (1455) fancifully connects it with the name of the Platonic
Atlantis, while later writers have endeavoured to derive it from the Latin
anterior (for example the island that's reached "before"
Cipango), or from the
Jezirat al Tennyn, "Dragon's Isle".
Plutarch
The legend of the islands seems to have arisen at the latest in pre-Christian Roman times when
Plutarch chronicled (in 74 AD, chapter 8 refers) the life of the Roman military commander and Consul of Spain
Quintus Sertorius (died 75 BC). After returning by sea to Spain after a campaign in "
Mauretania" (modern northern Morocco), Sertorius "met some sailors who had recently come back from the Atlantic Islands." It was from these men that Sertorius learned facts so beguiling that he made it his life's ambition to find the islands and retire there. According to Plutarch:
Medieval beliefs
A Portuguese
legend tells how the island was settled by the Archbishop of
Porto accompanied by six
bishops and their parishioners in either
714 or
734 in the face of the
Moorish conquest of
Iberia. The archbishop and bishops each founded a city, known as
Aira,
Anhuib,
Ansalli,
Ansesseli,
Ansodi,
Ansolli and
Con. A similar Spanish tradition claims that these bishops were all Spanish.
Antilia is first marked in the
Pizzigano Chart of
1424 together with the island Satanazes (devil's island). It reappears in the maps of the Genoese B. Beccario or Beccaria (
1435), and of the Venetian Andrea Bianco (
1436), and again in
1455 and
1476. In most of these it's accompanied by the smaller and equally legendary islands of
Royllo,
St Atanagio, and
Tanmar, the whole group being classified as
insulae de novo repertae, "newly discovered islands". The Florentine
Paul Toscanelli, in his letters to Columbus and the Portuguese court (
1474), takes Antilia as the principal landmark for measuring the distance between Lisbon and the island of Cipango or Zipangu (Japan).
One of the chief early descriptions of Antilia is that inscribed on the globe which the geographer
Martin Behaim made at
Nuremberg in
1492 (see
map:
History). Behaim relates that in 734--a date which is probably a misprint for 714--and after the Moors had conquered Spain and Portugal, the island of Antilia or "Septe Cidade" was colonized by Christian refugees under the archbishop of Oporto and six bishops. The inscription adds that a Spanish vessel sighted the island in
1414, while a Portuguese crew claimed to have landed on Antillia in the
1430s. According to an old Portuguese tradition each of the seven leaders founded and ruled a city, and the whole island became a
Utopian commonwealth, free from the disorders of less favoured states. Later Portuguese tradition localized Antilia in the island of
Sao Miguel, the largest of the
Azores. It is impossible to estimate how far this legend commemorates some actual but imperfectly recorded discovery, and how far it's a reminiscence of the ancient idea of an
elysium in the western seas which is embodied in the legends of the Isles of the Blest or Fortunate Islands.
Many expeditions were launched in an attempt to find the island, and in
1492 Christopher Columbus planned to stop there on his journey to
Asia.
On maps, Antillia was typically shown as being almost the size of
Portugal, lying around two hundred miles west of the
Azores. It was an almost perfect rectangle, its long axis running north-south, but with seven or eight
trefoil bays shared between the east and west coasts. This has made some scholars to identify the island as
Puerto Rico. Each city lay on a bay. The similar island of
Saluaga was shown north of Antillia, while
Taumar and
Ymana (or
Roillo) lay nearby.
Current beliefs
Some, the first being
Peter Martyr d'Anghiera in
1493, believe that Antillia represented a previous discovery of the
West Indies (and more specifically either
Puerto Rico or
Trinidad), and as a result the Caribbean islands became known as the
Antilles. The island's shape on Behaim's globe is similar to that of Trinidad. A less popular theory identifies the island with
Sao Miguel in the Azores, where seven villages around twin lakes are known as
Sete Cidades. Regardless, the improving knowledge of the Atlantic led to Antillia shrinking on maps and disappearing entirely after
1587.
Sixteenth-century explorers such as
Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca and
Francisco Vásquez de Coronado continued to look for the Seven Cities, but located them in the American Southwest rather than the Caribbean (the "Seven Cities of
Cibola").
A controversial book titled
The Island of Seven Cities
by Canadian architect and amateur
archeologist Paul Chiasson (St. Martin's Press, 2006) presents the claim that the Island of Seven Cities was in fact
Cape Breton Island, settled in
Cape Dauphin by sailors from
China who had rounded Africa and sailed up the Atlantic.
(External Link
) Chiasson write that some of those Chinese sailors may have been
Nestorian Christians. These claims are based on interpretations of an alleged archaeological site, since identified as actually consisting of a 20th Century firebreak and a road constructed in the 1980s, and also alleged cultural similarities between the
Mi'kmaq peoples native to the
Canadian Maritimes and New England States and the Chinese. Chiasson's claims were systematically refuted by a team of five Nova Scotian professional
archeologists who visited the site in summer 2006.
(External Link
)
Antilia is also thought by some to have been called
Mayda or Asmaida. This story is told by
Vincent H. Gaddis in his
Invisible Horizons.
In Popular Music
More recently, remixers
Solarstone released a hit dance single entitled
Seven Cities which used moody melodies and tribal rhythms in an attempt to recreate the phantom world of Antillia.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Antillia'.
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