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2,500 years ago,
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00:00:07,720 --> 00:00:11,455
Ancient Greeks told
of a terrifying catastrophe...
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00:00:13,640 --> 00:00:16,815
...the destruction of Atlantis.
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00:00:16,840 --> 00:00:21,495
It was a tale
of utter devastation and carnage...
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00:00:21,520 --> 00:00:25,335
and has captivated the world
for over 2,000 years.
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00:00:27,320 --> 00:00:31,295
Atlantis, a once glittering city
that had ruled the waves
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now sunk beneath them,
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obliterated
from the face of the Earth
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00:00:36,640 --> 00:00:39,375
by a terrible natural disaster.
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00:00:41,000 --> 00:00:46,375
Atlantis was described as one
of the greatest places on Earth -
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luxurious, rich and powerful.
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00:00:50,000 --> 00:00:53,535
But for centuries,
people have wondered,
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00:00:53,560 --> 00:00:57,255
was it just a story or did
such an amazing city ever exist
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00:00:57,280 --> 00:00:59,655
before it sank beneath the waves?
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Now I'm on a journey through Greece
to find out
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00:01:07,080 --> 00:01:10,935
if there's any fact buried
amongst the fiction.
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00:01:10,960 --> 00:01:15,455
From clues hidden
at the tops of mysterious mountains
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00:01:15,480 --> 00:01:18,415
to discoveries
buried deep beneath the ground,
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I'll trace the extraordinary story
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00:01:20,920 --> 00:01:24,655
of the search
for this legendary world.
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He wants this to be Atlantis?
He really wants this to be Atlantis.
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00:01:27,920 --> 00:01:33,295
'Exploring today's incredible hunt
for the ancient lost city...'
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I was determined to find it.
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..|'ll uncover
a world of luxury and beauty
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00:01:41,960 --> 00:01:46,335
and evidence of brutal destruction.
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00:01:46,360 --> 00:01:51,135
And I'll dive beneath the waves
to find remains of an ancient city
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buried beneath the scenes.
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Incredible
archaeological discoveries,
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extraordinary detective work.
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00:01:58,320 --> 00:02:02,535
This is the hunt
for the real lost city of Atlantis.
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00:02:18,600 --> 00:02:19,895
I love being in Greece.
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I love the landscape,
the rugged mountains
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and then the beautiful coastline
and the sea.
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I love the fact there are so many
historic sites to visit here.
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It's a place of magic,
a place of mystery,
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00:02:32,960 --> 00:02:34,815
and really,
there's no bigger mystery
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00:02:34,840 --> 00:02:38,695
than the strange Ancient Greek story
of the city of Atlantis,
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00:02:38,720 --> 00:02:42,055
which lies underneath the waves.
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00:02:42,080 --> 00:02:45,175
It seems very unlikely, and yet,
I'm off to visit a place now
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00:02:45,200 --> 00:02:48,855
where I've been told
that's exactly what I'm gonna see.
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00:02:51,560 --> 00:02:56,295
The first destination on my hunt
for Atlantis is Pavlopetri,
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00:02:56,320 --> 00:03:01,575
an isolated spot on the barren,
southernmost tip of mainland Greece,
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00:03:01,600 --> 00:03:05,815
where the ancient fragments
of a destroyed lost city
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00:03:05,840 --> 00:03:11,215
lie beneath the waves,
like the legendary Atlantis.
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00:03:11,240 --> 00:03:12,655
There is an air of mystery
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00:03:12,680 --> 00:03:16,535
surrounding
this beautiful stretch of coastline.
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00:03:16,560 --> 00:03:20,255
The rocky shore is covered
with strange crater-like pits
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00:03:20,280 --> 00:03:23,975
where human bones
have been discovered.
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00:03:26,200 --> 00:03:31,695
The waves lap against huge
stone blocks that look manmade.
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00:03:36,200 --> 00:03:38,575
But for thousands of years,
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00:03:38,600 --> 00:03:43,575
no-one had really investigated
what was going on here...
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00:03:43,600 --> 00:03:47,015
until a British archaeologist,
Nicholas Flemming,
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00:03:47,040 --> 00:03:51,175
arrived at Pavlopetri,
hunting for sunken sites.
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00:03:54,680 --> 00:03:56,175
just like today,
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00:03:56,200 --> 00:04:00,415
the beach was scattered
with shards of ancient pottery.
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00:04:00,440 --> 00:04:02,015
You can see these two bits here...
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00:04:02,040 --> 00:04:03,855
Actually,
this is a much better piece.
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00:04:03,880 --> 00:04:06,295
Look, it's like
the rim of a drinking vessel
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00:04:06,320 --> 00:04:07,775
or a storage container.
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00:04:07,800 --> 00:04:10,015
And you can tell that this pottery
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00:04:10,040 --> 00:04:12,655
had all been rubbed very smooth
by the actions of the waves.
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00:04:12,680 --> 00:04:16,895
It had probably been washed ashore
from somewhere just out there.
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00:04:16,920 --> 00:04:20,015
So, he put on his scuba gear
and went swimming,
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and instantly,
he starts to see wonderful things.
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Over the next year, he would uncover
a submerged ancient city.
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Had he found Atlantis?
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00:04:34,240 --> 00:04:36,695
These waters can get quite rough,
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churning up the sand
and burying everything,
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so I'm really hoping that
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00:04:41,480 --> 00:04:45,375
some of what Flemming saw
back in 1967 is still visible.
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00:04:47,320 --> 00:04:51,575
Luckily, I've got
local diver George to guide me,
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and he knows this seabed
like the back of his hand.
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OK, here goes. Let's go and see
what's beneath the waves.
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00:05:12,160 --> 00:05:14,455
'The sea is fairly shallow here,
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00:05:14,480 --> 00:05:17,255
'so I don't have to dive too deep
to explore.'
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00:05:19,920 --> 00:05:24,055
It's amazing!
The water is beautifully clear.
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00:05:28,920 --> 00:05:32,295
At first, you're looking
at shells and bits of rock...
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00:05:32,320 --> 00:05:35,535
then you swim a bit closer,
and you realise...
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these are shards of broken pottery
from thousands of years ago.
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'Although the water's clear,
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00:05:43,640 --> 00:05:47,975
'years of rough seas have buried
what Flemming saw back in the '60s,
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00:05:48,000 --> 00:05:51,535
'and you have to look carefully
to see any remains.
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00:05:51,560 --> 00:05:53,575
'But when you do get your eye in,
84
00:05:53,600 --> 00:05:56,855
'you can see
straight lines in the rocks.'
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00:05:58,720 --> 00:06:01,495
Those rocks
are far too neatly lined,
86
00:06:01,520 --> 00:06:05,255
they're far too straight
to be put there by nature.
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00:06:05,280 --> 00:06:07,815
'They look like a wall.
88
00:06:07,840 --> 00:06:12,335
'And George tells me that this was
once the wall of someone's house.
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00:06:12,360 --> 00:06:15,135
'Shifting sands
have covered the rest,
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00:06:15,160 --> 00:06:17,135
'but I'm swimming
over the foundations
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00:06:17,160 --> 00:06:18,975
'of an entire neighbourhood here.
92
00:06:20,320 --> 00:06:23,535
'By scanning the seabed,
archaeologists have been able
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00:06:23,560 --> 00:06:27,535
'to piece together the remains of
the city and a sense of its layout.
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00:06:28,960 --> 00:06:31,855
'You can make out
rectangular shapes,
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'which they identified
as buildings and courtyards.
96
00:06:35,400 --> 00:06:39,775
'There are rows upon rows of them
spreading across the sea floor.
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00:06:41,600 --> 00:06:44,615
'And there's not only
the homes of the living,
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'but the graves of the dead.
99
00:06:47,440 --> 00:06:51,575
'They stretch all the way
from the beach to under the water.'
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00:06:57,280 --> 00:06:59,975
It looks like these...
these holes...
101
00:07:01,200 --> 00:07:03,335
These, I think...
This must be the cemetery.
102
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These must be graves.
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Oh!
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00:07:16,520 --> 00:07:18,815
Well, I visit ancient sites
all over the world,
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I've been high in the mountains,
I've been in deep jungles,
106
00:07:23,200 --> 00:07:28,175
but I have never dived on an ancient
site beneath the waves.
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00:07:29,680 --> 00:07:35,575
Marine archaeologists now think that
Pavlopetri vanished 3,500 years ago,
108
00:07:35,600 --> 00:07:40,615
a century before the famous
Pharaoh Tutankhamun ruled Egypt.
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It's thought
that it was hit by an earthquake
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and then submerged under the sea
as the waters rose -
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00:07:48,680 --> 00:07:51,855
a real echo of the Atlantis story,
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00:07:51,880 --> 00:07:56,215
the legendary lost city
beneath the sea.
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Unless you know
what's beneath the waves here,
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00:08:01,520 --> 00:08:06,095
this just feels like a lovely,
remote beach, a beautiful spot,
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00:08:06,120 --> 00:08:08,455
but in fact, down there,
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00:08:08,480 --> 00:08:14,295
there is the remains of
a thriving, a bustling ancient city.
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00:08:14,320 --> 00:08:17,215
The buildings would have been
up to two storeys high,
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00:08:17,240 --> 00:08:18,695
packed together.
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00:08:18,720 --> 00:08:21,455
They would have been trading
with the Aegean Islands,
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00:08:21,480 --> 00:08:23,935
round in the Ionian.
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00:08:23,960 --> 00:08:29,055
This was
a busy, dynamic place of life,
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00:08:29,080 --> 00:08:33,695
but now all that's left are a few
foundations beneath the waves...
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00:08:34,840 --> 00:08:37,375
...and the graves of their dead.
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00:08:40,800 --> 00:08:44,255
So, could this really be
a match for the spectacular city
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00:08:44,280 --> 00:08:48,535
and the events described
in the Atlantis story?
126
00:08:48,560 --> 00:08:52,255
Well, I think it's a possibility.
127
00:08:52,280 --> 00:08:56,455
But this is a region plagued
by earthquakes and volcanoes.
128
00:08:56,480 --> 00:08:58,815
So, now my hunt for Atlantis
129
00:08:58,840 --> 00:09:03,055
is taking me
to where the story began, Athens,
130
00:09:03,080 --> 00:09:07,255
where I'll discover that
Pavlopetri is not the only candidate
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00:09:07,280 --> 00:09:09,815
for that lost world.
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00:09:10,920 --> 00:09:14,615
And I'll get a new lead that
takes me to a buried ancient city
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00:09:14,640 --> 00:09:17,295
on Greece's biggest island.
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It sounds so similar to Atlantis.
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00:09:30,240 --> 00:09:35,375
Athens... home to some
of the greatest ancient monuments
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00:09:35,400 --> 00:09:38,415
and archaeological treasures
in the world.
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2,500 years ago,
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it was here that
one of its most famous residents
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first told
the incredible story of Atlantis.
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00:09:50,320 --> 00:09:55,175
I've come to one of his favourite
hangouts, the Agora,
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00:09:55,200 --> 00:09:58,695
back then,
the central meeting place in Athens.
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00:10:00,720 --> 00:10:04,135
This place would have been
a hive of activity,
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00:10:04,160 --> 00:10:08,375
people coming here
to shop, to chat, to gossip,
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00:10:08,400 --> 00:10:12,575
day and night,
anyone who was anyone -
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00:10:12,600 --> 00:10:16,495
beggars, tradesmen and politicians.
146
00:10:16,520 --> 00:10:19,415
And, of course, philosophers.
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00:10:19,440 --> 00:10:22,455
And the most famous of them
was Plato,
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the man who first tells us about
Atlantis and how it was destroyed.
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00:10:28,640 --> 00:10:32,055
To discover the real inspiration
behind Atlantis,
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00:10:32,080 --> 00:10:36,215
I need to get to the bottom
of exactly what Plato wrote.
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00:10:37,560 --> 00:10:39,695
All right, come on, then,
the big question -
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Atlantis - fact or fiction?
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00:10:41,680 --> 00:10:44,735
You had to start with the hardest
question! Yes! Let's get into it.
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jasmine Elmer is
an expert on Ancient Greece.
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00:10:49,200 --> 00:10:51,695
I would say it's definitely a story,
156
00:10:51,720 --> 00:10:54,055
but with little reality sprinkles
on top.
157
00:10:54,080 --> 00:10:56,455
Hang on, that sounds
a bit philosophical to me.
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00:10:56,480 --> 00:10:59,255
There wasn't actually
a city called Atlantis?
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00:10:59,280 --> 00:11:01,975
No, there's no real city
called Atlantis.
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00:11:02,000 --> 00:11:05,695
It's a mythical place that's made up
by the philosopher Plato.
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00:11:05,720 --> 00:11:08,655
But I can go looking for the places
that might have inspired Plato.
162
00:11:08,680 --> 00:11:12,055
Yeah, totally right.
What you will find is potentially
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00:11:12,080 --> 00:11:15,855
these kind of places that have
a similar story about them
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that could have inspired
the story of Atlantis.
165
00:11:18,280 --> 00:11:20,655
So, how does he describe it?
166
00:11:20,680 --> 00:11:23,695
Well, he talks about it being
this kind of huge island
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that's out in the Atlantic Ocean,
168
00:11:25,320 --> 00:11:27,535
which, to Greeks,
is this kind of like
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00:11:27,560 --> 00:11:30,495
vague space somewhere over there,
but it's absolutely huge.
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Is it kind of
a flourishing civilisation?
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Yeah, absolutely.
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I mean, first of all,
it's a land rich in resources,
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so they had their own minerals
and metals that they could mine.
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00:11:40,360 --> 00:11:41,655
They had fertile plains,
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so they could grow loads
of amazing fruit and vegetables.
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They had exotic animals,
even, like elephants.
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00:11:47,200 --> 00:11:49,375
They also imported
a lot of goods as well.
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00:11:49,400 --> 00:11:50,896
So, they had lots of luxury
around them,
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00:11:50,920 --> 00:11:54,175
colourfultemples and palaces
as well.
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00:11:55,760 --> 00:11:58,335
Essentially,
what the Greeks would perceive
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00:11:58,360 --> 00:12:00,215
as a very advanced civilisation.
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00:12:02,040 --> 00:12:05,975
So, it's a sort of idealised picture
of a society.
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00:12:06,000 --> 00:12:09,895
Completely that, exactly that.
It's like an almost utopian society.
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00:12:09,920 --> 00:12:11,895
Everything kind of seems
on the surface
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00:12:11,920 --> 00:12:14,815
as being a perfect place
that you'd wanna live.
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00:12:16,440 --> 00:12:20,415
To begin with, the picture Plato
paints of Atlantis is idyllic...
187
00:12:22,160 --> 00:12:27,455
...a sprawling, prosperous city
surrounded by olive trees...
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00:12:27,480 --> 00:12:30,375
a busy port filled with ships...
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00:12:31,680 --> 00:12:35,975
...magnificent squares
and luxurious bathhouses.
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But it doesn't stay that way
for long.
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00:12:41,760 --> 00:12:48,015
In the story, this perfect city is
hit by a cataclysmic earthquake...
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00:12:48,040 --> 00:12:51,735
before a terrifying tsunami
buries it beneath the waves.
193
00:12:54,080 --> 00:12:57,135
And Plato had a moral to his tale.
194
00:12:58,800 --> 00:13:01,895
It's obviously a natural disaster,
but it comes from the gods
195
00:13:01,920 --> 00:13:04,735
as a punishment
for being too big for your boots,
196
00:13:04,760 --> 00:13:07,135
for trying to expand and be greedy.
197
00:13:07,160 --> 00:13:08,415
The Atlanteans decide that
198
00:13:08,440 --> 00:13:10,615
they wanna expand their empire
and take over,
199
00:13:10,640 --> 00:13:13,135
and they actually wanna invade
Athens as well,
200
00:13:13,160 --> 00:13:15,015
and that's a big no-no for Plato.
201
00:13:15,040 --> 00:13:16,295
So the message is,
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00:13:16,320 --> 00:13:19,815
if you are an advanced civilisation
and it's all hunky dory and great,
203
00:13:19,840 --> 00:13:23,455
don't get too big for your boots
cos bad things can happen to you,
204
00:13:23,480 --> 00:13:25,735
like what happens at Atlantis.
205
00:13:25,760 --> 00:13:28,416
And Plato was living in a society
where the Earth moves quite a lot.
206
00:13:28,440 --> 00:13:30,895
Exactly. I mean, this is
what the reality sprinkles was
207
00:13:30,920 --> 00:13:32,135
that I mentioned earlier on
208
00:13:32,160 --> 00:13:34,495
because absolutely,
the Greeks are living in a world
209
00:13:34,520 --> 00:13:36,135
where natural disasters
are occurring.
210
00:13:36,160 --> 00:13:38,335
That's where you get
this kind of modern idea
211
00:13:38,360 --> 00:13:42,935
that Atlantis is this submerged city
that we might be able to find.
212
00:13:42,960 --> 00:13:44,535
Interesting.
I've been to Pavlopetri,
213
00:13:44,560 --> 00:13:46,975
so there are places around Greece
they would have known about
214
00:13:47,000 --> 00:13:48,375
which are underwater.
215
00:13:48,400 --> 00:13:50,615
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, that's an amazing sight,
216
00:13:50,640 --> 00:13:53,695
fantastic, like, beautiful
and so much you can take from it.
217
00:13:53,720 --> 00:13:56,855
Could it have influenced Plato?
It's possible,
218
00:13:56,880 --> 00:13:59,415
but it kind of happened
around 1,000 years before Plato,
219
00:13:59,440 --> 00:14:03,055
so would Plato know about it?
Maybe.
220
00:14:03,080 --> 00:14:05,975
But there are definitely these sorts
of things happening over Greece
221
00:14:06,000 --> 00:14:09,335
that definitely could have inspired
Plato in his storytelling.
222
00:14:12,000 --> 00:14:16,735
I'm going to rule out Pavlopetri
as a candidate for Atlantis.
223
00:14:16,760 --> 00:14:19,055
From what I saw,
it doesn't feel grand enough
224
00:14:19,080 --> 00:14:23,215
for tales of its destruction
to have survived 1,000 years.
225
00:14:24,720 --> 00:14:26,095
I need a new lead,
226
00:14:26,120 --> 00:14:30,695
a place that sounds
more believable, more spectacular.
227
00:14:30,720 --> 00:14:32,895
150 years ago,
228
00:14:32,920 --> 00:14:36,655
there was a breakthrough
archaeological discovery
229
00:14:36,680 --> 00:14:39,855
at a place
that I think might fit the bill,
230
00:14:39,880 --> 00:14:44,975
a place on Greece's largest island
to the south of here.
231
00:14:48,840 --> 00:14:53,335
99 miles from Athens
across the Aegean Sea,
232
00:14:53,360 --> 00:14:56,335
that island is Crete.
233
00:14:56,360 --> 00:15:00,055
And the extraordinary discovery
made here
234
00:15:00,080 --> 00:15:04,215
late in the 19th century
changed everything.
235
00:15:05,360 --> 00:15:07,015
Suddenly, people began to wonder
236
00:15:07,040 --> 00:15:11,615
if Crete could have been
the inspiration for Atlantis.
237
00:15:11,640 --> 00:15:18,295
Like Plato's island, it's massive,
covering over 3,000 square miles.
238
00:15:18,320 --> 00:15:23,815
And in Plato's time, it was
the setting for many epic tales.
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00:15:27,680 --> 00:15:32,095
In 1877, a man
who was brilliantly called Minos,
240
00:15:32,120 --> 00:15:35,535
after the legendary king
who'd once ruled over this island,
241
00:15:35,560 --> 00:15:41,015
discovered
some strange large stone blocks
242
00:15:41,040 --> 00:15:44,935
just down there
in a place called Knossos.
243
00:15:44,960 --> 00:15:46,695
Not much was made of it at the time
244
00:15:46,720 --> 00:15:50,215
because the island was embroiled
in a bitter war,
245
00:15:50,240 --> 00:15:52,575
but word of it did get out.
246
00:15:53,680 --> 00:15:58,015
And 20 years later, a famous British
archaeologist arrived in Crete.
247
00:15:58,040 --> 00:16:01,975
He was on a mission to investigate
the mysterious finds.
248
00:16:02,000 --> 00:16:04,815
His name was Arthur Evans.
249
00:16:07,120 --> 00:16:10,695
Evans spent six years
negotiating and haggling
250
00:16:10,720 --> 00:16:13,775
to gain permission to investigate
the site.
251
00:16:17,040 --> 00:16:19,935
Finally, in March 1900,
252
00:16:19,960 --> 00:16:24,375
with an army of 30 men,
he began to dig.
253
00:16:24,400 --> 00:16:27,215
There was no more time to waste.
254
00:16:29,840 --> 00:16:32,375
Almost at once,
their efforts were rewarded.
255
00:16:32,400 --> 00:16:35,695
As they shovel led away mountains
of dirt from this section here,
256
00:16:35,720 --> 00:16:38,095
they revealed
these huge stone blocks,
257
00:16:38,120 --> 00:16:41,135
which seem to be forming a corridor.
258
00:16:43,000 --> 00:16:45,375
This was the first glimpse
259
00:16:45,400 --> 00:16:49,015
that something monumental really lay
beneath their feet -
260
00:16:49,040 --> 00:16:51,215
a possible Atlantis.
261
00:16:51,240 --> 00:16:54,695
With mounting anticipation,
they carried on digging.
262
00:16:54,720 --> 00:17:00,375
And then, just three weeks later,
on the 5th April 1900,
263
00:17:00,400 --> 00:17:04,535
Evans came face to face
with something incredible.
264
00:17:05,440 --> 00:17:06,695
Early that morning,
265
00:17:06,720 --> 00:17:09,775
the team were clearing
some dirt off on the standing walls,
266
00:17:09,800 --> 00:17:12,895
and they started to see what looked
like an image painted beneath.
267
00:17:15,120 --> 00:17:18,855
It was damaged,
but soon, features were visible.
268
00:17:20,120 --> 00:17:22,055
It was a human,
269
00:17:22,080 --> 00:17:27,255
it was life-size with rich red skin,
slim waist...
270
00:17:27,280 --> 00:17:29,415
eyes shaped almost like almonds,
271
00:17:29,440 --> 00:17:31,935
and it was holding a cup.
272
00:17:36,880 --> 00:17:38,575
Nothing like this had been seen
before.
273
00:17:38,600 --> 00:17:40,575
Evans guessed that it was ancient.
274
00:17:40,600 --> 00:17:46,175
In fact, no-one had looked
into those eyes for 3,500 years.
275
00:17:49,280 --> 00:17:52,855
This amazing discovery
was the first glimpse
276
00:17:52,880 --> 00:17:57,415
that an ancient civilisation
lay lost and buried here,
277
00:17:57,440 --> 00:18:00,015
just like Atlantis.
278
00:18:01,480 --> 00:18:04,375
It was the start
of a rapid succession
279
00:18:04,400 --> 00:18:07,535
of spectacular find after find.
280
00:18:09,240 --> 00:18:13,775
Painted corridors...
rooms full of magnificent jars...
281
00:18:15,240 --> 00:18:17,015
...and grand staircases.
282
00:18:19,840 --> 00:18:22,055
And then on Apr“ the 13th,
283
00:18:22,080 --> 00:18:26,415
after eight more days
of frenzied, backbreaking digging,
284
00:18:26,440 --> 00:18:31,055
the team worked their way
to this spot.
285
00:18:31,080 --> 00:18:33,615
Evans was about to uncover
286
00:18:33,640 --> 00:18:39,175
the most remarkable, game-changing
discovery of his life.
287
00:18:39,200 --> 00:18:41,975
At first,
it wasn't clear what he'd found.
288
00:18:42,000 --> 00:18:45,175
It was a finely crafted room,
289
00:18:45,200 --> 00:18:49,055
and there was evidence of
beautiful paintings on these walls.
290
00:18:51,440 --> 00:18:54,015
There were benches along the edges,
291
00:18:54,040 --> 00:18:57,775
then there were steps leading
down to this strange sunken pit
292
00:18:57,800 --> 00:19:00,855
that reminded Evans
of a communal bathhouse
293
00:19:00,880 --> 00:19:02,895
that you might find in a Roman site.
294
00:19:02,920 --> 00:19:06,415
But then he made
an astonishing discovery.
295
00:19:06,440 --> 00:19:11,895
just opposite the pit, there was
a beautifully crafted chair.
296
00:19:15,920 --> 00:19:20,135
In Evans's mind,
suddenly, this was not a bathroom -
297
00:19:20,160 --> 00:19:25,895
this was a throne room, the heart
of some ancient royal palace.
298
00:19:28,080 --> 00:19:30,695
Gradually, an incredible lost world
299
00:19:30,720 --> 00:19:33,615
was coming back to life
before their eyes.
300
00:19:35,160 --> 00:19:39,455
News of the remarkable discoveries
captivated the world.
301
00:19:39,480 --> 00:19:43,255
With evidence of a royal throne,
Evans was certain
302
00:19:43,280 --> 00:19:49,535
he'd found the palace of King Minos,
the legendary ancient King of Crete.
303
00:19:49,560 --> 00:19:55,375
The archaeologist named the
civilisation Minoan after the King.
304
00:19:55,400 --> 00:19:59,655
But some people began to make
another connection.
305
00:19:59,680 --> 00:20:04,495
Could this lost world actually be
the inspiration for Atlantis,
306
00:20:04,520 --> 00:20:09,695
the magnificent island city that had
been devastated in Plato's story?
307
00:20:12,320 --> 00:20:15,255
There are
some very interesting parallels
308
00:20:15,280 --> 00:20:18,135
between this place
and Plato's Atlantis.
309
00:20:18,160 --> 00:20:22,615
First of all,
Knossos is on a huge, lush island.
310
00:20:22,640 --> 00:20:24,375
That's a big tick.
311
00:20:24,400 --> 00:20:26,575
And then Plato describes,
312
00:20:26,600 --> 00:20:31,455
"a royal palace that befitted
the greatness of the kingdom."
313
00:20:31,480 --> 00:20:35,815
"|t was made up from buildings of
many colours by blending the stones"
314
00:20:35,840 --> 00:20:38,055
"for the sake of ornament."
315
00:20:38,080 --> 00:20:40,055
Well, that could be describing
this palace.
316
00:20:40,080 --> 00:20:44,015
He also describes how sacred bulls
were allowed to roam free
317
00:20:44,040 --> 00:20:45,935
through the Palace of Atlantis,
318
00:20:45,960 --> 00:20:48,175
and there's one thing
you see plenty of here,
319
00:20:48,200 --> 00:20:50,495
and that's images of bulls.
320
00:20:54,800 --> 00:20:56,375
As Evans excavated,
321
00:20:56,400 --> 00:21:00,295
he discovered images of bulls
throughout the site.
322
00:21:00,320 --> 00:21:03,255
Even wall paintings of Minoan people
323
00:21:03,280 --> 00:21:07,455
leaping over the back
of charging bulls.
324
00:21:07,480 --> 00:21:09,895
And this was just the beginning.
325
00:21:09,920 --> 00:21:15,615
As Evans and his team excavated
over 14,000 square metres,
326
00:21:15,640 --> 00:21:20,055
the parallels between Knossos
and Plato's story of Atlantis
327
00:21:20,080 --> 00:21:22,735
seemed to grow and grow.
328
00:21:26,600 --> 00:21:28,455
Plato described that,
329
00:21:28,480 --> 00:21:31,775
"the size and beauty of Atlantis
was astonishing to see."...
330
00:21:33,880 --> 00:21:39,295
...just like the enormous complex
of grand buildings here.
331
00:21:39,320 --> 00:21:41,095
In Plato's story,
332
00:21:41,120 --> 00:21:46,215
the royal citadel in Atlantis
is surrounded by mighty mountains,
333
00:21:46,240 --> 00:21:48,695
just like Knossos,
334
00:21:48,720 --> 00:21:53,895
and, as local expert
Akrivi Chatzigeorgiou is showing me,
335
00:21:53,920 --> 00:21:57,175
there was even more tantalising
evidence of the similarities.
336
00:21:57,200 --> 00:22:01,415
The gods of Atlantis
were also present here.
337
00:22:01,440 --> 00:22:04,695
I would like to show you
something which is very interesting.
338
00:22:04,720 --> 00:22:05,815
Look here.
339
00:22:05,840 --> 00:22:07,975
What have we got here?
That's like a... Oh, a trident!
340
00:22:08,000 --> 00:22:09,615
Was the symbol of Poseidon.
341
00:22:09,640 --> 00:22:14,255
It was used as an arrow,
as a symbol showing which way to go.
342
00:22:14,280 --> 00:22:15,495
OK, so like a signpost?
Yeah.
343
00:22:15,520 --> 00:22:17,280
Oh, well, let's follow it.
Come on, let's go.
344
00:22:19,960 --> 00:22:25,135
According to Plato, Poseidon
was the main god on Atlantis.
345
00:22:25,160 --> 00:22:29,735
He ruled the waves and made
Atlantis a mighty sea power.
346
00:22:31,640 --> 00:22:34,335
Plato tells us that,
347
00:22:34,360 --> 00:22:38,255
"its vast harbour was crowded
with merchant ships,"
348
00:22:38,280 --> 00:22:43,495
"and there was a constant din of
noise and shouting day and night."
349
00:22:45,320 --> 00:22:47,175
In the heart of Knossos,
350
00:22:47,200 --> 00:22:52,575
a magnificent building shows that
the Minoans also dominated the seas.
351
00:22:52,600 --> 00:22:54,535
This is a grand staircase,
352
00:22:54,560 --> 00:22:57,015
one of the miracles
of the Minoan architecture.
353
00:22:57,040 --> 00:22:59,615
Cor! That is magnificent,
and it's huge.
354
00:22:59,640 --> 00:23:01,975
Yes. This is the big staircase,
the grand staircase.
355
00:23:02,000 --> 00:23:04,975
They made a deep cut
to this side of the hill
356
00:23:05,000 --> 00:23:07,135
in order to be able to construct
two floors lower
357
00:23:07,160 --> 00:23:09,335
on this level of where we are.
358
00:23:09,360 --> 00:23:12,335
It was a big warehouse,
a big economic centre.
359
00:23:12,360 --> 00:23:14,375
So, it's a place of trade.
Exactly.
360
00:23:14,400 --> 00:23:17,055
Goods from all over the Eastern
Mediterranean Sea
361
00:23:17,080 --> 00:23:18,295
came in this building.
362
00:23:18,320 --> 00:23:21,455
From Egypt,
they imported cotton, wheat.
363
00:23:21,480 --> 00:23:24,015
Copper was imported
from the island of Cyprus.
364
00:23:24,040 --> 00:23:27,375
The Greek name Kypros means copper.
The island of copper.
365
00:23:27,400 --> 00:23:28,815
Oh!
Also, elephant tusks.
366
00:23:28,840 --> 00:23:31,295
We found whole elephant tusks.
Elephant tusks?
367
00:23:31,320 --> 00:23:34,135
They are at the museum
as well as gold from Nubia,
368
00:23:34,160 --> 00:23:36,095
where the mines are
of the Egyptian empire.
369
00:23:36,120 --> 00:23:39,735
So North Africa, the Eastern
Mediterranean... Exactly.
370
00:23:39,760 --> 00:23:43,575
...Southern Europe, all coming here?
Yeah, exactly. This was a crossroad.
371
00:23:44,960 --> 00:23:48,655
'The Minoans clearly had
a vast trade network,
372
00:23:48,680 --> 00:23:51,575
'just like the Atlanteans
from Plato's story.'
373
00:23:51,600 --> 00:23:53,535
And like Atlantis,
374
00:23:53,560 --> 00:23:58,495
the archaeologists also began
to realise this was a huge place.
375
00:24:00,040 --> 00:24:04,695
They estimated that between
25,000 and 30,000 people lived here.
376
00:24:04,720 --> 00:24:08,255
And by delving into
Knossos's magnificent buildings,
377
00:24:08,280 --> 00:24:12,175
it also became clear these people
lived a life of luxury...
378
00:24:12,200 --> 00:24:15,015
just like
the inhabitants of Atlantis.
379
00:24:16,560 --> 00:24:18,295
We know from the discoveries
380
00:24:18,320 --> 00:24:21,335
that the upper classes loved
the beautiful things.
381
00:24:22,960 --> 00:24:25,175
Women were dressed
with elaborated garments,
382
00:24:25,200 --> 00:24:29,135
jewellery was worn by both,
men as well as women.
383
00:24:29,160 --> 00:24:32,215
They loved the wine.
They loved good food.
384
00:24:32,240 --> 00:24:33,855
So, lots of fish from the sea.
385
00:24:33,880 --> 00:24:38,055
Exactly. We found seafood shells.
We found fishing hooks.
386
00:24:38,080 --> 00:24:40,335
So, they loved seafood.
387
00:24:40,360 --> 00:24:43,415
So, if you had wealth, it was
a good place to live. Exactly.
388
00:24:43,440 --> 00:24:46,855
So, this was
a rich, luxurious place,
389
00:24:46,880 --> 00:24:49,655
there were magnificent buildings
here, it was powerful-
390
00:24:49,680 --> 00:24:53,855
it sounds so similar to the way
that Plato writes about Atlantis.
391
00:24:55,240 --> 00:24:58,335
The discoveries at Knossos had put
Crete on the map,
392
00:24:58,360 --> 00:25:02,815
and they'd also made
Atlantis a hot topic.
393
00:25:04,560 --> 00:25:07,175
On February 15th, 1909,
394
00:25:07,200 --> 00:25:10,735
an anonymous article was published
in the Times.
395
00:25:12,120 --> 00:25:15,215
The title was simply Atlantis,
396
00:25:15,240 --> 00:25:17,135
and it gives all sorts of detail
397
00:25:17,160 --> 00:25:20,735
about the excavations here in Crete
and the Atlantis story
398
00:25:20,760 --> 00:25:23,495
and draws a direct connection
between them.
399
00:25:23,520 --> 00:25:27,215
It says...
"|f the account of Atlantis"
400
00:25:27,240 --> 00:25:29,535
"is to be compared
with the history of Crete,"
401
00:25:29,560 --> 00:25:36,295
"it seems almost certain that here,
we have an echo of the Minoans."
402
00:25:36,320 --> 00:25:40,735
And the Times said, "This may very
well engage the serious attention"
403
00:25:40,760 --> 00:25:44,895
"of scholars and archaeologists."
And it was absolutely right.
404
00:25:46,720 --> 00:25:50,615
Crete was now firmly
in the spotlight to prove that
405
00:25:50,640 --> 00:25:52,495
this really was the inspiration
406
00:25:52,520 --> 00:25:55,855
for the legendary
lost city of Atlantis.
407
00:26:09,440 --> 00:26:12,495
Crete, the 1920s.
408
00:26:12,520 --> 00:26:14,935
After two decades of digging,
409
00:26:14,960 --> 00:26:19,255
the incredible palace of Knossos
had been almost completely revealed
410
00:26:19,280 --> 00:26:23,135
after lying buried beneath the soil
for thousands of years.
411
00:26:24,240 --> 00:26:26,855
The discovery had captivated
the world
412
00:26:26,880 --> 00:26:30,055
through its parallels
with the story of Atlantis.
413
00:26:32,720 --> 00:26:36,775
Now every inch of the island
was scrutinised,
414
00:26:36,800 --> 00:26:40,215
and everywhere you looked seemed to
mirror the description of Atlantis
415
00:26:40,240 --> 00:26:42,375
in the ancient tale.
416
00:26:44,360 --> 00:26:48,215
You can see why people thought
they were walking through Atlantis.
417
00:26:48,240 --> 00:26:50,695
There's a tickle of a sea breeze
coming off the ocean,
418
00:26:50,720 --> 00:26:54,375
you can see the mountains
over there in the background,
419
00:26:54,400 --> 00:26:57,575
and everything seems to grow here,
it's just so abundant.
420
00:26:57,600 --> 00:26:59,815
Plato describes Atlantis like this.
421
00:26:59,840 --> 00:27:02,575
He said that...
422
00:27:18,640 --> 00:27:21,055
Reads a bit like a guidebook
to Crete.
423
00:27:23,920 --> 00:27:26,295
In his story of Atlantis,
424
00:27:26,320 --> 00:27:29,775
Plato tells us that vineyards
and olive groves flourished,
425
00:27:29,800 --> 00:27:34,095
producing olive oil and wine
for the enjoyment of its people.
426
00:27:35,240 --> 00:27:41,495
Today, Crete is also a thriving
olive oil and wine producer.
427
00:27:41,520 --> 00:27:46,055
And there's evidence that's been
this way for thousands of years.
428
00:27:46,080 --> 00:27:50,015
This isolated little chapel is
only around 100 years old,
429
00:27:50,040 --> 00:27:54,735
but it's built on the foundations
of something far older.
430
00:27:57,320 --> 00:28:01,375
This is
a remarkable and ancient wine press,
431
00:28:01,400 --> 00:28:05,095
and the fields around here are still
covered in vineyards to this day.
432
00:28:05,120 --> 00:28:08,175
So, they've been pressing wine
up here for generations.
433
00:28:08,200 --> 00:28:10,375
It's unclear
exactly how old this is.
434
00:28:10,400 --> 00:28:12,655
Some people locally think
it is Minoan -
435
00:28:12,680 --> 00:28:16,295
that means the same era
as the palace of Knossos.
436
00:28:16,320 --> 00:28:19,015
But the wine making process
is pretty straightforward.
437
00:28:19,040 --> 00:28:22,415
You bring your grapes in here
and people with nice clean feet
438
00:28:22,440 --> 00:28:26,015
press the grapes, stand on top
of them, jump on top of them,
439
00:28:26,040 --> 00:28:28,895
and all of that liquid flows
out into the surrounding tubs
440
00:28:28,920 --> 00:28:31,535
through this hole here, for example.
441
00:28:33,680 --> 00:28:37,095
And then that grape juice
comes pouring out
442
00:28:37,120 --> 00:28:40,135
in a huge torrent
from here into this tub,
443
00:28:40,160 --> 00:28:42,575
ready to be turned into wine.
444
00:28:46,360 --> 00:28:51,095
Crete is believed to be the
birthplace of Greek wine production,
445
00:28:51,120 --> 00:28:56,855
made here on the island
for around 5,500 years.
446
00:28:56,880 --> 00:29:01,495
I'm visiting one of the region's
modern vineyards to find out more
447
00:29:01,520 --> 00:29:03,735
about Crete's
wine-producing heritage
448
00:29:03,760 --> 00:29:08,575
and why it links this island
to the Atlantis story.
449
00:29:08,600 --> 00:29:10,255
Let's start from the harvest.
450
00:29:10,280 --> 00:29:12,815
The harvest here in Crete starts
about August to September.
451
00:29:12,840 --> 00:29:14,495
It's by hand.
452
00:29:14,520 --> 00:29:16,695
So, you still pick the grapes
with your hands?
453
00:29:16,720 --> 00:29:19,455
There's no machine?
Yeah, we still do it by hand.
454
00:29:19,480 --> 00:29:21,655
We just use scissors. Yeah.
455
00:29:21,680 --> 00:29:24,295
That's a tradition that's been going
on for thousands of years.
456
00:29:24,320 --> 00:29:25,975
Maybe they have not scissors.
457
00:29:26,000 --> 00:29:29,775
Maybe they have
another way to cut the grapes.
458
00:29:29,800 --> 00:29:32,135
But this is the same.
459
00:29:32,160 --> 00:29:35,255
Because the landscape with the hills
and the small properties,
460
00:29:35,280 --> 00:29:38,175
it's impossible to have
harvest machines.
461
00:29:39,440 --> 00:29:42,375
But of course, there are
some parts of the wine making process
462
00:29:42,400 --> 00:29:46,015
that have changed a little
since the Minoans.
463
00:29:46,040 --> 00:29:48,935
So, here, we have the press machine.
464
00:29:48,960 --> 00:29:52,055
Now, this is different to what
would have been done in the past
465
00:29:52,080 --> 00:29:54,935
because this was all humans doing
this in the past, right?
466
00:29:54,960 --> 00:29:58,215
Exactly the same idea.
But no electricity, just foot.
467
00:29:58,240 --> 00:29:59,655
Footwork.
Feet, just feet.
468
00:29:59,680 --> 00:30:02,415
I don't think
you want my feet anywhere near that.
469
00:30:02,440 --> 00:30:04,375
So, I think
this is a very good system.
470
00:30:05,680 --> 00:30:07,855
Today, once the wine is pressed,
471
00:30:07,880 --> 00:30:11,415
it is stored
in these vast stainless steel vats
472
00:30:11,440 --> 00:30:13,895
before it's bottled and shipped
around the world.
473
00:30:13,920 --> 00:30:17,095
At Knossos, 3,500 years ago,
474
00:30:17,120 --> 00:30:19,935
they used enormous clay jars,
475
00:30:19,960 --> 00:30:24,735
and there's evidence
they also exported it far and wide.
476
00:30:24,760 --> 00:30:27,135
Minoans were great exporters,
477
00:30:27,160 --> 00:30:31,415
so from the ports,
they went in Egypt,
478
00:30:31,440 --> 00:30:34,135
in Lebanon, in Israel.
479
00:30:34,160 --> 00:30:36,455
Especially in these countries,
480
00:30:36,480 --> 00:30:42,335
we found a lot of paintings,
especially in Egypt,
481
00:30:42,360 --> 00:30:46,255
paintings with
the appearances of vineyards
482
00:30:46,280 --> 00:30:51,735
or jars or wine making and wine life.
483
00:30:51,760 --> 00:30:54,295
So, Cretan wine is one of
the big secrets of Minoan's success.
484
00:30:54,320 --> 00:30:56,495
It's bringing them wealth
through trade.
485
00:30:56,520 --> 00:30:59,135
Exactly.
So, they were making a lot of wine.
486
00:30:59,160 --> 00:31:03,615
A lot of wine and brilliant wine.
Of course, the best.
487
00:31:07,840 --> 00:31:09,895
Ah.
488
00:31:09,920 --> 00:31:12,375
The more I learn
about Ancient Crete,
489
00:31:12,400 --> 00:31:14,575
with its magnificent architecture
490
00:31:14,600 --> 00:31:18,575
and its abundant fields
producing all of nature's bounty,
491
00:31:18,600 --> 00:31:22,935
the more I think it really could be
inspiration for Plato's Atlantis.
492
00:31:24,640 --> 00:31:26,855
In his story, Plato tells us
493
00:31:26,880 --> 00:31:30,095
that Atlantis had close contact
with Egypt,
494
00:31:30,120 --> 00:31:33,015
just like the Ancient Minoans
on Crete.
495
00:31:34,720 --> 00:31:39,935
This link was yet another detail
mirroring the Atlantis story.
496
00:31:41,200 --> 00:31:43,935
And as those parallels
grew and grew -
497
00:31:43,960 --> 00:31:48,175
in the 1960s,
one man became captivated.
498
00:31:49,960 --> 00:31:54,775
He would become one of history's
greatest Atlantis hunters.
499
00:31:55,920 --> 00:31:57,935
His name was Spyridon Marinatos.
500
00:31:57,960 --> 00:32:03,375
He was a local archaeologist and
the curator of the museum in town.
501
00:32:05,560 --> 00:32:07,735
He became obsessed.
502
00:32:07,760 --> 00:32:10,655
He spent
much of the rest of his career
503
00:32:10,680 --> 00:32:14,175
trying to prove
that this Minoan civilisation
504
00:32:14,200 --> 00:32:17,575
was the basis for Plato's Atlantis,
505
00:32:17,600 --> 00:32:20,895
a city that had been wiped
off the map.
506
00:32:22,080 --> 00:32:24,735
Marinatos had first visited Knossos
507
00:32:24,760 --> 00:32:28,055
while archaeologists excavated
in the 1920s.
508
00:32:28,080 --> 00:32:31,655
He'd been blown away
by their beautiful discoveries,
509
00:32:31,680 --> 00:32:35,495
but he'd also been fascinated
by something else they'd unearthed.
510
00:32:41,520 --> 00:32:44,575
As the team excavated the palace,
511
00:32:44,600 --> 00:32:47,895
they realised
that it had been repaired,
512
00:32:47,920 --> 00:32:51,695
changed at various points
in its lifetime.
513
00:32:51,720 --> 00:32:54,375
It had obviously been
through quite a lot.
514
00:32:55,760 --> 00:32:57,255
Like Atlantis,
515
00:32:57,280 --> 00:33:00,975
the Minoan civilisation had vanished
almost without trace
516
00:33:01,000 --> 00:33:02,815
for thousands of years.
517
00:33:02,840 --> 00:33:05,215
No-one knew why.
518
00:33:07,280 --> 00:33:09,735
In the story,
Atlantis had been the victim
519
00:33:09,760 --> 00:33:12,815
of a terrible natural disaster.
520
00:33:12,840 --> 00:33:17,815
But had a natural disaster also
wiped out the civilisation here?
521
00:33:19,000 --> 00:33:22,415
Marinatos was now
on a mission to find out.
522
00:33:22,440 --> 00:33:28,015
His investigations have been studied
by Minoan expert Steve Kershaw.
523
00:33:28,040 --> 00:33:29,975
I mean,
what do you think happened here?
524
00:33:30,000 --> 00:33:34,215
There's a palace here
that's been inhabited for 450 years,
525
00:33:34,240 --> 00:33:37,615
going through all sorts of
different phases of destruction
526
00:33:37,640 --> 00:33:39,975
and rebuilding and modification,
527
00:33:40,000 --> 00:33:44,895
and some of those
destructive events were natural,
528
00:33:44,920 --> 00:33:46,535
the kind of things like earthquakes,
529
00:33:46,560 --> 00:33:50,255
some of them may have been manmade
as well.
530
00:33:50,280 --> 00:33:53,695
And so, some of that could just be
accidental fire? It could, indeed.
531
00:33:53,720 --> 00:33:57,495
But Marinatos really wanted to get
to the bottom of this,
532
00:33:57,520 --> 00:34:01,735
and he's found traces
of volcanic dust on the island,
533
00:34:01,760 --> 00:34:05,015
so he thinks
it's something volcanic,
534
00:34:05,040 --> 00:34:08,535
but he doesn't think
that the volcano is on Crete.
535
00:34:08,560 --> 00:34:10,975
He thinks it's on a nearby island.
536
00:34:11,000 --> 00:34:14,815
'Marinatos wanted to prove
that a volcanic eruption
537
00:34:14,840 --> 00:34:19,655
'from a nearby island had destroyed
the Minoan civilisation here.
538
00:34:19,680 --> 00:34:23,135
'And he had
a very specific island in mind.
539
00:34:23,160 --> 00:34:26,615
‘Santorini,
which lies just 60 miles away...
540
00:34:27,720 --> 00:34:31,215
'..and it's home
to an enormous volcano.'
541
00:34:31,240 --> 00:34:34,935
So, is Marinatos looking for
this volcano solution a little bit
542
00:34:34,960 --> 00:34:37,535
because of his obsession
with the story of Atlantis?
543
00:34:37,560 --> 00:34:38,895
It's very possible.
544
00:34:38,920 --> 00:34:41,535
He knows that story,
he likes that story.
545
00:34:41,560 --> 00:34:44,935
and he, in a sense, wants
that story to be true.
546
00:34:44,960 --> 00:34:48,175
He wants this to be Atlantis.
He really wants this to be Atlantis.
547
00:34:50,760 --> 00:34:54,615
But there's also another reason
why Marinatos was fascinated
548
00:34:54,640 --> 00:34:58,495
by the possible link
between Crete and nearby Santorini.
549
00:34:58,520 --> 00:35:01,335
And that's because
in his story of Atlantis,
550
00:35:01,360 --> 00:35:05,175
Plato says that
Atlantis wasn't just one island,
551
00:35:05,200 --> 00:35:07,735
but made up of several islands.
552
00:35:07,760 --> 00:35:11,975
He said that the royal centre
was on Atlantis' main island,
553
00:35:12,000 --> 00:35:14,895
but the docks and harbour were
on another.
554
00:35:18,960 --> 00:35:24,175
Could Santorini be one of the other
islands mentioned in the story?
555
00:35:24,200 --> 00:35:26,455
Marinatos was thrilled
with this theory,
556
00:35:26,480 --> 00:35:28,095
and he thought if he could prove it,
557
00:35:28,120 --> 00:35:31,695
the link between the Minoans,
Crete and Atlantis
558
00:35:31,720 --> 00:35:33,615
would be stronger than ever.
559
00:35:33,640 --> 00:35:38,175
Could it be that an enormous
eruption out there on Santorini
560
00:35:38,200 --> 00:35:42,215
had inspired the story of Atlantis?
561
00:35:42,240 --> 00:35:47,775
In 1967, he set out on a hunt
to find out.
562
00:35:52,040 --> 00:35:54,855
Following Marinatos's search
for Atlantis,
563
00:35:54,880 --> 00:35:57,375
I'm now heading
to the island of Santorini,
564
00:35:57,400 --> 00:35:59,935
60 miles away across the sea.
565
00:36:05,200 --> 00:36:09,775
Santorini is home to the biggest and
most volatile volcano in the region.
566
00:36:09,800 --> 00:36:11,815
If you look
at these rock formations,
567
00:36:11,840 --> 00:36:15,175
this whole island is basically
one enormous volcano.
568
00:36:19,440 --> 00:36:22,615
just 17 years
before Marinatos arrived,
569
00:36:22,640 --> 00:36:25,415
Santorini's volcano had erupted,
570
00:36:25,440 --> 00:36:29,575
spewing ash and fireballs
1,000 metres into the sky.
571
00:36:33,280 --> 00:36:34,815
In just six days,
572
00:36:34,840 --> 00:36:40,615
90 billion tons of molten rock
was thrown into the air.
573
00:36:40,640 --> 00:36:43,735
What if an even more violent
eruption had occurred
574
00:36:43,760 --> 00:36:46,375
3,500 years before,
575
00:36:46,400 --> 00:36:48,895
at the time
when the Minoan civilisation
576
00:36:48,920 --> 00:36:51,655
discovered on Crete
reached its height?
577
00:36:51,680 --> 00:36:57,295
That could mean that there was
a city buried here beneath the rock.
578
00:36:59,840 --> 00:37:02,895
A busy city with docks and harbours.
579
00:37:02,920 --> 00:37:08,375
But where should Marinatos start
his hunt for this lost port?
580
00:37:08,400 --> 00:37:11,935
There are 42 miles of coastline
on this island.
581
00:37:13,360 --> 00:37:15,815
And that wasn't his only challenge.
582
00:37:18,760 --> 00:37:20,095
It's a fairly daunting prospect
583
00:37:20,120 --> 00:37:22,495
because
that mighty volcanic eruption
584
00:37:22,520 --> 00:37:26,855
had blasted millions of tons
of volcanic debris into the sky,
585
00:37:26,880 --> 00:37:30,535
but then fell,
blanketing this island
586
00:37:30,560 --> 00:37:35,855
in layer upon layer
of pumice and rock and volcanic ash,
587
00:37:35,880 --> 00:37:40,095
and you can see some of those layers
etched out in this cliff face here.
588
00:37:40,120 --> 00:37:43,375
So that meant that if
there were any ancient ruins here,
589
00:37:43,400 --> 00:37:48,575
the chances are they'd be under
metres and metres of this stuff.
590
00:37:52,400 --> 00:37:55,335
It must have seemed
like Mission Impossible.
591
00:37:56,880 --> 00:38:01,575
But little did Marinatos know,
on the coast of Santorini,
592
00:38:01,600 --> 00:38:03,295
he was about to make
593
00:38:03,320 --> 00:38:07,895
the greatest archaeological
discovery of his life.
594
00:38:19,960 --> 00:38:25,015
The island of Santorini, 1967.
595
00:38:25,040 --> 00:38:27,215
The hunt was on to find out
596
00:38:27,240 --> 00:38:30,135
if a port city had been buried
beneath the ground
597
00:38:30,160 --> 00:38:35,215
following a gigantic volcanic
eruption 3,500 years ago.
598
00:38:36,680 --> 00:38:42,255
If they found it... it would help
prove Spyridon Marinatos's theory
599
00:38:42,280 --> 00:38:45,495
that this island
and neighbouring Crete
600
00:38:45,520 --> 00:38:50,655
could have been the inspiration
for the story of Atlantis,
601
00:38:50,680 --> 00:38:54,415
where a whole series of islands
had been obliterated
602
00:38:54,440 --> 00:38:57,375
by natural disaster.
603
00:38:57,400 --> 00:39:00,535
He was on a mission
to investigate...
604
00:39:00,560 --> 00:39:04,095
and now he'd pinpointed
an area to target.
605
00:39:05,280 --> 00:39:06,735
'IO years ago,
606
00:39:06,760 --> 00:39:10,935
an intriguing clue had been found
buried near this spot,
607
00:39:10,960 --> 00:39:12,735
under metres of ash.
608
00:39:14,080 --> 00:39:18,095
In 1899, some labourers in a quarry
just inland from here
609
00:39:18,120 --> 00:39:20,775
started finding
some mysterious objects.
610
00:39:20,800 --> 00:39:24,735
They didn't know what they were, but
they thought they looked ancient.
611
00:39:28,480 --> 00:39:31,215
Marinatos was intrigued.
612
00:39:31,240 --> 00:39:36,255
This was the perfect position for
a port city - right on the coast.
613
00:39:36,280 --> 00:39:40,415
So, gathering together a team,
he started to investigate here.
614
00:39:41,880 --> 00:39:44,535
He had no idea
how deep they'd have to dig.
615
00:39:44,560 --> 00:39:47,535
The volcanic ash and rock
is 30 metres high
616
00:39:47,560 --> 00:39:49,455
in some places on the island.
617
00:39:49,480 --> 00:39:51,855
But remarkably,
618
00:39:51,880 --> 00:39:55,735
on the very first day,
they made a breakthrough.
619
00:39:56,840 --> 00:39:59,735
They were digging
through stuff just like this here,
620
00:39:59,760 --> 00:40:02,455
and he was ecstatic
when about four metres down,
621
00:40:02,480 --> 00:40:04,655
he starts to make out
the shape of pots,
622
00:40:04,680 --> 00:40:08,615
and to his expert eye,
they were clearly storage jars...
623
00:40:08,640 --> 00:40:13,095
and storage jars that looked to be
exactly the same type and date
624
00:40:13,120 --> 00:40:17,295
as the ones he was so familiar
with from Knossos in Crete.
625
00:40:19,840 --> 00:40:23,215
But that was nothing
because a few days later,
626
00:40:23,240 --> 00:40:26,495
he would discover
an entire buried city.
627
00:40:31,240 --> 00:40:34,095
He called it Akrotiri.
628
00:40:35,200 --> 00:40:36,695
WOW!
629
00:40:41,320 --> 00:40:43,095
And these are the pots,
630
00:40:43,120 --> 00:40:44,775
these are the storage jars
631
00:40:44,800 --> 00:40:48,255
that he discovered so early on
as he started digging.
632
00:40:48,280 --> 00:40:50,455
And he didn't just discover
one or two.
633
00:40:50,480 --> 00:40:52,295
Look, there were
three rooms full of them,
634
00:40:52,320 --> 00:40:54,215
so different shapes and sizes,
635
00:40:54,240 --> 00:40:57,295
different designs on the outside,
maybe just to look nice and pretty,
636
00:40:57,320 --> 00:41:00,055
but maybe to indicate
that they were designed to store
637
00:41:00,080 --> 00:41:03,095
different foodstuffs,
some olive oil, some perhaps wine.
638
00:41:03,120 --> 00:41:06,775
What a fantastic start
to the excavation.
639
00:41:10,840 --> 00:41:15,535
Over the next seven years, the
archaeologists feverishly excavated.
640
00:41:17,920 --> 00:41:20,255
Wall after wall...
641
00:41:20,280 --> 00:41:23,495
room after room...
642
00:41:23,520 --> 00:41:27,535
and building after building
slowly began to appear
643
00:41:27,560 --> 00:41:32,375
from beneath the 3,500-year-old
ash and rubble.
644
00:41:33,600 --> 00:41:37,055
And as they dug, they began
to reveal striking similarities
645
00:41:37,080 --> 00:41:39,895
with the story of Atlantis.
646
00:41:39,920 --> 00:41:45,295
Located by the sea,
it was almost certainly a port city.
647
00:41:45,320 --> 00:41:48,455
And just like Atlantis,
there was evidence
648
00:41:48,480 --> 00:41:51,935
that its destruction had started
with an earthquake.
649
00:41:54,440 --> 00:41:56,655
This staircase here, look at that.
650
00:41:56,680 --> 00:41:59,655
Finely crafted,
strongly built stairs.
651
00:41:59,680 --> 00:42:02,735
And yet, they've just been snapped
in half in an instant
652
00:42:02,760 --> 00:42:08,175
by the shockwave that the earthquake
sent through this entire settlement.
653
00:42:10,520 --> 00:42:13,415
Little did the survivors know
after that earthquake,
654
00:42:13,440 --> 00:42:15,775
as they tried to put their lives
back in order,
655
00:42:15,800 --> 00:42:17,895
there was worse to come.
656
00:42:19,600 --> 00:42:24,055
Like Atlantis, a once thriving city
had been obliterated.
657
00:42:26,000 --> 00:42:29,375
Minoan expert Steve Kershaw
is giving me
658
00:42:29,400 --> 00:42:34,095
a guided tour of the ruins,
to show me its past splendour.
659
00:42:34,120 --> 00:42:36,015
Steve, I always love
an archaeological site
660
00:42:36,040 --> 00:42:37,495
where you look up at...
661
00:42:37,520 --> 00:42:39,655
This was a multi-storey city,
wasn't it?
662
00:42:39,680 --> 00:42:41,015
It was indeed.
663
00:42:41,040 --> 00:42:47,135
It's-It's now buried beneath metres
and metres of volcanic debris.
664
00:42:47,160 --> 00:42:50,215
So, it's all looking a bit grey now,
but would it have been whitewashed,
665
00:42:50,240 --> 00:42:52,055
would have been colourful
inside and things?
666
00:42:52,080 --> 00:42:53,815
It would, indeed, yes.
667
00:42:53,840 --> 00:42:56,655
The exteriors
would have been plastered over.
668
00:42:56,680 --> 00:43:01,615
On the inside, you've got colourful
frescoes and what have you.
669
00:43:01,640 --> 00:43:06,295
Amongst the devastation are
also details showing the true horror
670
00:43:06,320 --> 00:43:08,775
that the people here experienced.
671
00:43:08,800 --> 00:43:10,135
What on Earth are these?
672
00:43:10,160 --> 00:43:13,695
Yeah, a couple of beds.
The imprints of beds.
673
00:43:13,720 --> 00:43:15,495
And what happened was,
674
00:43:15,520 --> 00:43:18,735
before the eruption,
there was an enormous earthquake,
675
00:43:18,760 --> 00:43:21,935
and the people
of the town were tidying it up.
676
00:43:21,960 --> 00:43:24,135
So, they were stacking the beds,
trying to tidy up,
677
00:43:24,160 --> 00:43:26,535
maybe pick up loose bricks
and things. Very much so.
678
00:43:26,560 --> 00:43:29,175
And some of them are protecting
bits of pottery as well,
679
00:43:29,200 --> 00:43:31,735
you've got a little tripod
cooking pot down there.
680
00:43:31,760 --> 00:43:34,455
So, this is the repair work
on the town
681
00:43:34,480 --> 00:43:37,375
before the eruption
that they never knew was coming.
682
00:43:37,400 --> 00:43:38,895
What's happened is that
683
00:43:38,920 --> 00:43:41,175
the wood has decayed
in the volcanic material,
684
00:43:41,200 --> 00:43:44,935
and the archaeologists have poured
plaster into it
685
00:43:44,960 --> 00:43:48,255
to recreate the bed
out of the space.
686
00:43:48,280 --> 00:43:50,855
So, the archaeologists found
a vacuum, they poured plaster in,
687
00:43:50,880 --> 00:43:53,975
it was a bed shape.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
688
00:43:54,000 --> 00:43:55,815
That's a moment in time, really,
689
00:43:55,840 --> 00:43:58,535
captured from 3,500 years ago.
Very much so.
690
00:43:58,560 --> 00:44:01,975
It takes you right
to the heart of people's real lives.
691
00:44:02,000 --> 00:44:03,615
And that's one of the wonderful things
692
00:44:03,640 --> 00:44:05,815
that archaeology can do for us,
I think.
693
00:44:11,920 --> 00:44:14,935
With its impressive
multi-storey buildings,
694
00:44:14,960 --> 00:44:19,175
Akrotiri had clearly been wealthy,
just like Atlantis.
695
00:44:21,000 --> 00:44:24,775
And as more and more of the ancient
city surfaced from the ash,
696
00:44:24,800 --> 00:44:28,175
the similarities grew even stronger.
697
00:44:28,200 --> 00:44:29,895
So, what are we looking at here?
698
00:44:29,920 --> 00:44:32,775
So, this is
one of the main streets of the town,
699
00:44:32,800 --> 00:44:35,055
and you've got houses
on either side.
700
00:44:35,080 --> 00:44:37,375
You can just see
the remains of the walls.
701
00:44:37,400 --> 00:44:39,935
Then a main street
that would have been paved
702
00:44:39,960 --> 00:44:43,375
with beautiful flagstones,
and then the most remarkable thing,
703
00:44:43,400 --> 00:44:46,055
I think, underneath it,
you've got a drainage system.
704
00:44:46,080 --> 00:44:48,415
What, that gutter there?
That gutter, yes.
705
00:44:48,440 --> 00:44:53,695
That humble gutter is actually a
mark of extremely high civilisation.
706
00:44:53,720 --> 00:44:56,495
Amazing!
There's flushing lavatory systems,
707
00:44:56,520 --> 00:44:58,455
and that would have all gone
into that
708
00:44:58,480 --> 00:45:00,095
and flushed it out into the sea.
709
00:45:00,120 --> 00:45:01,975
That wasn't normal at the time,
presumably?
710
00:45:02,000 --> 00:45:03,775
No, that is highly sophisticated.
711
00:45:03,800 --> 00:45:07,775
There's not many cultures have got
that level of water engineering
712
00:45:07,800 --> 00:45:10,335
in the states at this time.
713
00:45:10,360 --> 00:45:12,935
And these people have got it down so well.
714
00:45:12,960 --> 00:45:16,655
And that, I guess, allows everyone
to live together in this crowded way
715
00:45:16,680 --> 00:45:19,495
without getting terrible diseases.
It's gonna help.
716
00:45:19,520 --> 00:45:22,695
One of the reasons that
people have drawn parallels
717
00:45:22,720 --> 00:45:24,975
between here and Plato's Atlantis
718
00:45:25,000 --> 00:45:27,575
is precisely this facility
with water engineering,
719
00:45:27,600 --> 00:45:32,655
because the Atlanteans are kind
of the ultimate water engineers.
720
00:45:32,680 --> 00:45:36,215
They create bathhouses
with both cold and hot,
721
00:45:36,240 --> 00:45:40,535
not just for their elite classes,
but for the rest of the population,
722
00:45:40,560 --> 00:45:42,975
and indeed not just
for the human population,
723
00:45:43,000 --> 00:45:46,655
but for the horses, the beasts
of burden, and the animals.
724
00:45:46,680 --> 00:45:49,935
So, we have cleanliness pervading
Atlantis.
725
00:45:49,960 --> 00:45:52,735
So, in Plato's Atlantis,
even the animals are clean.
726
00:45:52,760 --> 00:45:56,295
They are. So, for Plato and the
Ancient Greeks, water management,
727
00:45:56,320 --> 00:45:58,735
that said
you're an advanced civilisation?
728
00:45:58,760 --> 00:46:01,375
It does indeed, yeah.
And they're doing it here.
729
00:46:01,400 --> 00:46:03,495
They're doing it right here.
Brilliant.
730
00:46:04,840 --> 00:46:07,175
After digging up Akrotiri,
731
00:46:07,200 --> 00:46:11,415
Marinatos was now convinced
that his theory was right.
732
00:46:11,440 --> 00:46:14,775
The combination
of Knossos Palace on Crete
733
00:46:14,800 --> 00:46:19,455
and this port city
was inspiration for Atlantis.
734
00:46:20,560 --> 00:46:24,415
It was like Atlantis itself
had been found in stone.
735
00:46:24,440 --> 00:46:26,615
You no longer had to imagine it.
736
00:46:26,640 --> 00:46:28,335
You could walk through the streets,
737
00:46:28,360 --> 00:46:33,335
could almost sense
the people that had once lived here.
738
00:46:37,520 --> 00:46:40,615
Today, many of
Akrotiri's finest treasures
739
00:46:40,640 --> 00:46:45,095
lie in Santorini Archaeological
Museum in the town of Thera.
740
00:46:49,480 --> 00:46:52,375
Each one gives
a fascinating insight
741
00:46:52,400 --> 00:46:54,735
into that lost world
742
00:46:54,760 --> 00:46:58,895
and the parallels
with the story of Atlantis.
743
00:47:00,480 --> 00:47:02,615
I love these murals.
744
00:47:02,640 --> 00:47:03,975
This was painted onto the wall
745
00:47:04,000 --> 00:47:06,335
of one of the grandest houses
in Akrotiri,
746
00:47:06,360 --> 00:47:10,295
and it's such a special thing
to have an image of their world
747
00:47:10,320 --> 00:47:13,535
painted by the people
who actually lived in it.
748
00:47:13,560 --> 00:47:17,295
just look at this wonderful island
here. It's lush.
749
00:47:17,320 --> 00:47:20,215
You've got fantastic details
like trees, deer,
750
00:47:20,240 --> 00:47:22,695
perhaps a lion up there.
751
00:47:22,720 --> 00:47:26,255
And then my favourite bit,
this armada of ships and boats
752
00:47:26,280 --> 00:47:29,455
heading out across the sea,
some of them under oar,
753
00:47:29,480 --> 00:47:31,255
some of them sail-powered.
754
00:47:31,280 --> 00:47:32,575
Some of them look ceremonial
755
00:47:32,600 --> 00:47:34,775
like it's almost
a kind of festival experience.
756
00:47:34,800 --> 00:47:37,975
Dolphins all around them,
and they're arriving
757
00:47:38,000 --> 00:47:41,375
in somewhere that
I think looks quite like Santorini,
758
00:47:41,400 --> 00:47:45,695
barren red cliffs, a sense of
the volcanic, coloured buildings,
759
00:47:45,720 --> 00:47:47,375
people greeting them.
760
00:47:47,400 --> 00:47:53,375
This is a wealthy maritime world,
a lot of colour and vibrancy.
761
00:47:53,400 --> 00:47:57,015
Could this settlement at the end
here actually be Akrotiri?
762
00:47:57,040 --> 00:48:02,255
Was this what it looked like before
it was destroyed in that volcano?
763
00:48:02,280 --> 00:48:05,135
The whole thing that really strikes
me when you look at this -
764
00:48:05,160 --> 00:48:07,775
you look at the animals,
the richness of the colours,
765
00:48:07,800 --> 00:48:09,855
the buildings, the ships -
766
00:48:09,880 --> 00:48:14,735
if you did want a picture of Plato's
Atlantis, this is pretty much it.
767
00:48:17,840 --> 00:48:19,855
Many of Akrotiri's buildings
were covered
768
00:48:19,880 --> 00:48:24,055
with beautiful frescoes that
incredibly survived the disaster.
769
00:48:25,360 --> 00:48:28,535
Each and every one
seems to strengthen
770
00:48:28,560 --> 00:48:30,735
the connection with Atlantis.
771
00:48:30,760 --> 00:48:34,215
There are fishermen proudly holding
their catch,
772
00:48:34,240 --> 00:48:35,735
linking the Minoans to the sea,
773
00:48:35,760 --> 00:48:38,535
just like the Atlanteans
in the story.
774
00:48:38,560 --> 00:48:41,575
Like Atlantis and Crete,
775
00:48:41,600 --> 00:48:45,935
Akrotiri was clearly
a rich and luxurious place.
776
00:48:45,960 --> 00:48:47,895
We can see that
from their hairstyles,
777
00:48:47,920 --> 00:48:50,415
their fashions, their jewellery.
778
00:48:50,440 --> 00:48:54,495
There are exotic animals
native to Africa,
779
00:48:54,520 --> 00:48:58,175
and in Atlantis,
Plato mentions elephants.
780
00:49:06,480 --> 00:49:08,015
The more I read about Atlantis
781
00:49:08,040 --> 00:49:10,975
and the more I explore the wonderful
archaeology on these islands,
782
00:49:11,000 --> 00:49:13,735
the more I get a real sense
of why people got so excited
783
00:49:13,760 --> 00:49:16,255
about the apparent similarities
784
00:49:16,280 --> 00:49:19,655
between the Minoans
and the story of Atlantis.
785
00:49:21,040 --> 00:49:24,655
Marinatos had discovered that,
like the Atlanteans,
786
00:49:24,680 --> 00:49:26,695
who ruled over several islands,
787
00:49:26,720 --> 00:49:30,975
the real-life Minoans flourished
both here and on Crete.
788
00:49:31,000 --> 00:49:34,575
The Minoans, too, were
clearly a massive sea power
789
00:49:34,600 --> 00:49:37,455
with connections
as far away as Egypt.
790
00:49:39,320 --> 00:49:42,655
And they suffered
an epic natural disaster.
791
00:49:42,680 --> 00:49:45,775
The idea that
these places were the inspiration
792
00:49:45,800 --> 00:49:48,695
for Plato's Atlantis is compelling.
793
00:49:50,400 --> 00:49:52,415
The problem I have with it
is that it took place
794
00:49:52,440 --> 00:49:55,615
over 1,000 years
before Plato was writing,
795
00:49:55,640 --> 00:50:00,695
and we've got absolutely no evidence
that Plato had ever heard about it.
796
00:50:00,720 --> 00:50:02,735
In fact, there is no account,
797
00:50:02,760 --> 00:50:05,415
no mention
of the destruction of Akrotiri
798
00:50:05,440 --> 00:50:07,735
in any ancient source at all.
799
00:50:07,760 --> 00:50:10,575
Possibly, we've lost
those sources over the years,
800
00:50:10,600 --> 00:50:13,095
and possibly,
it was such an enormous event
801
00:50:13,120 --> 00:50:15,295
that it was just talked about,
802
00:50:15,320 --> 00:50:19,015
handed down from parent to child
over the generations.
803
00:50:19,040 --> 00:50:23,215
So, despite all the incredible
similarities with Atlantis,
804
00:50:23,240 --> 00:50:25,575
I'm gonna continue my search.
805
00:50:25,600 --> 00:50:29,255
And luckily,
there is another contender.
806
00:50:29,280 --> 00:50:32,775
Through an incredible
piece of detective work,
807
00:50:32,800 --> 00:50:36,655
archaeologists have just discovered
another lost city
808
00:50:36,680 --> 00:50:39,255
on the coast of mainland Greece.
809
00:50:39,280 --> 00:50:42,775
Perhaps the inspiration
for Atlantis lies closer
810
00:50:42,800 --> 00:50:47,935
to Plato's home of Athens
and much closer to Plato's time.
811
00:50:47,960 --> 00:50:52,175
The archaeologists discovered that
not only was this city destroyed,
812
00:50:52,200 --> 00:50:57,375
but that destruction was big news
in Greece during Plato's lifetime.
813
00:50:57,400 --> 00:51:01,535
Could this city be
the real Atlantis?
814
00:51:10,600 --> 00:51:15,815
Greece, nearly 2,500 years ago.
815
00:51:15,840 --> 00:51:20,135
News of a terrible natural disaster
reached the city of Athens.
816
00:51:21,560 --> 00:51:24,255
About 100 miles
away along the coast,
817
00:51:24,280 --> 00:51:28,255
a huge tsunami smashed
into the shoreline.
818
00:51:28,280 --> 00:51:34,255
A once bustling, vibrant port
now lay beneath the waves.
819
00:51:35,760 --> 00:51:38,495
The devastated city was called
Helike,
820
00:51:38,520 --> 00:51:41,415
and intriguingly,
its destruction occurred
821
00:51:41,440 --> 00:51:45,055
just 13 years
before Plato wrote about Atlantis.
822
00:51:47,000 --> 00:51:50,335
There are
some very interesting parallels.
823
00:51:50,360 --> 00:51:52,495
For example,
people in Greece at the time
824
00:51:52,520 --> 00:51:55,255
said that the population of Helike
825
00:51:55,280 --> 00:51:58,735
must have somehow enraged
the sea god Poseidon,
826
00:51:58,760 --> 00:52:01,815
and he was the one
who destroyed the town.
827
00:52:01,840 --> 00:52:03,815
Well, in the same way,
828
00:52:03,840 --> 00:52:08,895
Plato's Atlantis is smashed
by a vengeful god.
829
00:52:08,920 --> 00:52:10,655
It's an interesting coincidence.
830
00:52:12,320 --> 00:52:18,415
And just like Atlantis, Poseidon
was the chief god of Helike.
831
00:52:18,440 --> 00:52:22,135
The city was famously home to
one of his most important temples.
832
00:52:23,720 --> 00:52:26,055
So, this vanished city,
833
00:52:26,080 --> 00:52:28,895
destroyed by a tsunami
in Plato's lifetime,
834
00:52:28,920 --> 00:52:33,775
certainly seems a good candidate
as the inspiration for Atlantis.
835
00:52:34,880 --> 00:52:36,255
The problem was that
836
00:52:36,280 --> 00:52:40,215
for centuries, it was impossible
to explore the connection
837
00:52:40,240 --> 00:52:44,455
because Helike had vanished
without a trace.
838
00:52:44,480 --> 00:52:46,775
Apart from a few ancient stories,
839
00:52:46,800 --> 00:52:50,695
there was no evidence that
the city had ever existed at all.
840
00:52:50,720 --> 00:52:53,335
But just 35 years ago,
841
00:52:53,360 --> 00:52:56,535
archaeologists began to hunt,
842
00:52:56,560 --> 00:52:58,575
and all that would change.
843
00:52:58,600 --> 00:53:00,335
Their search would turn out to be
844
00:53:00,360 --> 00:53:03,855
one of the most brilliant pieces
of archaeological detective work
845
00:53:03,880 --> 00:53:05,175
I have ever come across.
846
00:53:05,200 --> 00:53:07,215
I'm just heading up the coast now,
847
00:53:07,240 --> 00:53:10,215
following the footsteps
of those brilliant archaeologists,
848
00:53:10,240 --> 00:53:13,215
and I cannot wait to see
what they uncovered.
849
00:53:17,720 --> 00:53:21,535
At first, the archaeologists
only had a very rough idea
850
00:53:21,560 --> 00:53:25,175
where to look
for the city of Helike -
851
00:53:25,200 --> 00:53:29,055
100 miles west of Athens
on the coast.
852
00:53:37,040 --> 00:53:39,695
Once they arrived,
they began to scour
853
00:53:39,720 --> 00:53:42,615
every inch of the seabed
around the shore
854
00:53:42,640 --> 00:53:45,735
using sonar equipment,
hunting for the city.
855
00:53:48,080 --> 00:53:51,055
After three years,
they had found...
856
00:53:53,000 --> 00:53:54,495
...absolutely nothing.
857
00:53:56,640 --> 00:54:01,535
Not one ruined building,
not one piece of pottery.
858
00:54:05,040 --> 00:54:06,855
But they didn't give up hope.
859
00:54:06,880 --> 00:54:10,615
Instead,
they did something surprising.
860
00:54:11,840 --> 00:54:14,775
They began to look inland.
861
00:54:14,800 --> 00:54:17,375
Now, that might sound like
they're swapping their search
862
00:54:17,400 --> 00:54:20,855
from a drop in the ocean
to a needle in a haystack,
863
00:54:20,880 --> 00:54:22,735
but the archaeologists had a theory.
864
00:54:22,760 --> 00:54:26,015
What if the old coastline
was actually inland
865
00:54:26,040 --> 00:54:27,815
from where the modern beach is?
866
00:54:27,840 --> 00:54:31,135
That would mean
Helike wasn't underwater -
867
00:54:31,160 --> 00:54:32,775
it was underground.
868
00:54:35,800 --> 00:54:40,655
The archaeologists began looking
back at the ancient stories to see
869
00:54:40,680 --> 00:54:43,695
if there could be anything
in this theory.
870
00:54:43,720 --> 00:54:47,255
They concluded that
in their previous hunts,
871
00:54:47,280 --> 00:54:50,255
something had been lost
in translation.
872
00:54:50,280 --> 00:54:53,095
Helike wasn't buried under the sea,
873
00:54:53,120 --> 00:54:56,335
but lost under an inland lagoon.
874
00:54:59,200 --> 00:55:00,975
And they had some useful clues.
875
00:55:01,000 --> 00:55:03,495
The ancient records
named a few places
876
00:55:03,520 --> 00:55:07,895
which archaeologists hope might help
them pinpoint its location.
877
00:55:09,280 --> 00:55:12,135
I'm a mile or two
in from the coast now,
878
00:55:12,160 --> 00:55:15,095
and apparently,
one of the key landmarks was hidden
879
00:55:15,120 --> 00:55:17,375
in these cliffs above me now.
880
00:55:19,920 --> 00:55:23,335
One of the stories referred
to a magical cave
881
00:55:23,360 --> 00:55:25,095
high up in the mountains.
882
00:55:34,120 --> 00:55:37,255
This was the Cave of Heracles.
883
00:55:37,280 --> 00:55:40,095
You may known him by his Roman name,
Hercules.
884
00:55:40,120 --> 00:55:43,815
He's the half man, half god
who performed the 12 Labours.
885
00:55:43,840 --> 00:55:46,615
Well, the Ancient Greeks
would climb up to the cave,
886
00:55:46,640 --> 00:55:49,495
they'd kneel
down before a statue of Heracles
887
00:55:49,520 --> 00:55:51,895
just in there.
They'd roll some dice,
888
00:55:51,920 --> 00:55:55,255
and the statue would apparently tell
their fortunes for them.
889
00:55:55,280 --> 00:55:58,135
It still feels like a bit of
an adventure coming up here today.
890
00:55:58,160 --> 00:56:01,055
But more recently,
this cave was also
891
00:56:01,080 --> 00:56:03,495
the vital piece of evidence
892
00:56:03,520 --> 00:56:05,855
that helped archaeologists fix
893
00:56:05,880 --> 00:56:08,895
the position
of the ancient city of Helike.
894
00:56:11,120 --> 00:56:14,455
In ancient times,
a geographer visited here
895
00:56:14,480 --> 00:56:18,615
and, significantly, wrote down
a detailed description of the area.
896
00:56:20,120 --> 00:56:23,495
He mentions this cave.
He mentions the ruins of Helike,
897
00:56:23,520 --> 00:56:25,455
which you can still see
in the shallows,
898
00:56:25,480 --> 00:56:29,695
and he mentions the town of Aigio,
which is still in existence today.
899
00:56:29,720 --> 00:56:33,495
And that allowed
archaeologists to piece together
900
00:56:33,520 --> 00:56:37,415
what this coastline might have
looked like 2,500 years ago.
901
00:56:37,440 --> 00:56:40,775
Here's the coast. Here's the sea.
902
00:56:40,800 --> 00:56:43,295
We know he mentions the cave here,
903
00:56:43,320 --> 00:56:46,095
and he mentions the town of Aigio,
904
00:56:46,120 --> 00:56:48,295
still in existence
on the coast today.
905
00:56:48,320 --> 00:56:53,335
Now, he says that
Aigio was four and a half miles
906
00:56:53,360 --> 00:56:55,535
from the ruins of Helike,
907
00:56:55,560 --> 00:57:00,215
and he says that the cave was three
miles from the ruins of Helike,
908
00:57:00,240 --> 00:57:03,255
which means
Helike should be round about here.
909
00:57:03,280 --> 00:57:04,935
X marks the spot.
910
00:57:04,960 --> 00:57:08,175
That is
where they need to start looking.
911
00:57:09,960 --> 00:57:11,295
Of course, they had to hope that
912
00:57:11,320 --> 00:57:14,095
the ancient geographer was
accurate...
913
00:57:15,400 --> 00:57:16,775
...but it was a strong clue.
914
00:57:20,360 --> 00:57:25,575
By 2000, the archaeologists
had narrowed down their target.
915
00:57:27,000 --> 00:57:30,215
That was still
a huge area to investigate.
916
00:57:34,040 --> 00:57:36,215
Well, you don't have to be an expert
to work out
917
00:57:36,240 --> 00:57:38,215
that you can't possibly
just turn up here
918
00:57:38,240 --> 00:57:42,375
and dig up
such a vast area of this landscape.
919
00:57:44,520 --> 00:57:47,175
They wouldn't just be scratching
the surface, either.
920
00:57:48,320 --> 00:57:51,015
They were pretty sure that
after 2,500 years,
921
00:57:51,040 --> 00:57:54,615
any remains would be buried
deep underground.
922
00:57:54,640 --> 00:57:57,575
They were gonna need to come up
with a clever plan.
923
00:58:02,520 --> 00:58:05,535
The archaeologist leading
the hunt for the lost city
924
00:58:05,560 --> 00:58:08,415
was Dora Katsonopoulou.
925
00:58:08,440 --> 00:58:12,855
So, you and your team, you think
you've identified the general area,
926
00:58:12,880 --> 00:58:16,495
how do you find the exact sites?
What's next?
927
00:58:16,520 --> 00:58:19,375
There is nothing visible from Helike
on the surface.
928
00:58:19,400 --> 00:58:20,975
Everything is buried.
929
00:58:21,000 --> 00:58:27,255
So, the only way to start getting
some good information
930
00:58:27,280 --> 00:58:30,935
about what is underground
is the borehole drilling.
931
00:58:30,960 --> 00:58:33,135
Drilling big holes
straight vertically down
932
00:58:33,160 --> 00:58:34,535
into the ground?
Very small.
933
00:58:34,560 --> 00:58:36,495
Something like that.
OK.
934
00:58:36,520 --> 00:58:38,215
So, small holes...
A very small hole.
935
00:58:38,240 --> 00:58:39,975
Drill them into the ground.
936
00:58:40,000 --> 00:58:42,215
Drill into the ground.
What are you hoping to find?
937
00:58:42,240 --> 00:58:48,855
If we would be lucky, a few small
pieces of pottery or tiles
938
00:58:48,880 --> 00:58:51,455
that would show you
an ancient occupation,
939
00:58:51,480 --> 00:58:55,255
so you knew where the area is.
How many boreholes did you drill?
940
00:58:55,280 --> 00:58:57,255
A total of 99 in the plains.
941
00:58:57,280 --> 00:58:58,895
99?
Mm-hm.
942
00:58:58,920 --> 00:59:00,615
You were drilling 99 holes
in the ground.
943
00:59:00,640 --> 00:59:02,936
Did you ever think, "|'m gonna
give up, go back to Athens."?
944
00:59:02,960 --> 00:59:05,695
No, no, never.
945
00:59:05,720 --> 00:59:07,415
You always believed
it'd be down there?
946
00:59:07,440 --> 00:59:09,135
I am very persistent.
947
00:59:09,160 --> 00:59:11,775
I was determined to find it.
948
00:59:11,800 --> 00:59:16,695
And then in the year 1993,
we found the first piece of pottery
949
00:59:16,720 --> 00:59:19,975
and a few small, tiny pieces.
950
00:59:20,000 --> 00:59:24,335
This led us
to the first areas where we decided
951
00:59:24,360 --> 00:59:26,255
that here we have something.
952
00:59:26,280 --> 00:59:28,375
- So, let's dig.
- So, let's dig!
953
00:59:29,760 --> 00:59:34,615
For 2,500 years,
the city of Helike had been lost.
954
00:59:34,640 --> 00:59:37,655
Now it was
on the verge of being found.
955
00:59:37,680 --> 00:59:41,335
But could this discovery
finally end the search
956
00:59:41,360 --> 00:59:43,615
for the lost city of Atlantis?
957
00:59:55,480 --> 00:59:57,975
January, 2000.
958
00:59:58,000 --> 01:00:02,015
On the Greek coast,
100 miles west of Athens,
959
01:00:02,040 --> 01:00:04,695
the atmosphere was buzzing.
960
01:00:04,720 --> 01:00:07,415
After decades of searching,
961
01:00:07,440 --> 01:00:09,935
archaeologists had finally targeted
962
01:00:09,960 --> 01:00:12,335
a location
for the lost city of Helike.
963
01:00:14,560 --> 01:00:20,255
They'd always wondered whether
Helike was inspiration for Atlantis.
964
01:00:21,720 --> 01:00:26,375
Now, at last...
they had a chance to find out.
965
01:00:27,840 --> 01:00:29,335
It wasn't the easiest place to dig.
966
01:00:29,360 --> 01:00:34,215
As you can see, the countryside
is packed with dense olive groves.
967
01:00:34,240 --> 01:00:37,295
And once they'd cleared these trees
away, they dug into the ground
968
01:00:37,320 --> 01:00:39,535
and found water
quite close to the surface.
969
01:00:39,560 --> 01:00:41,215
The water was very high.
970
01:00:41,240 --> 01:00:45,135
All of it just made digging
a difficult process.
971
01:00:47,840 --> 01:00:51,135
They nervously dug
through the waterlogged soil,
972
01:00:51,160 --> 01:00:55,855
and it gradually became clear
that something was buried here
973
01:00:55,880 --> 01:00:57,255
beneath the ground.
974
01:01:00,320 --> 01:01:03,415
Little by little,
stone blocks emerged,
975
01:01:03,440 --> 01:01:06,455
forming the outline of walls.
976
01:01:06,480 --> 01:01:10,215
Pebbled floors
slowly came into view.
977
01:01:10,240 --> 01:01:14,815
And there were enormous storage jars
dotted across the site.
978
01:01:17,200 --> 01:01:18,695
They realised that,
979
01:01:18,720 --> 01:01:24,255
amazingly, the lost city of Helike
had been beautifully preserved
980
01:01:24,280 --> 01:01:28,295
beneath the soil
after thousands of years.
981
01:01:28,320 --> 01:01:30,495
So, Dora,
what are we looking at here?
982
01:01:30,520 --> 01:01:36,535
We are walking
through a major building complex.
983
01:01:36,560 --> 01:01:40,175
Here was
a thriving industry of textiles.
984
01:01:40,200 --> 01:01:42,935
They were making textiles,
985
01:01:42,960 --> 01:01:45,095
they were selling textile,
986
01:01:45,120 --> 01:01:47,935
Lots of products going in and out.
987
01:01:47,960 --> 01:01:49,695
Lots of coins found here,
988
01:01:49,720 --> 01:01:53,895
showing exchange
with many cities around Greece.
989
01:01:53,920 --> 01:01:56,695
A very, a very rich place.
990
01:01:58,160 --> 01:02:01,815
This ancient factory is
just one of the many pockets
991
01:02:01,840 --> 01:02:03,775
that have been found so far.
992
01:02:03,800 --> 01:02:09,135
And the parallels with Atlantis
are already proving to be strong.
993
01:02:09,160 --> 01:02:13,855
A recent dig uncovered what appears
to be the sanctuary of Poseidon,
994
01:02:13,880 --> 01:02:18,575
the sea God worshipped
both here and in Atlantis.
995
01:02:20,080 --> 01:02:23,815
The evidence already shows that
over 2,000 years,
996
01:02:23,840 --> 01:02:27,615
this city grew to be
huge, rich and powerful,
997
01:02:27,640 --> 01:02:29,335
just like Atlantis.
998
01:02:30,600 --> 01:02:32,255
And the evidence also suggests
999
01:02:32,280 --> 01:02:37,535
that this once glorious place was
destroyed in exactly the same way
1000
01:02:37,560 --> 01:02:42,935
as Plato's Atlantis,
starting with a massive earthquake.
1001
01:02:42,960 --> 01:02:47,335
About 600 metres east
from this building,
1002
01:02:47,360 --> 01:02:51,255
we have found
in one of our excavations
1003
01:02:51,280 --> 01:02:54,335
the ruins of a classical building
1004
01:02:54,360 --> 01:02:58,575
that was destroyed
by this earthquake of 373 BC,
1005
01:02:58,600 --> 01:03:03,095
and actually,
the way the walls are destroyed
1006
01:03:03,120 --> 01:03:07,535
shows that there we have
a tsunami action.
1007
01:03:07,560 --> 01:03:10,095
Wow. So, you can tell
from the archaeology
1008
01:03:10,120 --> 01:03:12,575
that the buildings
were knocked over by a tsunami?
1009
01:03:12,600 --> 01:03:13,975
Yes, exactly.
Wow!
1010
01:03:15,800 --> 01:03:20,415
Atlantis and Helike had shared
exactly the same fate.
1011
01:03:20,440 --> 01:03:23,575
And as evidence surfaced
from beneath the ground,
1012
01:03:23,600 --> 01:03:27,335
Dora dug further into
the ancient records about Helike
1013
01:03:27,360 --> 01:03:30,815
where she discovered
another incredible connection.
1014
01:03:30,840 --> 01:03:36,175
just like Atlantis in Plato's story,
Helike had been a bustling port.
1015
01:03:36,200 --> 01:03:38,655
On the night of the catastrophe,
1016
01:03:38,680 --> 01:03:42,815
it was harbouring
a whole fleet of Spartan warships.
1017
01:03:44,400 --> 01:03:45,895
Extraordinarily,
1018
01:03:45,920 --> 01:03:49,695
the admiral of this fleet was
Plato's most bitter enemy.
1019
01:03:49,720 --> 01:03:53,975
We found by looking again
into the ancient sources
1020
01:03:54,000 --> 01:03:59,255
that Plato had also a personal
interest in the Helike destruction.
1021
01:03:59,280 --> 01:04:01,495
Plato was travelling a lot,
1022
01:04:01,520 --> 01:04:04,255
and in one of his travels,
he was captured.
1023
01:04:04,280 --> 01:04:09,215
- Wow!
- And so the person tried to sell Plato into slavery.
1024
01:04:09,240 --> 01:04:11,895
- What?
- Yeah, slavery.
1025
01:04:11,920 --> 01:04:16,575
And here in Helike,
the night of the earthquake,
1026
01:04:16,600 --> 01:04:23,295
there were anchored here in Helike's
port Spartan, ten Spartan ships.
1027
01:04:23,320 --> 01:04:28,055
Their admiral was called Potts.
1028
01:04:28,080 --> 01:04:31,895
This Spartan admiral
was the person
1029
01:04:31,920 --> 01:04:37,135
that years ago had tried to sell him
into slavery,
1030
01:04:37,160 --> 01:04:39,695
and he got drowned here.
1031
01:04:39,720 --> 01:04:41,895
- No.
- Oh, yes.
1032
01:04:41,920 --> 01:04:44,615
So, we know this destruction would
have a big impact personally...
1033
01:04:44,640 --> 01:04:46,455
- Yes.
- ..on Plato?
1034
01:04:46,480 --> 01:04:47,735
- On Plato, yes.
- CooL
1035
01:04:50,280 --> 01:04:54,095
Out of all the places
I visited on my hunt for Atlantis,
1036
01:04:54,120 --> 01:04:57,455
Helike really does seem to tick
the boxes
1037
01:04:57,480 --> 01:05:01,695
as a real candidate for
the inspiration for Plato's story.
1038
01:05:01,720 --> 01:05:05,775
The destruction of Helike didn't
just occur within Plato's lifetime,
1039
01:05:05,800 --> 01:05:09,615
but it had killed off
his arch enemy.
1040
01:05:09,640 --> 01:05:12,855
I really love the way that
Dora and her team combined
1041
01:05:12,880 --> 01:05:17,215
a close reading of the ancient texts
with clever digging techniques
1042
01:05:17,240 --> 01:05:19,415
to make
some astonishing discoveries.
1043
01:05:19,440 --> 01:05:23,375
It really emphasises to me that
you can find something as remarkable
1044
01:05:23,400 --> 01:05:27,735
as a lost Atlantis
if you ignore the fantasies
1045
01:05:27,760 --> 01:05:30,295
and just follow
where the evidence leads.
1046
01:05:36,200 --> 01:05:37,815
Having visited
the extraordinary sites
1047
01:05:37,840 --> 01:05:41,175
on the islands
of Crete and Santorini...
1048
01:05:41,200 --> 01:05:45,375
dived to the sunken town
of Pavlopetri
1049
01:05:45,400 --> 01:05:48,015
and seen buried Helike,
1050
01:05:48,040 --> 01:05:51,415
it does often feel as if you're
in the lost world of Atlantis,
1051
01:05:51,440 --> 01:05:54,375
described
by the ancient philosopher.
1052
01:05:55,840 --> 01:06:00,215
I would love to go back to the Agora
here in Plato's time
1053
01:06:00,240 --> 01:06:04,455
and grab him by the shoulders and
ask him what his inspirations were.
1054
01:06:04,480 --> 01:06:07,015
Was it Helike, Akrotiri or Crete
1055
01:06:07,040 --> 01:06:08,935
or one of the other places
I've been to,
1056
01:06:08,960 --> 01:06:11,895
or was it all just
a product of his own imagination?
1057
01:06:13,240 --> 01:06:18,135
In my mind, when Plato was conjuring
up his fabulous story of Atlantis
1058
01:06:18,160 --> 01:06:21,375
with its glittering palaces,
bustling ports,
1059
01:06:21,400 --> 01:06:24,215
and its terrible destruction,
1060
01:06:24,240 --> 01:06:27,735
the chances are
that he was picking and mixing
1061
01:06:27,760 --> 01:06:30,735
from all the extraordinary places
that I've seen.
1062
01:06:32,120 --> 01:06:36,135
And would he be amazed to discover
that 2,500 years later,
1063
01:06:36,160 --> 01:06:40,575
people are still fascinated
by the Atlantis story?
1064
01:06:40,600 --> 01:06:45,695
It's contributed to archaeologists
making remarkable discoveries.
1065
01:06:45,720 --> 01:06:49,095
And will that interest in Atlantis
continue
1066
01:06:49,120 --> 01:06:51,575
and will it drive us to discover
1067
01:06:51,600 --> 01:06:54,775
yet more ancient ruins
beneath the waves?
90747
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