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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,240 --> 00:00:07,695 2,500 years ago, 2 00:00:07,720 --> 00:00:11,455 Ancient Greeks told of a terrifying catastrophe... 3 00:00:13,640 --> 00:00:16,815 ...the destruction of Atlantis. 4 00:00:16,840 --> 00:00:21,495 It was a tale of utter devastation and carnage... 5 00:00:21,520 --> 00:00:25,335 and has captivated the world for over 2,000 years. 6 00:00:27,320 --> 00:00:31,295 Atlantis, a once glittering city that had ruled the waves 7 00:00:31,320 --> 00:00:33,575 now sunk beneath them, 8 00:00:33,600 --> 00:00:36,615 obliterated from the face of the Earth 9 00:00:36,640 --> 00:00:39,375 by a terrible natural disaster. 10 00:00:41,000 --> 00:00:46,375 Atlantis was described as one of the greatest places on Earth - 11 00:00:46,400 --> 00:00:49,975 luxurious, rich and powerful. 12 00:00:50,000 --> 00:00:53,535 But for centuries, people have wondered, 13 00:00:53,560 --> 00:00:57,255 was it just a story or did such an amazing city ever exist 14 00:00:57,280 --> 00:00:59,655 before it sank beneath the waves? 15 00:01:02,840 --> 00:01:07,055 Now I'm on a journey through Greece to find out 16 00:01:07,080 --> 00:01:10,935 if there's any fact buried amongst the fiction. 17 00:01:10,960 --> 00:01:15,455 From clues hidden at the tops of mysterious mountains 18 00:01:15,480 --> 00:01:18,415 to discoveries buried deep beneath the ground, 19 00:01:18,440 --> 00:01:20,895 I'll trace the extraordinary story 20 00:01:20,920 --> 00:01:24,655 of the search for this legendary world. 21 00:01:24,680 --> 00:01:27,895 He wants this to be Atlantis? He really wants this to be Atlantis. 22 00:01:27,920 --> 00:01:33,295 'Exploring today's incredible hunt for the ancient lost city...' 23 00:01:33,320 --> 00:01:35,215 I was determined to find it. 24 00:01:36,720 --> 00:01:41,935 ..|'ll uncover a world of luxury and beauty 25 00:01:41,960 --> 00:01:46,335 and evidence of brutal destruction. 26 00:01:46,360 --> 00:01:51,135 And I'll dive beneath the waves to find remains of an ancient city 27 00:01:51,160 --> 00:01:53,935 buried beneath the scenes. 28 00:01:53,960 --> 00:01:56,095 Incredible archaeological discoveries, 29 00:01:56,120 --> 00:01:58,295 extraordinary detective work. 30 00:01:58,320 --> 00:02:02,535 This is the hunt for the real lost city of Atlantis. 31 00:02:18,600 --> 00:02:19,895 I love being in Greece. 32 00:02:19,920 --> 00:02:22,375 I love the landscape, the rugged mountains 33 00:02:22,400 --> 00:02:25,175 and then the beautiful coastline and the sea. 34 00:02:26,920 --> 00:02:29,855 I love the fact there are so many historic sites to visit here. 35 00:02:29,880 --> 00:02:32,935 It's a place of magic, a place of mystery, 36 00:02:32,960 --> 00:02:34,815 and really, there's no bigger mystery 37 00:02:34,840 --> 00:02:38,695 than the strange Ancient Greek story of the city of Atlantis, 38 00:02:38,720 --> 00:02:42,055 which lies underneath the waves. 39 00:02:42,080 --> 00:02:45,175 It seems very unlikely, and yet, I'm off to visit a place now 40 00:02:45,200 --> 00:02:48,855 where I've been told that's exactly what I'm gonna see. 41 00:02:51,560 --> 00:02:56,295 The first destination on my hunt for Atlantis is Pavlopetri, 42 00:02:56,320 --> 00:03:01,575 an isolated spot on the barren, southernmost tip of mainland Greece, 43 00:03:01,600 --> 00:03:05,815 where the ancient fragments of a destroyed lost city 44 00:03:05,840 --> 00:03:11,215 lie beneath the waves, like the legendary Atlantis. 45 00:03:11,240 --> 00:03:12,655 There is an air of mystery 46 00:03:12,680 --> 00:03:16,535 surrounding this beautiful stretch of coastline. 47 00:03:16,560 --> 00:03:20,255 The rocky shore is covered with strange crater-like pits 48 00:03:20,280 --> 00:03:23,975 where human bones have been discovered. 49 00:03:26,200 --> 00:03:31,695 The waves lap against huge stone blocks that look manmade. 50 00:03:36,200 --> 00:03:38,575 But for thousands of years, 51 00:03:38,600 --> 00:03:43,575 no-one had really investigated what was going on here... 52 00:03:43,600 --> 00:03:47,015 until a British archaeologist, Nicholas Flemming, 53 00:03:47,040 --> 00:03:51,175 arrived at Pavlopetri, hunting for sunken sites. 54 00:03:54,680 --> 00:03:56,175 just like today, 55 00:03:56,200 --> 00:04:00,415 the beach was scattered with shards of ancient pottery. 56 00:04:00,440 --> 00:04:02,015 You can see these two bits here... 57 00:04:02,040 --> 00:04:03,855 Actually, this is a much better piece. 58 00:04:03,880 --> 00:04:06,295 Look, it's like the rim of a drinking vessel 59 00:04:06,320 --> 00:04:07,775 or a storage container. 60 00:04:07,800 --> 00:04:10,015 And you can tell that this pottery 61 00:04:10,040 --> 00:04:12,655 had all been rubbed very smooth by the actions of the waves. 62 00:04:12,680 --> 00:04:16,895 It had probably been washed ashore from somewhere just out there. 63 00:04:16,920 --> 00:04:20,015 So, he put on his scuba gear and went swimming, 64 00:04:20,040 --> 00:04:23,935 and instantly, he starts to see wonderful things. 65 00:04:25,520 --> 00:04:29,855 Over the next year, he would uncover a submerged ancient city. 66 00:04:29,880 --> 00:04:32,455 Had he found Atlantis? 67 00:04:34,240 --> 00:04:36,695 These waters can get quite rough, 68 00:04:36,720 --> 00:04:39,575 churning up the sand and burying everything, 69 00:04:39,600 --> 00:04:41,455 so I'm really hoping that 70 00:04:41,480 --> 00:04:45,375 some of what Flemming saw back in 1967 is still visible. 71 00:04:47,320 --> 00:04:51,575 Luckily, I've got local diver George to guide me, 72 00:04:51,600 --> 00:04:55,935 and he knows this seabed like the back of his hand. 73 00:04:59,040 --> 00:05:02,575 OK, here goes. Let's go and see what's beneath the waves. 74 00:05:12,160 --> 00:05:14,455 'The sea is fairly shallow here, 75 00:05:14,480 --> 00:05:17,255 'so I don't have to dive too deep to explore.' 76 00:05:19,920 --> 00:05:24,055 It's amazing! The water is beautifully clear. 77 00:05:28,920 --> 00:05:32,295 At first, you're looking at shells and bits of rock... 78 00:05:32,320 --> 00:05:35,535 then you swim a bit closer, and you realise... 79 00:05:35,560 --> 00:05:39,015 these are shards of broken pottery from thousands of years ago. 80 00:05:41,360 --> 00:05:43,615 'Although the water's clear, 81 00:05:43,640 --> 00:05:47,975 'years of rough seas have buried what Flemming saw back in the '60s, 82 00:05:48,000 --> 00:05:51,535 'and you have to look carefully to see any remains. 83 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.' 85 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. 87 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. 89 00:06:12,360 --> 00:06:15,135 'Shifting sands have covered the rest, 90 00:06:15,160 --> 00:06:17,135 'but I'm swimming over the foundations 91 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 93 00:06:23,560 --> 00:06:27,535 'to piece together the remains of the city and a sense of its layout. 94 00:06:28,960 --> 00:06:31,855 'You can make out rectangular shapes, 95 00:06:31,880 --> 00:06:35,375 '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. 97 00:06:41,600 --> 00:06:44,615 'And there's not only the homes of the living, 98 00:06:44,640 --> 00:06:47,415 '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.' 100 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 00:07:03,360 --> 00:07:05,295 These must be graves. 103 00:07:15,000 --> 00:07:16,495 Oh! 104 00:07:16,520 --> 00:07:18,815 Well, I visit ancient sites all over the world, 105 00:07:18,840 --> 00:07:23,175 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. 107 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. 109 00:07:42,840 --> 00:07:45,175 It's thought that it was hit by an earthquake 110 00:07:45,200 --> 00:07:48,655 and then submerged under the sea as the waters rose - 111 00:07:48,680 --> 00:07:51,855 a real echo of the Atlantis story, 112 00:07:51,880 --> 00:07:56,215 the legendary lost city beneath the sea. 113 00:07:58,880 --> 00:08:01,495 Unless you know what's beneath the waves here, 114 00:08:01,520 --> 00:08:06,095 this just feels like a lovely, remote beach, a beautiful spot, 115 00:08:06,120 --> 00:08:08,455 but in fact, down there, 116 00:08:08,480 --> 00:08:14,295 there is the remains of a thriving, a bustling ancient city. 117 00:08:14,320 --> 00:08:17,215 The buildings would have been up to two storeys high, 118 00:08:17,240 --> 00:08:18,695 packed together. 119 00:08:18,720 --> 00:08:21,455 They would have been trading with the Aegean Islands, 120 00:08:21,480 --> 00:08:23,935 round in the Ionian. 121 00:08:23,960 --> 00:08:29,055 This was a busy, dynamic place of life, 122 00:08:29,080 --> 00:08:33,695 but now all that's left are a few foundations beneath the waves... 123 00:08:34,840 --> 00:08:37,375 ...and the graves of their dead. 124 00:08:40,800 --> 00:08:44,255 So, could this really be a match for the spectacular city 125 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 131 00:09:07,280 --> 00:09:09,815 for that lost world. 132 00:09:10,920 --> 00:09:14,615 And I'll get a new lead that takes me to a buried ancient city 133 00:09:14,640 --> 00:09:17,295 on Greece's biggest island. 134 00:09:17,320 --> 00:09:19,495 It sounds so similar to Atlantis. 135 00:09:30,240 --> 00:09:35,375 Athens... home to some of the greatest ancient monuments 136 00:09:35,400 --> 00:09:38,415 and archaeological treasures in the world. 137 00:09:39,560 --> 00:09:42,695 2,500 years ago, 138 00:09:42,720 --> 00:09:45,775 it was here that one of its most famous residents 139 00:09:45,800 --> 00:09:48,935 first told the incredible story of Atlantis. 140 00:09:50,320 --> 00:09:55,175 I've come to one of his favourite hangouts, the Agora, 141 00:09:55,200 --> 00:09:58,695 back then, the central meeting place in Athens. 142 00:10:00,720 --> 00:10:04,135 This place would have been a hive of activity, 143 00:10:04,160 --> 00:10:08,375 people coming here to shop, to chat, to gossip, 144 00:10:08,400 --> 00:10:12,575 day and night, anyone who was anyone - 145 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. 147 00:10:19,440 --> 00:10:22,455 And the most famous of them was Plato, 148 00:10:22,480 --> 00:10:27,455 the man who first tells us about Atlantis and how it was destroyed. 149 00:10:28,640 --> 00:10:32,055 To discover the real inspiration behind Atlantis, 150 00:10:32,080 --> 00:10:36,215 I need to get to the bottom of exactly what Plato wrote. 151 00:10:37,560 --> 00:10:39,695 All right, come on, then, the big question - 152 00:10:39,720 --> 00:10:41,655 Atlantis - fact or fiction? 153 00:10:41,680 --> 00:10:44,735 You had to start with the hardest question! Yes! Let's get into it. 154 00:10:44,760 --> 00:10:49,175 jasmine Elmer is an expert on Ancient Greece. 155 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. 158 00:10:56,480 --> 00:10:59,255 There wasn't actually a city called Atlantis? 159 00:10:59,280 --> 00:11:01,975 No, there's no real city called Atlantis. 160 00:11:02,000 --> 00:11:05,695 It's a mythical place that's made up by the philosopher Plato. 161 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 163 00:11:12,080 --> 00:11:15,855 these kind of places that have a similar story about them 164 00:11:15,880 --> 00:11:18,255 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 167 00:11:23,720 --> 00:11:25,295 that's out in the Atlantic Ocean, 168 00:11:25,320 --> 00:11:27,535 which, to Greeks, is this kind of like 169 00:11:27,560 --> 00:11:30,495 vague space somewhere over there, but it's absolutely huge. 170 00:11:30,520 --> 00:11:32,655 Is it kind of a flourishing civilisation? 171 00:11:32,680 --> 00:11:34,135 Yeah, absolutely. 172 00:11:34,160 --> 00:11:36,895 I mean, first of all, it's a land rich in resources, 173 00:11:36,920 --> 00:11:40,335 so they had their own minerals and metals that they could mine. 174 00:11:40,360 --> 00:11:41,655 They had fertile plains, 175 00:11:41,680 --> 00:11:44,655 so they could grow loads of amazing fruit and vegetables. 176 00:11:44,680 --> 00:11:47,175 They had exotic animals, even, like elephants. 177 00:11:47,200 --> 00:11:49,375 They also imported a lot of goods as well. 178 00:11:49,400 --> 00:11:50,896 So, they had lots of luxury around them, 179 00:11:50,920 --> 00:11:54,175 colourfultemples and palaces as well. 180 00:11:55,760 --> 00:11:58,335 Essentially, what the Greeks would perceive 181 00:11:58,360 --> 00:12:00,215 as a very advanced civilisation. 182 00:12:02,040 --> 00:12:05,975 So, it's a sort of idealised picture of a society. 183 00:12:06,000 --> 00:12:09,895 Completely that, exactly that. It's like an almost utopian society. 184 00:12:09,920 --> 00:12:11,895 Everything kind of seems on the surface 185 00:12:11,920 --> 00:12:14,815 as being a perfect place that you'd wanna live. 186 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... 188 00:12:27,480 --> 00:12:30,375 a busy port filled with ships... 189 00:12:31,680 --> 00:12:35,975 ...magnificent squares and luxurious bathhouses. 190 00:12:37,520 --> 00:12:39,815 But it doesn't stay that way for long. 191 00:12:41,760 --> 00:12:48,015 In the story, this perfect city is hit by a cataclysmic earthquake... 192 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, 202 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. 239 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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