NAN MADOL: A MYSTERIOUS CITY CALLED ATLANTIS WHERE UNDERWATER “PLATINUM COFFINS”
WERE SUPPOSEDLY DISCOVERED BY THE JAPANESE
This Mysterious
Ancient City is built on a reef just off the shore of POHNPEI Island, in
the Federated States of Micronesia.
The
buildings of this city do not have their foundations in the ground, but rather
are built on top of man-made platforms of stone and coral.
The name
Nan Madol roughly translates to “space in-between,” a reference to the many
channels and canals surrounding the 92 islets.
But, as
Gane Ashby writes in his book Pohnpei, An Island Argosy, the
island’s initial name was Soun Nan-leng, which means “the Reef of Heaven.”
Given its
beauty, the numerous waterways between islets, and its sheltered position
in a lagoon, NAN MADOL is nicknamed the “VENICE OF THE PACIFIC.”
The stone
walls around the city’s perimeter enclose an area around one mile long and half
a mile wide.
Its
history is both long and fascinating. In spite of its small size, the island
holds many secrets.
Archaeologists
sometimes refer to it as the mythical Atlantis.
And this
is where the mystery has its beginnings.
The
structures on this island are built using colossal stones that look as though
giants must have laid them.
What
researchers found is that this place was called home by the Saudeleur Dynasty.
But the
story of this place begins much earlier, in the 1st century AD.
Seven
centuries later, the city was thriving, but the megaliths seem to have been
built later, around 1200 AD.
Traditional
belief has it that this place was built by the same people who made the city of
Leluh, a well-explored ancient city found on nearby Lelu Island.
But the
latest carbon dating suggests that Nan Madol is actually older than Leluh.
Places as
old as this have their fair share of legends.
One, in
particular, has it that two sorcerers named Olosohpa and Olisihpa themselves
formed Kanamwayso (a
mythical city).
Using
their canoe, they arrived here seeking a sacred spot where they could pay their
respects to their god of agriculture, Nahnisohn Sahpw.
According
to legend, sorcerers managed to levitate these mammoth boulders with the help
of a flying dragon.
When one
of the sorcerers died, the other one created what later would become the
Saudeleur Dynasty.
The
remaining sorcerer married a local village girl and the two of them produced
the future rulers of the Saudeleur Dynasty.
Legends
aside, this place was where real people once dwelled, though no more than 1,000
(according to
some scholars it could have been half this number).
The
population mainly comprised villagers and a great number of chiefs.
The
majority of these little islets were used for residential purposes, though a
great number of them also seem to have had a unique purpose, like the mortuary
sector, or the sector where food was prepared.
In the middle of it all stands
the Royal Mortuary that was surrounded by 26-foot-high walls.
Over the
years, Nan Madol has evoked many legends, myths, and controversies that even
the legendary Atlantis that Plato talked about could not. It is compared to the
long-gone mythical lost continent of Mu, where human civilization was said to
have been born.
Huge
stones always inspire a great number of conspiracy theorists and writers such
as David Hatcher Childress and Erich Von Daeniken.
In his
book Evidence of the Gods, Von Daeniken wrote that sarcophagi
containing platinum bars were found in the waters off Nan Madol.
These
“platinum coffins,” supposedly discovered by the Japanese after World Wa16r
One, are unknown today.
This
place has remained abandoned since the start of the 19th century, after a long
decline that began in the 15th century, although various researchers and
scientists have visited it to attempt to understand its history and
construction.
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