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The Flood from Heaven: Deciphering the Atlantis Legend
 
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The Flood from Heaven: Deciphering the Atlantis Legend [Hardcover]

Eberhard Zangger (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 1992
A geoarchaeologist compiles the results of his fieldwork in the Mediterranean to reveal the true nature of Plato's story of Atlantis and to disclose the location of the legendary continent believed to have been drowned in the ocean. 20,000 first printing.

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

The author, a noted geoarchaeologist who has done extensive investigative fieldwork in landscapes of Bronze Age Greece and has recently excavated at Tiryns, goes to the source of the Atlantis legend, two of Plato's dialogs. Zangger examines these accounts in great detail, accepts them as historically based, and presents evidence for identifying Bronze Age Troy as the most likely site of "Atlantis." Zangger's approach, which also draws on archaeological and geological evidence, is impressive in its scope and makes fascinating reading. His overview of other theories and his arguments against his own conclusions are intellectually stimulating and engaging. This book should reawaken scholarly discussion in the many disciplines on which it touches. For both scholars and lay readers.
- Joan W. Gartland, Detroit P.L.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

Plato's myth of Atlantis--a lost continent, according to the Timaeus, that was destroyed by a cataclysmic flood over 11,000 years ago--has bedeviled archaeologists, historians, and occultists for millennia. Is Atlantis fact or fiction? If fact, where was it located? Zangger, a prominent geoarchaeologist, offers a novel and witty solution to the mystery. Researchers have place Atlantis everywhere from Malta to Greenland to outer space. Zangger, who has no truck with his subject's occult reputation, proposes a rather more mundane answer: That Plato's account of Atlantis is actually a ``coded'' history of the Trojan War, Atlantis itself being Troy at its peak, circa 1300 B.C. Zangger makes his case with sterling scholarship, first reviewing ancient Greek history and then offering a point-by-point analysis of Plato's accounts in light of modern archaeological knowledge. To reconstruct Bronze Age Troy, Zangger leans heavily on Homer's account in the Odyssey, perhaps a risky venture. More persuasive, if also more boring, are his attempts to chart the Trojan landscape, both citadel and plain, by using Landsat satellite images, 19th-century maps, and his own observations. Zangger's wit triumphs at the end, as he examines and rejects eight ``counterarguments and shortcomings'' to his thesis and spurns convention in favor of inspiration, inhibition in favor of fun. Zangger's ``solution,'' no doubt, will take its place as just one more entry in the colorful history of the Sunken Continent. But don't let his thesis get lost in the shuffle: In the barren land of serious Atlantean studies, it's like manna from heaven. (Thirty- four b&w photos, 24 maps--not seen.) -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow & Co; 1st Us Edition edition (August 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0688113508
  • ISBN-13: 978-0688113506
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,058,491 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't Bother!, January 26, 2011
I knew I was in for it when, on the first page the author wrote: "With an ambivalent feeling of satisfaction..." and "I was heading aimlessly toward Syntagma Square..." Being a student of linguistic psychopathology, I was alerted to the fact that there were going to be some bias problems.

Sure enough, on page 5, he revealed himself totally. Writing about a book on Atlantis he picked up in a bookshop, Zangger says: "...what a vast disappointment the book became for me when it turned out to be a collection of fictional fragments by various authors who had visions of lost continents." Five pages later he writes: "Using a 'brainstorming' technique, I typed out my thoughts, each in a separate paragraph marked by a hyphen. Finally, after a few hours of typing, I had reached the conclusion that Tiryns must have been hit by a simultaneous earthquake and flood, which occurred at ... the onset of the Mycenaean demise. ...Then, in the middle of typing this idea, I realized that I might have, inadvertently, begun deciphering the Atlantis legend."

In short, instead of a vision of a lost continent, he had a vision of Atlantis being a localized war and localized flood and earthquake blown up in legend. Somehow, I don't see much difference between his fictional fragment and anyone else's. He also might not have made such a fool of himself if he had read other books of "fictional fragments" that also include a lot of research and cite hard facts.

Zangger writes: "From secondary sources one is more likely to learn about the character and attitude of an author than to gain original information about a subject... As a scientist I was (and still am) strongly opposed to explaining the demises of civilizations by natural catastrophes. How many historical examples are there of cultures that were wiped out in a single, natural stroke?"

Hoo, boy, this guy is really ignorant and indeed, he does reveal much about his character and attitude - totally unscientific and lacking in little gray cells, if you ask me. (He compares himself to Hercule Poirot, so I'm not just making an nasty comment here.)

My conclusion: I'm not even going to bother to read the rest of the book and I don't recommend it to anyone. Save your time and money.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Splendid thought food!, June 10, 2006
Eberhard Zangger gives us a nifty little puzzle, with all we need to solve it. Well and clearly written, The Flood From Heaven deals with the "black hole" of Atlantis studies: there is no Egyptian version of Atlantis. Whether his conclusion is correct or not, the trip is worth it for the insights and the information. My only concern is that Zangger concludes that "Atlantis" was the Egyptian version of the Trojan War, in part. But it is known that only Greeks knew of Atlantis. They simply attributed it to Egypt. Far easier to note, perhaps, that there are TWO Greek versions of Troy, and that time and confusion allowed us to miss the point for 25 centuries. Zangger's chief contribution is making us rethink an ancient legend and discover how much life there is in it even now.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Revisionist Scholarship of the Best Sort, January 8, 2002
By 
Publius (Austin, TX United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Flood from Heaven: Deciphering the Atlantis Legend (Hardcover)
Zangger successfully embeds the search for Atlantis within a rigorously scientific archeological framework. The result is a startling conclusion: that the myth of Atlantis actually came from an ancient Egyptian interpretation of the Trojan War.

Most accounts of Atlantis were, and continue to be, written by amateur archeologists with a mystical bent; the result, of course, is speculation that is as much theology as science. A good example of the "mystic" orientation in most accounts of Atlantis is very well-known account of Atlantis was written by the "mystic" Edgar Cayce. Cayce predicted Atlantis would arise from the foam of the ocean sometime in the 1970s...alas, such is the condition of practically all written work concerning Atlantis.

Zangger's methodology is rooted in making inferences based on existing evidence--that is, he does not posit the existence of superconducting crystals which fired lasers into space! Rather, he approaches the topic as a scientific researcher who is deeply versed in the archeology of the region.

His work is original in that he draws new connections between previously discrete phenomena. For example, he uses his specialist's knowledge of the Trojan Plain's ancient appearance to construct a comparison between what the ancient Trojan Plain probably looked like and how the Egyptians described Atlantis (with many very intriguing parallels!). He makes many more connections between the specifics detailed in Plato's text and the condition of the Trojan Plain at the time of the Trojan War. The overall effect is powerful: I believe Zangger effectively answered the question of the location of Atlantis without resorting to mysticism.

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