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Greece is the Western culture that inherited characteristics closest to those of Atlantis, and the entire stage of ancient Greece was established in antediluvian times. In these eras of magic, beauty and splendour, humans were in contact with the Inner Earth, which was home to the gods of Olympus – a divine family headed by Zeus and Hera. Its members included Poseidon, Athena, Hermes, Ares and all twelve of mythology’s sovereign gods and goddesses. The gods lived alongside human beings, in those early epochs, and during the Golden Age of Atlantis, they helped found cities, whilst imparting teachings and providing guidance that would support mankind’s evolution and development.
Heroes also came to the fore in those days, as valiant men fulfilled the various tasks commissioned to them by the gods, who provided them with help and guidance, as they carried out their feats. Some striking examples include Ulysses and the nymph Calypso, and Jason and the Argonauts. On their quest for the Golden Fleece, the Argonauts travelled to Colchis, a place that makes reference to the depths of the Inner Earth.
The same is true of other myths, like those of Orpheus and Eurydice, or Demeter and Persephone, which include teachings linked to mythical places, which are actually real. It should also be noted that the protagonists of Homer’s Odyssey and Iliad are the eternal gods, such as Hermes, Athena, Ares, Poseidon… There are heroes, nymphs, muses, oracles… Hercules and his twelve labours, winged sphinxes, giants and Cyclopes. They all form part of a different world, which is not bound by material laws. In fact, they belong to a far more subtle world, found in the Earth’s interior.
Video by Alcyon Pleiades