Lost lands and sunken cities

by Nigel Pennick

Paper Book, 1987

Status

Available

Call number

914.1

Collection

Publication

London : Fortean Tomes, 1987.

Description

This engaging book...historical research is, as usual, meticulous and his writing explores great depths of fact, never leaving the reader hungry for more knowledge. I can fully recommend this book...it should become a standard work in its field. Prediction Draws on many sources, from legends to parish maps, old chronicles and surveys, gathering together the fragments of information on the remains of lands around the British coast which have been destroyed by the sea. The roll-call of these lost lands and the fate of once thriving coastal towns such as Dunwich and settlements such as Caer Arianrhod and the lost Lowland Hundred of Cantref y Gwaelod, challenges us to reconsider whether the lost land of Lyonesse, which once extended from Land s End to the Scilly Isles, existed solely in Arthurian legend. The underwater forests of Wales, Norfolk, Lincolnshire, Kent and Sussex, the lost Saxon cathedral off Selsey Bill - once a great parkland and Goodwin Sands - once good farmland, but now a notorious graveyard for shipping, are among the many lost lands of Britain described here. Liberally illustrated with diagrams, drawings and photographs.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member MiaCulpa
Lost Lands and Sunken Cities takes a look at all the places in Britain that have supposedly disappeared beneath the waves, including Lyonesse, which possibly never existed, to Dunwich, which certainly did, and lots of places in between.

Pennick also covers Atlantis and the deluge myth and makes me
Show More
want to head off to the UK's North Sea to coach to watch more villages fall victim to erosion and crash into the sea, to become future myth.
Show Less

Language

Physical description

176 p.; 25 cm

ISBN

1870021010 / 9781870021012
Page: 0.2711 seconds