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ANTILIA or ANTILLIA, sometimes called the See also: Island of the Seven Cities (Portuguese See also: Isla das Sete Cidades), a legendary island in the See also: Atlantic ocean
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The origin of the name is quite uncertain
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The See also: oldest suggested etymology (1455) fancifully connects it with the name of the Platonic See also: Atlantis, while later writers have endeavoured to derive it from the Latin anterior (i.e. the island that is reached " before " Cipango), or from the Jezirat at Tennyn, " Dragon's Isle," of the Arabian geographers
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Antilia is marked in an See also: anonymous map which is dated 1424 and preserved in the See also: grand-ducal library at See also: Weimar
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It reappears in the maps of the Genoese B
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Beccario or Beccaria (1435), and of the Venetian See also: Andrea Bianco (1436), and again in 1455 and 1476
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In most of these it is accompanied by the smaller and equally legendary islands of Royllo, St Atanagio, and Tan See also: mar, the whole See also: group being classified as insulae de now repartee, " newly discovered islands." The Florentine See also: Paul Toscanelli, in his letters to See also: Columbus and the Portuguese See also: court (1474), takes Antilia as the See also: principal landmark for measuring the distance between See also: Lisbon and the island of Cipango or Zipangu (See also: Japan)
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One of the chief early descriptions of Antilia is that inscribed on the globe which the geographer See also: Martin Behaim made at
See also: Nuremberg in 1492 (see MAP: See also: History)
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Behaimrelates that in 734—a date which is probably a misprint for 714—and after' the Moors had conquered See also: Spain and See also: Portugal, the island of Antilia or " Septe Cidade " was colonized by Christian refugees under the archbishop of See also: Oporto and six bishops
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The inscription adds that a See also: Spanish vessel sighted the island in 1414
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According to an old Portuguese tradition each of the seven leaders founded and ruled a city, and the whole island became a Utopian See also: common-See also: wealth, See also: free from the disorders of less favoured states
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Later Portuguese tradition localized Antilia in the island of St Michael's, the largest of the See also: Azores
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It is impossible to estimate how far this See also: legend commemorates some actual but imperfectly recorded See also: discovery, and how far it is a reminiscence of the See also: ancient idea of an See also: elysium in the western seas which is embodied in the legends of the Isles of the Blest or Fortunate Islands
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