Atlantis in comics

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The fictional island of Atlantis frequently appears in popular culture, especially in comic books. The most notable examples are commonly related to Namor of Marvel Comics and a particular version of Aquaman in DC Comics.

DC Comics

Publication history

One of the earliest mentions of Atlantis occurs in Action Comics #17, in a "Zatara the Magician" story.[1] The city was visually depicted in the following month's "Zatara" story in Action Comics #18.[2]

In Batman #19, Atlantis is shown to be inhabited by an advanced people ruled by an Emperor. The

Nazis have discovered Atlantis and are using it as a naval base. Batman
and Robin discover the base and are able to reveal the deception of the Nazis.

A more consistent portrayal began with an "Aquaman" story story in Adventure Comics #260, in a story by writer Robert Bernstein and artist Ramona Fradon, based on the real-world mythology of Atlantis.[3]

In

Arion is another depicted lord of Atlantis. He is a fictional sword and sorcery hero published by the American company DC Comics. He debuted in Warlord #55 (March 1982), and was created by Paul Kupperberg and Jan Duursema
. The history of Atlantis was detailed in The Atlantis Chronicles, a 7-issue miniseries published by DC Comics from March–September 1990. It was written by Peter David, and illustrated by Esteban Maroto. The series focused on a series of Atlantean historical manuscripts, also called The Atlantis Chronicles, and chronicled the rise and fall of Atlantis. Each issue dealt with a separate era or event in Atlantis' past, beginning with its sinking, as told through the royal historian's point of view.

In The Sandman: Brief Lives by writer Neil Gaiman, a chapter called "The People Who Remember Atlantis" speaks of "echo-Atlantises" and (many) other equatable prehistoric civilizations, and explores the theme of the bulk of human history and knowledge being lost to the modern world.

Zodiac artifacts

Zodiac Crystals

The Atlantean Royal Seal is one of 12 powerful mystical artifacts known as the Zodiac Crystals. The 12 crystals were created by Calcuha and Majistra, the parents of

Lord Arion of Atlantis. The 12 artifacts are able to tap into the magical energy of the Earth to perform sorcerous feats and geomancy. The 12 crystals resurfaced in Aquaman (vol. 2) #1, where they were in the possession of Orm Marius
, the Ocean Master.

Zodiac Coins

There were also 12 Atlantean Zodiac Coins, which Doctor Zodiac and Madame Zodiac used to power their Zodiac Idol; the coins were last seen in World's Finest Comics #288 (February 1983).[4]

Atlantean colonies

There have been other undersea cities called Atlantis in various DC comics titles. They include:

Other versions

Marvel Comics

Atlantis is a fictional location appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. It is based on the mythical island of Atlantis first mentioned in Plato's initial dialogue the Timaeus, written c. 360 B.C. In the Marvel Universe, Atlantis was a small continent (about the same size as modern Australia) with many human settlements. Over 21,000 years ago, an event called the "Great Cataclysm" caused it to be submerged into the sea.

The inhabitants of ancient Atlantis built an enormous glass-like dome over the capital city, also known as Atlantis. When barbarians sent by the

Kamuu opened the magma-pits which were the city's means of heating. This caused the continent to sink.[15] Kamuu was warned of the Great Cataclysm by the seer, Zhered-Na. When she refused to recant, he had her exiled to the mainland, where she was later stabbed to death by survivors of the submersion.[16][17]

The priests and intellectuals of the city Netheria foresaw the Lemurian attack and fortified their city, and thus it sank intact. Netheria still exists today, ruled by Queen

Stygyro
.

About 8,000 years ago, a group of

Homo mermanus nomads discovered the ruins of the city of Atlantis. They made the ruins of the human settlements in Atlantis their home and went on to develop a society there, using as much of the material as they could salvage from the wreckage. These people are thus often referred to as "Atlanteans", as it is in the city of Atlantis that their first complex society emerged.[volume & issue needed
]

Five hundred years after the settlement of Atlantis, another group of Homo mermanus left Atlantis to find their own city; this time in a part of the ruins of Lemuria, another continent submerged during the Great Cataclysm. These "Lemurians", as they now call themselves, discovered the

Naga's exposure and extensive use of the ancient mystical device, they became more serpent-like in appearance than their Atlantean cousins.[volume & issue needed
]

Atlanteans have had little or no contact with their human cousins for millennia. However, the two races came into sustained contact, often hostile, beginning in the 20th century. On occasions, Atlanteans have invaded the surface world.[

Axis Powers during World War II.[volume & issue needed] Namor defends Atlantis against villains like Attuma and the warlord Krang, who plot to overthrow him and take over Atlantis.[volume & issue needed
]

The city of Atlantis was damaged when the supervillain

Nitro exploded, taking with him Namor's traitorous son, Kamar.[19]

Following Namor's attack on

Queen Shuri.[20] Despite this, Wakanda launched an all-out strike on Atlantis, destroying the city and killing a number of Namor's soldiers in the process.[21]

Other versions

  • In Tales of Suspense #43, Iron Man meets a separate tribe of Atlanteans whose city sank to the bottom of the sea and has been renamed the Netherworld. He soon discovers that their Queen, Kala, is planning to invade the surface with advanced technology. Iron Man stops her by bringing her to the surface, where it is revealed that Netherworlders age rapidly when above ground. Though she is restored to her desired age when she returns to the Netherworld, Kala's hopes of ruling the surface world are greatly diminished, though she later attempts to do so several more times, all without success.
    • In a "Tuk the Caveboy" story sequence from Captain America #2 and 3 (1941), Tuk and Tanir (a Cro-Magnon man) meet Eve, princess of the not-yet lost kingdom of Atlantis, whom they aid in reclaiming the throne from her wicked uncle.
  • The
    Counter-Earth has its version of Atlantis. Proteus rose Atlantis to the surface and trapped the Atleanteans inside as a way to suffocate them.[23]
  • In the Marvel Noir reality, Atlantis matched the descriptions of Plato with it being near the Pillars of Heracles, being highly advanced, and powered by the Orichalcum. As the Orichalcum proved to be too powerful to be the Atlantean's superconductor, it created a vortex that sunk Atlantis beneath the ocean.[24]
  • The ruins of the Ultimate Marvel version of Atlantis are discovered by the Fantastic Four during an expedition. Unlike its Earth-616 counterpart, this version of Atlantis is shown to have been devoid of any life for thousands of years.[25] Upon being found by the Four, Namor suggests that the continent had been destroyed by Lemuria at some point during his time in stasis.[26] During the Ultimatum storyline, it is revealed that the ruins of Atlantis do contain a small pocket of survivors led by Namora.[27]

Disney comics

  • In the Donald Duck comic "The Lost Suburb", Donald decides to get Daisy Duck a necklace. Instead of going to Atlantis, Donald finds himself stranded in a suburb of Atlantis.
  • In the Uncle Scrooge comic "The Secret of Atlantis", in an attempt to outwit his nephew Donald, Scrooge acquires most of the world's circulating 1916 quarters and dumps them into the Atlantic. When circumstances necessitate his retrieving one, it is found that the quarters inadvertently ended up in Atlantis, now inhabited by fish-men who evolved from the original human Atlanteans.
  • In Topolino e l'Atlantide continente perduto (Mickey Mouse and Atlantis the lost continent, 1987), Italians Giorgio Pezzin (story) and Massimo de Vita (artwork) send Mickey and Goofy back in time to witness Atlantis's last moments.[28]

Other comics

  • In
    Sivana
    Family hope to use an element there for a machine to prevent the Marvels from calling their lightning down. A scientist, Chal-Patzun, hoped to have Atlantis raised in the future by his descendants, his son having gone to the mainland. He had discovered an element called Protium, which in 10,000 years would become Neutrium, and in another 10,000 years, Electrium. A machine powered by this would raise the island. Before Atlantis sinks, Georgia Sivana, having traveled to the past, steals a vial of Protium. During the 20th century his descendant, Dr. Charles Patterson, is shot by Sivana while in the vault after he tries to stop him from taking Neutrium. It is raised around A.D. 12,000 by Dr. Charles Patterson's own descendant, Chass Passon, though two of the vials had been stolen by the Sivanas in the past and present, leaving just eight. Sivana Jr. succeeds in taking a vial of Electrium just after the island is raised. Atlantis is apparently located around the Atlantic coast latitude 35.
  • Atlantis (along with its nemesis,
    Martin Mystere
    .
  • In The Kingdom Beyond the Waves, written by Stephen Hunt, an expedition sets out to find the ancient city of Camlantis. Once inhabited by the most advanced society in history, the city is believed to be adrift and derelict in the highest pockets of the sky. Much like Atlantis, Camlantis is a utopian society whose people perished overnight due to a great cataclysm, but Camlantis resides in the air, as opposed to the watery grave of Atlantis.
  • In the now-defunct
    Sigilverse
    .
  • In the webcomic
    Wigu, the Tinkle family as well as the head of the Illuminati
    are of Atlantean heritage. The second black and white comic book is to be called The Case of Atlantis.
  • LucasArts
    classic PC game.
  • In
    Getafix go to the remains of Atlantis (said to be the present-day Canaries
    ) to seek the secret of age reversal as Obelix was accidentally reverted to childhood. At Atlantis, except for the high priest, everyone is in a state of childhood.
  • In the backstory of the Hellboy comics, Atlantis is an outpost of Hyperboria, which soon collapses after Hyperboria does.
  • Edgar P. Jacobs wrote his own Atlantis Mystery in 1955–1956. There, Atlantis and a rival civilization have survived until our days in giant caves beneath the Azores, but a new series of (part man-made) cataclysms strikes again.
  • In the Canadian comic strip Captain Newfoundland (also known as Captain Atlantis) and related publications, the modern-day Canadian province of
    Captain Canada
    to watch over their own countries.
  • Atlantis plays a role and is a location (both as the original island and a space-relocated counterpart in the present time) in several adventures of the Scrameustache character by Franco-Belgian author Gos, notably in Le Cristal des Atlantes or L'Épreuve du sablier.

References

  1. ^ "In Search of Atlantis Contest: Conclusion!". The Aquaman Shrine. 2011-02-18. Archived from the original on 2011-08-10. Retrieved 2011-08-20.
  2. ^ Action Comics #17 (October 1939). DC Comics.
  3. ^ Adventure Comics #260 (May 1959). DC Comics.
  4. ^ World's Finest Comics #288 (February 1983). DC Comics.
  5. ^ Wonder Woman #107 (July 1959). DC Comics.
  6. ^ a b Aquaman (vol. 2) #1 (February 1986). DC Comics.
  7. ^ More Fun Comics #57 (July 1940) and More Fun Comics #65 (March 1941). DC Comics.
  8. ^ Wonder Woman #13 (Summer 1945). DC Comics.
  9. ^ Wonder Woman #61 (September 1953). DC Comics.
  10. ^ "Red Torpedo". Cosmicteams.com. Archived from the original on October 6, 2012. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  11. ^ "The Unofficial Queen Klitra Biography". Dcuguide.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-27. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  12. ^ The Flash #109 (October 1959). DC Comics.
  13. ^ Flash Comics #9 (September 1940). DC Comics.
  14. ^ Sea Devils #22 (April 1965). DC Comics.
  15. ^ The Sub-Mariner #62, "Tales of Atlantis" backup story. Marvel Comics. Written by Steve Gerber and Howard Chaykin.
  16. ^ Fear #15. Marvel Comics.
  17. ^ Marvel Spotlight #17. Marvel Comics.
  18. ^ Tales of Suspense #43. Marvel Comics.
  19. ^ Sub-Mariner (vol. 2) #1-6 (August 2007 - January 2008). Marvel Comics.
  20. ^ New Avengers (vol. 3) #7. Marvel Comics.
  21. ^ New Avengers (vol. 3) #8. Marvel Comics.
  22. ^ Exiles #14. Marvel Comics.
  23. ^ Exiles #82. Marvel Comics.
  24. ^ Iron Man Noir #2. Marvel Comics.
  25. ^ Ultimate Fantastic Four #23. Marvel Comics.
  26. ^ Ultimate Fantastic Four #24. Marvel Comics.
  27. ^ Ultimate Fantastic Four #60. Marvel Comics.
  28. ^ Topolino e l'Atlantide continente perduto