Phoenicean Time
Very few sea explorers reached the Canary Islands during
ancient times. The islands lie in the Atlantic Ocean, the so-called "Dark
Ocean", into which very few sailors dared to venture. Furthermore, the ocean current
called "Canaries Stream" flows in a southwesterly direction before veering to
the west to sweep the unwary ocean vessel off to the end of the world, as it was believed
during centuries.
Those few Phoenicians, Greeks and Romans who reached the islands and managed to return
home to tell their story, surrounded the Canaries in a mist of magic and
legend.
According to the Mediterranean sailors' tales, the Atlantic Ocean was inhabited by all
kind of monsters which destroyed the vessels and devored their daring crews. Once arrived
at the world's edge, which was thought to be a flat disc, the unwise seamen would fall
into the Abyss.
Most likely there was an economic or militar reason for some of these legends. The
Phoenicians, skillful sailors and trademen, knew some Atlantic searoutes along the African
and European coast. They were not interested at all in having other people as competitors,
so they tried to keep visitors at a distance by means of spreading awful rumours and
legends.
Atlantis
For centuries, even after the Spanish conquest, it was
believed that the islands were the uppermost peaks of the lost continent of Atlantis of
which Plato wrote in his "Timeos and Critias".
Atlantis was a big island, "larger than Libya and Asia together", located beyond
the Columns of Hercules (the Strait of Gibraltar). It was the dominion of Poseidon, God of
the Sea, and it was inhabited by the Atlants, descendants of its first king Atlas, son of
the god and a mortal women. Atlantis was immensely wealthy and the Atlants were the most
advanced people of the world. In the center of the continent raised the great capital town
with the Palace and the Temple of Poseidon. Its scientists transmitted their skills and
civilization knowledges to other peoples, with whom they maintained peace. Atlants
observed their laws of justice, generosity and peace for many generations. But in time
they degenerated and became greedy and warlike. Others add that they discovered the
secrets of the gods, secrets of cosmic energies and forces which could destroy mankind.
About 11,500 years ago Zeus, king of the gods, punished the Atlants. In the course of a
single night volcanoes and tidal waves destroyed the big island in a disaster of cosmic
proportions. According to the legend, only the islands of Azores, Madeira, Canaries and
Cape Verde remain from Atlantis. These were the lost continent's highest summits. But its
palaces and temples are still to be found in the bottom of the sea, a sea which took its
name from Atlantis: the Atlantic Ocean.
The Garden of Hesperydes
Hesiod -a Greek poet of the 8th century b.C.- wrote about the
legendary Garden of Hesperydes. The story starts with Atlas.
Atlas was a Giant, titan Japeto's son. The titans were defeated by Zeus, king of the gods,
who confined them in the Tartarus -the hell. Atlas had fought the war on his father's
side. According to some opinions, Zeus condemned Atlas to support the vault of heavens
upon his shoulders. Other maintain that an angry Perseus showed him Medusa's head thus
converting him into a high mountain that supported the sky. Be that as it may, Atlas had
to hold up the sky beyond the Columns of Hercules -the Strait of Gibraltar. Atlas had
three daughters, the Hesperydes: Egle, Eritia and Aretusa. The three lived in the most
westernly land of the world, some wonderful islands in the Atlantic Ocean, a Garden of
Eden where weather was always mild and where golden apples grew on the trees. Goddess Gea
(Mother Earth) made sprout those apples as a wedding gift to the king and queen of the
gods, Zeus and Hera. The Hesperydes cultivate the Garden, but a fierce dragon looked after
it. It was called Ladon, and it had hundred flame-spewing heads. Hercules -also called
Herakles-, the greatest hero of ancient times, had to perform twelve very difficult tasks,
almost impossible to accomplish, the "Twelve Labors of Hercules". Labor number
eleven consisted in stealing the Hesperydes' Golden Apples. Hercules found Atlas
supporting the sky near the Ocean, in the mountains which we call today Atlas (Morocco).
Since the Garden of Hesperydes' dragon knew Atlas, Hercules persuaded him to go to the
islands and steal the apples, while he stayed as supporter of the sky in his place. Atlas
went to the Garden in which he could enter since the dragon recognized him, killed the
monster, stole the golden apples and returned to the place where Hercules stayed. Atlas,
tired of his task, intended to leave Hercules with the burden upon his shoulders, but the
hero managed to cheat him. He passed him the burden again and fled with the apples. But
they returned to the garden, since they were given to goddess Athena, who gave them back
to the gardeners, the Hesperydes. Concerning Ladon, the watch-dragon killed by Atlas... it
lives on in their children, the Canarian Dragon -Trees (dracaena daco). According to the
legend, the blood flowing from the dragon's wounds fell all over the Garden of Hesperydes.
A dragon tree sprouted from each blood drop. Dragon trees have massive trunks from which
raise a bunch of twisted branches, Ladon's hundred heads. When a piece of bark or a branch
are broken, the tree "bleed" a dark-red sap called "dragon-tree
blood", which can be used with medical purposes. Dragon trees grow slowly, but they
can live for several centuries. There is a specimen at Icod de los Vinos -Tenerife- which
is called the "Thousand-year old Dragon Tree". The Guanches
revered the places where these trees grew as specially meaningful and full of
energies.
The Elysian Fields
Homer, the great poet of Ancient Greece, tells about
the Elysian Fields in his "Odyssey". Pindar also wrote about the "Islands
of the Blest", and Virgil mentions them in the epic poem Aeneid. The Elysian Fields
are at the ends of the world, where the souls of heroes and virtuous people will pass
after death. "Men lead there an easier life than any where else in the world, for in
Elysium there falls not rain, nor hail, nor snow, but Oceanus breathes ever with a West
wind that sings softly from the sea, and gives fresh life to all men...." (Homer,
Odyssey, Book III). The Elysium was governed by Rhadamanthus, son of Zeus and Europa and
brother of Minos, King of Crete.
The
Ghost Island: San Borondon (Saint Brendan)
When the Canaries were conquered throughout the 15th century,
stories were insistently told about an eigth island which sometimes was seen to the West
of La Palma, El Hierro and La Gomera. When sailors tried to reach it and approached to its
shores, mountains and valleys, the island was covered by mist and vanished. The island was
obviously identified as mythical Saint Brendan's whale-island, and was called "San
Borondón" in the Canary Islands. People believed firmly in its existence, and there
were even detailed accounts from an odd sailor or two who swore that they had landed on
the island and explored it before the land had sunk again into the Ocean. In some
international treaties signed by the Kingdom of Castille it was stated, concerning the
Canary Islands, the Castilian sovereignty over "the islands of Canaria, already
discovered or to be discovered ...". The island was called "Aprositus", the
Inaccesible, and in other versions of the legend is named "Antilia" or
"Island of the Seven Cities", cities which were supposed to have been founded by
seven legendary bishops. The archives of the 18th century inform about official inquiries
by the authorities of El Hierro, where tens of witnesses declared having seen the
bewitched island from the summits of El Hierro's mountains. An expedition in search of the
island sailed from Santa Cruz de Tenerife as a result of this inquiry. The persistence of
this legend in the islands' folklore is amazing. San Borondón is still alive in the
islands' people imagination. There is probably no one islander of Tenerife, La Palma, La
Gomera or El Hierro who has not looked at least one time from the mountains into the sea,
searching the lost island of San Borondón in the western horizon where the sun sinks in
the cobalt-blue waters of the Atlantic Ocean. |