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The Legend of the Voyage of Xu Fu: The Search for the Mountain of Immortality, the Three Thousand Children, and the Island of the East

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The Sorcerer of the First Emperor In the late third century before the common era, having unified the warring states of China to establish the Qin Dynasty, the first emperor Qin Shi Huang became obsessed with a single, ultimate quest: the conquest of physical death. Fearing the loss of his sovereign authority, the emperor gathered at his court in Xianyang thousands of alchemists, scholars, and sorcerers ( fangshi ), commanding them to discover the legendary Elixir of Life ( chang sheng bu lao yao ) that could grant him immortality. Among these sorcerers, a court magician named Xu Fu (Hsu Fu) approached the emperor in 219 BCE, claiming that in the middle of the Eastern Sea arose three sacred islands— Penglai, Fang丈, and Yingzhou —where lived the immortal sages and grew the herbs of immortality. The emperor, delighted by the report, commissioned Xu Fu to lead a massive expedition to find the islands. The first voyage failed to reach the destination due to the resistance of a giant...

The Legend of the Voyage of Saint Thomas to India: The Stone Crosses, the Palace of the King Gondophares, and the Mission to the East

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The Doubting Apostle and the Eastern Mission In the early apocryphal literature of the Christian Church, preserved in the third-century Syriac text known as the Acts of Thomas , the mission of the apostles is described as a global coordinate system. According to the narrative, after the resurrection of Jesus, the twelve disciples gathered in Jerusalem to divide the world by lot, and Saint Thomas (known as Didymus, meaning "The Twin") received India as his destination. Thomas, terrified by the distance and the wild nature of the eastern lands, refused to go, declaring that he had no strength for the journey. The resolution of his resistance was a divine intervention. Jesus appeared in a vision to a merchant from India named Abbanes, who was the envoy of the Indo-Partian King Gondophares , and sold Thomas to him as a slave, describing him as a skilled carpenter and architect . Thomas, recognizing the hand of the creator, accepted his fate, boarded the ship with Abbanes, a...

The Legend of the Voyage of Pytheas of Massalia: The Exploration of the Frozen North, the Island of Thule, and the Amber Sea

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The Navigator of the Greek West In the fourth century before the common era, during the reign of Alexander the Great, a Greek astronomer and geographer named Pytheas undertook one of the most daring voyages of exploration in the history of the Mediterranean. Sailing from the Phocaean colony of Massalia (modern Marseille, France), Pytheas slipped past the Carthaginian blockade at the Strait of Gibraltar, entering the open, stormy waters of the Atlantic Ocean. He sailed north, circumnavigated the British Isles, and entered the North Sea, exploring the coasts of northern Europe and the Baltic Sea, before returning to Marseille to write his lost treatise On the Ocean ( Peri tou Okeanou ). The legend of Pytheas is the mystery of the geographic limit . In his book, Pytheas described phenomena that were completely unknown to the people of the Mediterranean: * The giant tides of the Atlantic (which he correctly attributed to the cycles of the moon); * The midnight sun of the far north;...

The Legend of the Voyage of Saint Mark to Alexandria: The Winged Lion, the Conversion of Anianus, and the Foundation of the Church of Egypt

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The Evangelist of the Delta In the early ecclesiastical history of Egypt, against the monumental backdrop of the lighthouse of Alexandria and the library of the Ptolemies, a single mission is celebrated as the origin of the Coptic Church. Saint Mark the Evangelist , the disciple of Saint Peter and the writer of the second Gospel, was commissioned to carry the Christian faith to the great Mediterranean metropolis of Alexandria in the first century of the common era, establishing the patriarchal see that remains the oldest Christian institution of the African continent. The legend of Saint Mark's mission is the mystery of the intellectual synthesis . Alexandria was not a simple pagan city; it was the capital of the Hellenistic intellect, a place where the Jewish philosophy of Philo met the Neoplatonism of the academy and the ancient mysteries of Isis and Osiris. The arrival of Mark in this city represents the entry of the apostolic spirit into the crucible of the intellect , a p...

The Legend of the Voyage of Saint Jude to Armenia: The Spear of Geghard, the Conversion of King Abgar, and the Mandylion of Edessa

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The Apostle of the Lost Causes and the Armenian Dawn In the historical traditions of the Caucasus, where the snow-covered peaks of Mount Ararat dominate the landscape, a single mission is celebrated as the dawn of the first Christian nation. Saint Jude Thaddeus (known as the apostle of the lost and desperate causes) and Saint Bartholomew are revered as the patron saints who carried the Christian faith to Armenia in the first century of the common era, establishing the apostolic foundation that led to the conversion of the entire kingdom under King Tiridates III in 301 CE. The legend of Saint Jude's mission is closely linked to the Mandylion of Edessa —a sacred cloth bearing the miraculous, print face of Jesus, which Jude was believed to have carried to the court of King Abgar V of Edessa (a kingdom situated on the border of Syria and Armenia). According to the ecclesiastical history of Eusebius of Caesarea, King Abgar, who was suffering from a severe, incurable disease (lik...

The Legend of the Voyage of Himilco: The Exploration of the Tin Islands, the Sargasso Sea, and the Ocean Borders of Carthage

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The Navigator of the Carthaginian Atlantic In the fifth century before the common era, during the golden era of the maritime empire of Carthage, the Carthaginian Senate commissioned a major expedition to explore the northern trade routes of the Atlantic Ocean. Led by the navigator Himilco (contemporary with Hanno the Navigator), the expedition sailed north from the Strait of Gibraltar, exploring the coasts of modern Spain, Portugal, and France, reaching the shores of Britain and the Tin Islands ( Cassiterides ), where the Carthaginians traded for the precious tin necessary to make bronze. The legend of Himilco is the mystery of the carthaginian secrecy . The Carthaginians, who held a monopoly on the Atlantic trade, kept their navigational routes as state secrets, spreading terrifying stories of the ocean to discourage their Greek rivals. Himilco's report, preserved in fragments by the Roman writer Rufus Festus Avienus in his geographical poem Ora Maritima (written in the four...

The Legend of the Voyage of Hanno the Navigator: The Carthaginian Exploration of the West African Coast, the Wild Gorillas, and the Mountain of Fire

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The Navigator of the African South In the fifth century before the common era, during the expansion of the maritime empire of Carthage, the Carthaginian Senate commissioned a major expedition to colonize and explore the west coast of Africa. Led by the suffete Hanno the Navigator , a fleet of sixty ships carrying thirty thousand men and women sailed south from the Strait of Gibraltar. Hanno established several colonies along the coast of modern Morocco, before navigating further south to explore the uncharted tropical coastlines of Senegal, Guinea, and Gabon, returning to Carthage to dedicate a bronze tablet describing the voyage in the Temple of Baal Hammon. The legend of Hanno is the mystery of the geographic encounter . His report, preserved in a Greek translation known as the Periplus of Hanno , described a landscape that was completely foreign to the Mediterranean world: * A river filled with crocodiles and hippopotamuses; * A land where the inhabitants spoke an unknown tongu...