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ANCIENT MYSTERIES

Most mysterious ‘lost’ cities – from Brazilian town ‘brimming with gold’ to Welsh metropolis destroyed by fire

TOURISTS clamor to see Petra in Jordan, Angkor Wat in Cambodia and Machu Picchu in Peru — onetime megacities that now capture our imagination and fuel legends.

But they’re not the only mythic spots. Here are some of the most mysterious abandoned locales in the world.

 Old diamond mining city in Namibia
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Old diamond mining city in NamibiaCredit: Getty Images - Getty

El Dorado/The Lost City of Z: Brazil

If you didn’t catch the 2017 film “The Lost City of Z,” you’re not alone: The movie grossed just over $8million (£6.1million) at the US box office.

But the Muisca tribal city of El Dorado itself — which is said to contain mountains of gold — is the stuff of legend.

Explorers have been seeking the mythical land since at least the 1500s.

After first searching in Honduras and Colombia, archaeologists hit pay dirt in 2010 when satellite imagery located promising remnants deep in an impenetrable jungle in the Mato Grosso state of Brazil.

: "The discovery was in line with a document in the National Library of Rio De Janeiro called Manuscript 512, written by a Portuguese explorer in 1753, who claimed to have found a walled city deep in the Mato Grosso region of the Amazon rainforest, reminiscent of ancient Greece."

Excavation has yet to commence, but the lure of the megalopolis' untold treasures has caused several deaths.

The area is also full of once cannibalistic tribes who are thought to have been responsible for the 1925 disappearance of explorer Sir Percy Fawcett and his entire team.

Hashima Island: Japan

 Hashima was bustling with life until 1974
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Hashima was bustling with life until 1974Credit: Wikimedia/kntrty

This tiny, 16-acre island off Nagasaki was once one of the most densely populated in the world.

, during the first half of the 20th century, more than 5,000 people lived and worked on the island — which was developed by the Mitsubishi Corporation as a means to tap into an undersea coal mine that lies beneath it.

Hashima was bustling with life until 1974, when petroleum surpassed coal as the world’s preferred energy source and Mitsubishi announced the mine’s closure.

Within months, all residents had left and the island was permanently closed. The Pacific ghost town was used as a background in the 2012 James Bond film "Skyfall."

Ur: Iraq

 Ur is believed to be the birthplace of Abraham
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Ur is believed to be the birthplace of Abraham
 Reconstructewd ziggurat at Ur in Southern Iraq
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Reconstructewd ziggurat at Ur in Southern IraqCredit: BBC

Founded in 3800 B.C., Ur was once the most powerful and populous city in the Sumerian empire.

Biblical scholars know the city as home to Abraham — who left it for Canaan — but today, many people have no idea it even existed.

All that is left of the great city that was once home to 80,000 is rubble and the remains of a .

Great Zimbabwe: Zimbabwe

 The Great Zimbabwe ruins
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The Great Zimbabwe ruinsCredit: Getty Images - Getty

While Europe was muddling along in the Middle Ages, far south in Africa was a huge, wealthy and modern kingdom adept in metal-working and architecture.

Great Zimbabwe was home to up to 20,000 people and extended as far as Mozambique.

The ruins, located near today’s city of Masvingo, displayed “an architecture that is unparalleled elsewhere in Africa or beyond,” according to archaeologist Peter Garlake.

The Tellem Cities: Mali

 Tellem houses in the cliffs above the village of Ireli, Mali
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Tellem houses in the cliffs above the village of Ireli, MaliCredit: Alamy

High up in the Bandiagara Escarpment in Mali, West Africa, lies a host of abandoned cities that resemble the Anasazi cliff dwellings of New Mexico.

Formerly home to the Tellem pygmies, these once-bustling cities were built in the 11th century but mysteriously abandoned in the 16th.

Chan Chan: Peru

 Aerial view of ancient ruins of Chan Chan in Trujillo, Peru
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Aerial view of ancient ruins of Chan Chan in Trujillo, PeruCredit: Getty Images - Getty

Six hundred years ago, Chan Chan in Northern Peru was the largest metropolis in the Americas.

Built in adobe with intricate designs, it was, according to the Smithsonian, "the capital of the Chimú civilisation, which lasted from A.D. 850 to around 1470" and was the "first true engineering society in the New World."

It fell to ruin after the Chimu were conquered by the Inca in the 15th century.

Today, the haunting remains are under a different kind of attack: Due to climate change and heavy rainfall, the mud ruins are disintegrating.

Kolmanskop: Namibia

 Kolmanskop ghost town in Namibia
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Kolmanskop ghost town in Namibia

This grand ghost town lies smack in the middle of the Namib desert, southwest of the country’s current capital, Windhoek.

Built in the early 20th century after diamonds were found nearby, Kolmanskop eventually produced more than 10% of the world’s diamonds.

Houses, hospitals and schools were built and all was fine until the 1930s, when easier-to-mine diamonds were discovered to the south — leading to a mineral rush.

The town fell into decline and was deserted by 1956.

Trellech: Wales

 Harold's Stones in the village of Trellech
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Harold's Stones in the village of TrellechCredit: Alamy

In the 13th century, Trellech was the  in Wales, , and was "comprised of about 400 buildings before being destroyed, most likely due to a combination of attacks, fire and disease."

The discovery of the town was announced in 2017.

Taxila: Pakistan

 Today, Taxila is full of Buddhist stupa structures (pictured) and in a state of decay
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Today, Taxila is full of Buddhist stupa structures (pictured) and in a state of decayCredit: Getty Images - Getty

At the fulcrum of trade routes between Greece, Asia and Kashmir, this once great city in the Gandhara region is, according to Encyclopedia Britannica, "known from references in Indian and Greco-Roman literary sources and from the accounts of two Chinese Buddhist pilgrims, Faxian and Xuanzang."

Founded in 1000 B.C., it was abandoned by the 5th century A.D.

Now a UNESCO site and located just north of modern-day Islamabad, Taxila is full of Buddhist stupa structures and in a state of decay.

Merv, Turkmenistan

 Also known as 'Maiden's Castle', the Greater Kyz Kala is one of several ruins in the ancient city of Merv
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Also known as 'Maiden's Castle', the Greater Kyz Kala is one of several ruins in the ancient city of MervCredit: Getty Images - Getty

An Indian viceroy  in 1881, "the spectacle of walls, towers, ramparts and domes, stretching in bewildering confusion to the horizon, reminds us that we are in the [centre] of bygone greatness."

Once one of the largest cities in the world, the Silk Road metropolis of Merv was destroyed by Genghis Khan’s son in 1221, during a battle in which more than 700,000 people died.

Miraculously, the place was not completely razed to the ground and the ruins that once stupefied the viceroy can still be viewed today.

Pripyat: Ukraine

 Abandoned residential building inside the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, Pripyat, Ukraine
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Abandoned residential building inside the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, Pripyat, UkraineCredit: Getty Images - Getty

The 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident decimated the town of Pripyat, which lay in the path of the blast and, thanks to winds, took the brunt of it.

Once home to 50,000 people, it now lies abandoned.

L’Anse aux Meadows: Newfoundland, Canada

 Replicas of Viking houses built in Newfoundland, Canada, 1,000 Years Ago
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Replicas of Viking houses built in Newfoundland, Canada, 1,000 Years AgoCredit: Getty Images - Getty

This recently discovered Viking settlement suggests that Scandinavian sea raiders discovered North America hundreds of years before Christopher Columbus.

Dating from the 11th century, L'Anse aux Meadows contains artefacts that show metal workers, shipbuilders and woodworkers lived in the historic town.

This story originally appeared in the .

Voice of Ancient Egyptian priest mummy recreated 3,000 YEARS after he died

In other news, an ancient palace built by a mysterious empire 3,400 years ago was recently swallowed up by a rising lake.

A lost empire that ruled Mesopotamia for 200 years was wiped out by an apocalyptic dust storm, according to experts.

And, a flooded ancient Egyptian tomb stunned archaeologists last year after they drained it and discovered huge intact artefacts inside.

Which famous lost city is your favourite? Let us know in the comments!


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