Author: Theodoros Paschos, pages 202 Two Greek scientists with their technology find solution to the problem of communication with intelligent beings in the universe, carving the future of humanity. Seeking to solving various mysterious phenomena, they star in Expedition Groups to watch the flying saucers that appear on Earth, Mars and the Moon and to communicate with the extraterrestrial beings. In doing so, they get involved in dangerous adventures with them, discovering at the same time, into the ocean depths, the remnants (traces) of the old technology of lost Atlantis...
You can preview or get the book from the website: Smasword.com
Login Form
The founder of Atlantis Museum
Also available:
Hits: 284
Brief biography of the author of Atlantis Museum
Vassilios Th. Paschos was born in Kanalia of Karditsa (in Greece) in 1924. He had a degree in Political Science of Panteion University and in Law Studies, he was a member of the Greek authors' Society and he was also the founder of the Atlantis Museum. His main occupation was Custom Houses Inspector.
After 1944-45 he started writing in Thessalian newspapers about "the problems of agricultural youth" and in 1950-52 he worked for "Progressive liberal" (a local newspaper). Some of his articles were published in magazines like "New Hearth", "Critical Papers", "Thessalian Hearth", "Educational Way", "Link" etc and in "New Greek Encyclopaedia".In 1950 he started writing literary texts for children. In 1960 he began translating Plutarch's "Parallel Lives" into the modern Greek demotic language. In the "life of Solon" and in other "lives" he pointed out facts about Atlantis which he underlined and later copied. From then on, he wrote down everything he read about Atlantis and later recorded everything he saw in the museums he visited.
Influenced by the myth of Atlantis
The beginning was made in 1950 by reading Jules Verne's two books "The Mysterious Island" and "20,000 Leagues Down in the Sea". However, he systematically dealt with the "Atlantis case" in 1964, when he studied Plato's two speeches, "Timaeus" and "Critias". Influenced by Plato, he wrote the short story "Walker of Peace" which allegorically refers to the lost Atlantis. In his book "Pioneers in Space", a science fiction novel published in 1966, he devoted an entire chapter to Atlantis. In 1979 he also published three children's books entitled "For the Smart Children", in which he published a play with people playing the heroes of Atlantis and other related texts. He was also the director of the Greek magazine "Atlantida" which was in circulation from 1989 to 1991.
Since 1960 he had been collecting information from Egyptian papyruses, the Gigalmes Epic, the Bible, Homer, Hesiod, Plato etc in order to elaborate an essay about Atlantis.
When, in 1976, many of the Daeniken's readers were seized with frenzy, he was forced to answer his theory with the book "The Atlantes Mr. Daeniken". That book, since the third edition and so far, has been put into circulation completed with new information from other sources, and under the new title "The Atlantes, not the Gods".
In August 1981, he founded the private Museum of Atlantis, which functioned as an exhibit's room in various buildings until August 2000.
In October 1982, on his own initiative, the "Atlantis Museum Promotion Association" was founded by 21 founding members, which was legally recognized in December 1982 by the Athens Court of First Instance.In April 1985 he retired from the State with the title of Honorary Customs House Inspector. He had time now and had several hours a day for the Museum. Unfortunately, however, the founder of the museum passed away on 1993-10-3.
A total of seventeen (17) of his books and three (3) of his philology papers were published (see figure 1).
The work and research of the museum was continued by Theodoros Paschos, son of the founder of the museum. Theodoros, using the new facilities offered by modern electronic technology, created, in the year 2,000, the web site "www.atlantida.gr", in which he was publicated some of the works and research of the museum. Much upgraded today with a new design and newer texts, articles and videos continues to work as "www.atlanteans.eu" and "www.atlanteans.gr".