FORTUNATE ISLES

(Redirected from Isles of the Blessed)
In the 'Fortunate Isles,' also called the 'Isles' (or 'Islands') 'of the Blessed' (μακαρων νησοι ''makarôn nêsoi''), heroes and other favored mortals in Greek mythology and Celtic mythology were received by the gods into a blissful paradise. These islands were thought to lie in the Western Ocean near the encircling River Oceanus; the Madeira and the Canary Islands have sometimes been cited as possible matches.
Flavius Philostratus ''Life of Apollonius of Tyana'' (book v.2) says "And they also say that the Islands of the Blessed are to be fixed by the limits of Libya where they rise towards the uninhabited promontory." In this geography Libya was considered to extend westwards through Mauretania "as far as the mouth of the river Salex, some nine hundred stadia, and beyond that point a further distance which no one can compute, because when you have passed this river Libya is a desert which no longer supports a population."
Ptolemy used these islands as the reference for the measurement of geographical longitude, and they continued to play the role of defining the prime meridian through the Middle Ages.[1] Modern geography names these islands as Macaronesia.

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See related
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See related



Hesperides

Snake Island (Black Sea), "Isle of the Blessed" in Greek legend.

Annwn

Elysian Fields

Mag Mell

Tír na nÓg

Avalon, The Isle of the Blessed

Aman, the "blessed realm" of Tolkien's works.

Buyan

Notes


1. John Kirtland Wright, "Notes on the Knowledge of Latitudes and Longitudes in the Middle Ages", ''Isis'', 5 (1923): 75-98.


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