Notes and Queries, Number 53, November 2, 1850 by Various
page 44 of 64 (68%)
page 44 of 64 (68%)
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loyal race of Bradshaigh.
J.H.M. Bath. _Julin, the drowned City_ (Vol. ii., pp. 230. 282.).--I am sorry I did not state more clearly the inquiry respecting the fate of _Julin_, which DR. BELL has been so good as to notice. This is partly the printer's fault. I spoke of the _drowned_, not the _doomed_ city. The _drowning_ was what I desired some account of. "A flourishing emporium of commerce", extant {380} in 1072, and now surviving only in tradition, and in "records" of ships wrecked on its "submerged ruins," does not sink into the ocean without exciting wonder and pity. I knew of the tradition, and presumed there was some probability of the existence of a legend (_legendum_, something to be _read_) describing a catastrophe that must have been widely heard of when it happened. This I conjectured might be found in Adam of Bremen; to whose mention of Julin DR. BELL referred. But it seems that in his time the city was still existing, and flourishing ("urbs locuples"). The "excidium civitatis," if the _Veneta_ of Helmold were Julin, must have taken place, therefore, between 1072 and 1184, when the latter account was written. If Veneta was Julin, and "aquarum æstu absorpta," there must, I suppose, be some account of this great calamity: and as I have seen in modern German works allusions to the drowning of the great city, and to the ruins still visible at times under water, I hoped to find out the _where_ of its site, and the _when_ of its destruction--as |
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