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A lost city is an that fell into terminal decline and became extensively or completely uninhabited, with the consequence that the site's former significance was no longer known to the wider world. The locations of many lost cities have been forgotten, but some have been rediscovered and studied extensively by scientists. Recently abandoned cities or cities whose location was never in question might be referred to as or . Smaller settlements may be referred to as abandoned villages. The search for such lost cities by European and adventurers in Africa, the Americas, and Southeast Asia from the 15th century onward eventually led to the development of .

Lost generally fall into two broad categories: those where all knowledge of the city's existence was forgotten before it was rediscovered, and those whose memory was preserved in myth, legend, or historical records but whose location was lost or at least no longer widely recognized.


How cities are lost
Cities may become lost for a variety of reasons including natural disasters, economic or social upheaval, or war.

The capital city of Vilcabamba was destroyed and depopulated during the conquest of Peru in 1572. The Spanish did not rebuild the city, and the location went unrecorded and was forgotten until it was rediscovered through a detailed examination of period letters and documents.

(2025). 9780452297982, Plume.

was a city located in northwest in what is now Turkey. It is best known for being the focus of the described in the Greek Epic Cycle and especially in the , one of the two epic poems attributed to . Repeatedly destroyed and rebuilt, the city slowly declined and was abandoned in the era. Buried by time, the city was consigned to the realm of legend until the location was first excavated in the 1860s.

Other settlements are lost with few or no clues to their abandonment. For example, , in the central Pacific, was deserted when first visited by in 1825, but the remains of temples and other structures on the island indicate that a population of had lived there for perhaps several generations in the past. Typically this lack of information is due to a lack of surviving written or and a lack of archaeological data as in the case of the remote and fairly unknown Malden Island.


Rediscovery
With the development of archaeology and the application of modern techniques, many previously lost cities have been rediscovered.

is a pre-Columbian site situated on a mountain ridge above the in Peru. Often referred to as the "Lost City of the Incas", it is perhaps the most familiar icon of the Inca World. Machu Picchu was built around 1450, at the height of the Inca Empire. It was abandoned just over 100 years later, in 1572, as a belated result of the . It is possible that most of its inhabitants died from introduced by travelers before the Spanish conquistadors arrived in the area. In 1911, Melchor Arteaga led the explorer Hiram Bingham to Machu Picchu, which had been largely forgotten by everybody except the small number of people living in the immediate valley.

(2025). 9780300097634, Yale University Press.
Nevertheless, Peruvian explorer and farmer Agustín Lizárraga predated this discovery by 9 years, having found the Inca site on July 14, 1902. He left a charcoal inscription bearing the words "A. Lizárraga 1902".
(2025). 9780230112049, MacMillan.

was an ancient Greek city that sank at night in the winter of 373 BCE. The city was located in , Northern , two kilometres (12 stadia) from the . The city was thought to be legend until 2001, when it was rediscovered in the Helike Delta. In 1988, the Greek archaeologist Dora Katsonopoulou launched the Helike Project to locate the site of the lost city. In 1994, in collaboration with the University of Patras, a survey was carried out in the midplain of the delta, which revealed the outlines of a buried building. In 1995, this target was excavated (now known as the Klonis site), and a large Roman building with standing walls was brought to light.


Lost cities by continent

Africa

Rediscovered

Egypt
  • – capital during the reign of 18th Dynasty . Later abandoned, almost totally destroyed. Modern day .
  • – capital city of the in the .
  • Canopus – located on the now-dry Canopic branch of the , east of .
  • Memphis – administrative capital of ancient Egypt. Little remains. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • – imperial city of Rameses the Great, now thought to exist beneath Qantir
  • – capital during the 21st and 22nd Dynasties, in the Delta region.


Maghreb
  • – initially a city in , destroyed and then rebuilt by Rome. Later served as the capital of the of North Africa, before being destroyed by the Arabs after its capture in 697 CE. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • , – Roman city located in present-day Tunisia. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • city located in present-day . It was the birthplace of Emperor Septimius Severus, who lavished an extensive public works program on the city, including diverting the course of a nearby river. The river later returned to its original course, burying much of the city in silt and sand. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • , – Roman city founded by the emperor Trajan around 100 CE, covered by sand in the 7th century. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • , – wealthy city in .


Horn of Africa


Subsaharan Africa
  • – built between the 11th and the 14th century, this city is the namesake of modern-day . Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • Niani, – lost capital of the


Uncertain or disputed
  • Lost City of the Kalahari – possibly invented


Undiscovered


Asia

Central Asia

Rediscovered


Undiscovered


East Asia

Rediscovered


Undiscovered


South Asia

India

Rediscovered
  • – located in Gujarat. City of the Indus Valley civilization.
  • Dvārakā – ancient city of , hero of the . Now largely excavated. Off the coast of the Indian state of Gujarat.
  • – located in , India – early city of the Indus Valley Civilization.
  • – located in , – early city of the Indus Valley Civilization.
  • – located in , India. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • Puhar, Mayiladuthurai – located in , India.
  • – located in , largest Indus Valley Civilization site, dating back to 4600 BCE.
  • – located in Gujarat, India – early city of the Indus Valley Civilization.
  • – located in India, former capital (1533–1740) of the Northern Provinces of Portuguese India
  • – located in , India. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.


Undiscovered


Nepal


Pakistan

Rediscovered
  • – located in Pakistan's Sindh province, an Indus Valley civilization city
  • – located in the of Punjab, Pakistan – was a large town of the Indus Valley Civilization, not yet excavated.
  • – located in Punjab, Pakistan – early city of the Indus Valley Civilization
  • – located in Pakistan's Sindh province Indus Valley civilization city
  • – located in Pakistan's Balochistan province Indus Valley civilization city
  • – located in — early city of the Indus Valley civilization. The city was one of the early urban settlements in the world.
  • – located in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province — an ancient town, now the site of ruins.
  • – located near the city of Pasni — another ancient settlement of the Indus Valley.
  • – located near the — was a small settlement in the Indus Valley, now in ruins.
  • – located in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province — an ancient Indo-Parthian Buddhist monastery site.
  • – located in Pakistan's Punjab province.


Undiscovered
  • – located in Pakistan's Sindh province, a city of the Indus Valley civilization. The city was on the banks of the .
    (1963). 067154800X, Simon & Schuster. 067154800X


Sri Lanka

Rediscovered


Southeast Asia

Rediscovered


Undiscovered


Uncertain or disputed
  • , Malaysia
  • , – was a sovereign polity that pre-dated the Hispanic establishment of the Philippines and notable for having established trade relations with the Kingdom of Brunei, and with Song and Ming dynasty China. Its existence was recorded both in the Chinese Imperial annals Zhu Fan Zhi (諸番志) and History of Song.


Western Asia

Rediscovered
  • – medieval capital, located on the Turkish side of the Armenia–Turkey border.
  • – ancient Greek city, important stronghold in the time of the .
  • – Ancient Mesopotamian capital.
  • Caesarea
  • Çatalhöyük – a and settlement, located near the modern city of , .
  • – Capital of the and in Iran.
  • Göbekli Tepe – 12,000 years old settlement. It was likely not a city, but rather a temple complex.
  • – capital of the . Located near the modern village of Boğazköy in north-central Turkey.
  • – Paleolithic settlement built by the same culture as Göbekli Tepe.
  • ,
  • Kish – the Sumerian king list states that Kish was the first city to have kings following the deluge.[2] Thorkild Jacobsen, "The Sumerian King List", Assyriological Studies 11, Chicago: University of Chricago Press, 1939
  • – Sumerian city.
  • Mada'in Saleh (and capitol ) – now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • New Sarai – capital of the
  • – Second Capital of the Neo-Assyrian Empire.
  • – Ceremonial Complex built by kings.
  • Samaria
  • – Bronze Age anatolian city made famous by 's .
  • Ur – Sumerian city.


Undiscovered


Uncertain or disputed
  • – final capital of the , located in the vicinity of .
  • Iram of the Pillars
  • Irisaĝrig – Southern , near the town of
  • – Hebrew: . Jewish city in The Great Revolt.
  • Old Sarai – capital of the , its status as a separated city from is still disputed.


Europe

Austria
  • – the capital of the ancient Celtic kingdom of Noricum. Possibly in southern or .


Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • – the capital of ancient Illyrian community in present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina.


Bulgaria
  • – the megalith complex had been laid in ruins and re-erected many times in history – from the Bronze Age until Middle Ages.
  • – an ancient Thracian city, discovered and excavated in 1948. It was founded by king around 325 BC. Its ruins are now located at the bottom of the Koprinka Reservoir near the city of .


Croatia
  • Heraclea somewhere in the Adriatic on the Croatian coast. Exact location unknown.


Denmark


Finland
  • Teljä


France
  • – In 842, the ancient port of Quentovicus was destroyed by a Viking fleet.
  • Thérouanne – In 1553, the city was razed, the roads broken up and the fields ploughed and salted by command of Charles V.


Germany


Greece
  • Akrotiri – on the island of , Greece.
  • – in the Aegean, reputed site of an ancient temple still visible on the sea floor.
  • – sunk by an in the 4th century BC and rediscovered in the 1990s.
  • – underwater off the coast of southern Laconia in , is about 5,000 years old, and is the oldest submerged archaeological town site.


Hungary


Iceland
  • Gunnbjörn's skerries - a group of islands between Iceland and Greenland that were briefly settled before being destroyed in a volcanic eruption.


Italy
  • – a town of the Sarranates mentioned by Pliny the Elder as having been situated in an unknown location in .
  • Castro – a city in , capital of a Duchy ruled by the Farnese family. It was destroyed by a Papal army in 1649.
  • Luni
  • – Greek and Roman city south of Naples; three famous Greek temples.
  • , , and – all buried during the eruption of in 79 AD and rediscovered in the 18th century.
  • , – ancient Greek colonial city of unsurpassed wealth utterly destroyed by its arch-rival in 510 BC.
  • – ancient Roman spa village on the eastern shores of the in the . The village and most of the lake were buried by in 1538 during the volcanic eruption that created . The exact location of the village and its associated hot springs can no longer be identified.


Lithuania
  • Apuolė


Netherlands
  • – ancient Roman settlement
  • Reimerswaal – flooded in the 16th century.
  • – prosperous city lost to the sea in 1584.


Norway
  • – In Viksfjord near , . Largest trading city around the during the age. As sea levels retreated (the shoreline is 7m lower today than in 1000) the city was no longer accessible from the ocean and was abandoned.


Poland


Portugal
  • - Roman villa Abandoned between the 5th and the 9th century AD.
  • Conímbriga – early trading post dating to the 9th century BC. Abandoned in the 8th century AD.


Romania
  • Sarmisegetuza Regia – the old capital of the Ancient Dacian Kingdom.
  • Vicina – a port on the , near the .
  • Orașul de Floci – a former trading town on the .


Russia
  • – important city on the river, razed by the .
  • – a small town in . Flooded by the Ust-Ilimsk Reservoir in the mid-1970s.
  • – mythical city beneath the waters in central .
  • – a trading colony on the ' Northern Sea Route, was abandoned in the 17th century after the Northern Sea Route was banned. Mangazeya was considered lost until it was re-discovered by archaeologists in 1967.
  • Peremyshl – town that was founded in 1152.
  • – a trading town of Rus' Khaganate


Serbia
  • – one of the first capitals of the medieval Serbian state of Raška, abandoned in the 13th century.


Slovakia
  • Myšia Hôrka (near Spišský Štvrtok) – 3500 years old town (rediscovered in the 20th century) and archaeological site.


Spain
  • Amaya – either the capital or one of the most important cities of the . Probably located in what nowadays is called "Amaya Peak" in , northern .
  • Cypsela – drowned Ibero-Greek settlement in the Catalan shore, Spain. Mentioned by Greek, Roman and Medieval chroniclers.
  • – one of the capital cities founded in Hispania by the . The site was incrementally abandoned in the 10th century.
  • – a harbor city or an economical complex of small harbors and trade routes set on the mouth of the Guadalquivir river, in modern Andalusia, Spain. Tartessos is believed to be either the seat of an independent kingdom or a community of palatial cities devoted to exporting the mineral resources of the Hispanic mainland to the sea, to meet the Phoenician and Greek traders. Its destruction is still a matter of debate among historians, and one modern tendency tends to believe that Tartessos was never a city, but a culture complex.


Sweden


United Kingdom
  • Calleva Atrebatum, , – large Romano-British walled city south of present-day Reading, Berkshire. Just the walls remain and a street pattern can be discerned from the air.
  • , – purported coronation site and capital of 40 kings
  • , , Scotland – Neolithic settlement buried under sediment. Uncovered by a winter storm in 1850.


Ukraine
  • Árheimar – a capital of the , that was located near the river
  • – abandoned in the 13th century.


North America

Canada

Rediscovered
  • L'Anse aux Meadows – Viking settlement founded in 1021 AD. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • Lost Villages – The Lost Villages are ten communities (Aultsville, Dickinson's Landing, Farran's Point, Maple Grove, Mille Roches, Moulinette, Santa Cruz, Sheek's Island, Wales, Woodlands) in the Canadian province of Ontario, in the former townships of Cornwall and Osnabruck (now South Stormont) near Cornwall, which were permanently submerged by the creation of the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1958.

Undiscovered
  • Hóp - A possible Viking settlement south of Staumsfjord in alluded to in the Saga of the Greenlanders.


Caribbean

Rediscovered


Mexico and Central America

Maya cities
Incomplete list – for further information, see Maya civilization


Rediscovered
  • – One of two superpowers in the classic Maya period. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • – This ancient place of pilgrimage is still the most visited Maya ruin. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • Copán – In modern . Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • – Rediscovered in 1922, it remains one of the most remote and least visited Maya sites. Located south-south-east of Calakmul, and north of Tikal, it is believed to have had strategic importance to, and been vulnerable to military attacks by, both neighbours. Its ancient name was identified in the mid-1990s as Masuul.
  • – in the Mexican state of , known for its beautiful art and architecture. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • – One of two major powers in the classic Maya period. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • – Mayan coastal city.


Olmec cities

Rediscovered


Totonac Cities

Rediscovered


Other

Rediscovered
  • – Chief city of the civilization, whose territory extended from the Gulf Coast across to the Pacific Coast of , in present-day , and .
  • – In Costa Rica. It is believed that the site was inhabited from 1500 BCE to 1400 CE, and had at its peak a population of around 10,000.


United States

Rediscovered
  • Ajacán Mission – an attempt by Spain to found a mission in Virginia in the mid-16th century. The entire party of 30 was massacred by Native Americans in February 1571. Only one survivor was left.
  • The cities of the (or ) culture, located in the region of the Southwest United States – The best known are located at and .
  • – located in Arkansas City, Kansas. City of the . It was home to around 20,000 people at its height, and it was inhabited from c. 1450–1700 AD.
  • Fort San Juan (Joara) - a Spanish fort build by the Pardo expedition in 1567. Destroyed by Indians one year later. Rediscovered in 2016.
  • Bethel Indian Town, New Jersey – settlement which disappeared as the Lenape were pushed west.
  • – Located near present-day St. Louis, Missouri. At its height Cahokia is believed to have had a population of between 40,000 and 80,000 people, making it amongst the largest Pre-Columbian cities of the Americas. It is known chiefly for its huge pyramidal mounds of compacted earth. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • Pueblo Grande de Nevada a complex of villages, located near Overton, Nevada
  • Sarabay – a settlement in northeast , mentioned in both French and Spanish documents dating to the 1560s.


South America

Inca cities

Rediscovered
  • – One of the last bastions of Incan resistance against the Spaniards and refuge of Manco Inca Yupanqui.
  • – Possibly 's Family Palace. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • Vilcabamba – Currently known as Espiritu Pampa, the capital of the (1539–1572).
  • – Currently known as Rosaspata, a residence and ceremonial center of the Neo-Inca State.


Other

Rediscovered
  • , in present-day .
  • – An important center of the Norte Chico civilization, in present-day . Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • . Located near Trujillo, in present-day . Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • – A massive ruined city, still covered in jungle, that was the capital of the Chachapoyas culture in Northern Peru. Amazon jungle gives up lost city of the 'Cloud People', News.com.au.
  • – Largest city of the culture. Known for its large semi-pyramidal buildings, Huaca del Sol and Huaca de la Luna.
  • Nueva Cádiz – In , one of the first Spanish settlements in the Americas.
  • Santa María la Antigua del Darién – First permanent settlement in the mainland of the continental , in the Darién region between and . Founded by Vasco Núñez de Balboa in 1510. Found in 2012.
  • () located in present-day . Lost City Teyuna, Lostcitytour.com.
  • – pre- site, also known as Tiwanaku. Located in present-day . Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • Upano Valley Sites – Urban complex in Ecuadorian Amazon, discovered in early 2024.


Status Unknown
  • La Ciudad Blanca – a settlement said to be located in the Mosquitia region of the Gracias a Dios Department in eastern .


Undiscovered and fictional lost cities

Legendary
  • Ai – important city in the
  • – the legendary castle of
  • – mythical lost continent, mentioned in two of 's works, Timaeus and Critias
  • Aztlán – the ancestral homeland in Aztec mythology
  • Ciudad de los Cesares (City of the Caesars, also variously known as City of Patagonia, Elelín, Lin Lin, Trapalanda, Trapananda, or Wandering City) – a legendary city in , never found
  • Dvārakā – An ancient city of , submerged in the sea.
  • – a mythical city of in the Americas
  • Iram of the Pillars – this may refer to a lost city in the , but sources also identify it as a tribe or an area mentioned in the
    (2025). 9780759101906, AltaMira Press.
  • , – legendary underwater city which supposedly may be seen in good weather
  • Lemuria – An ancient, now sunken, land in the Pacific Ocean
  • , – (Also known as Libertalia) was a colony founded in the 17th century by pirate Captain James Misson (occasionally spelled "Mission") that is still disputed by historians today.
  • Lost City of Z – a city allegedly located in the jungles of the region of , said to have been seen by the British explorer some time before World War I
  • – a stretch of land from , England, into the Celtic Sea
  • – legendary capital city of in Turkic mythology
  • – a legendary city and refuge in the where , , and meet
  • The Seven Cities of Gold
  • – Mythical kingdom said to be located in
  • Sodom and Gomorrah
  • – legendary city somewhere at the coast of Germany or
  • Ys – legendary city on the western coast of France

That some cities are considered legendary does not mean they did not in fact exist. Some that were once considered legendary are now known to have existed, such as and .


Fictional
  • – from the musical of the same name
  • – from The Chronicles of Narnia
  • Leng – Antarctic city described in H.P. Lovecraft's At the Mountains of Madness
  • Númenor – from The Lord of the Rings and other works in Tolkien's legendarium
  • Opar – from the novels by Edgar Rice Burroughs (named for his long-time hometown of Oak Park, Illinois); the series features several such lost cities, but Opar is the one which appears most often
  • R'lyeh – sunken city referenced in many of the works of H. P. Lovecraft, where the godlike being is buried
  • Sarnath – city described in H.P. Lovecraft's short story "The Doom that Came to Sarnath"
  • – fictional place from James Hilton's 1933 novel
  • Loo – capital of the lost African kingdom of Kukuanaland in Sir H. Rider Haggard's King Solomon's Mines
  • – created by Sir H. Rider Haggard for his Ayesha series of adventure novels
  • Zu-Vendis – appearing in Sir H. Rider Haggard's Allan Quatermain
  • Kaloon – Central Asian lost city in by Sir H. Rider Haggard
  • – appears in , one of the eighteen stories by Sir H. Rider Haggard, many of which feature lost worlds, races and cities
  • Skull Island – from the movies
  • The Nameless City – ancient city in the Arabian desert described in H.P. Lovecraft's short story "The Nameless City"
  • – created by in "An Inhabitant of Carcosa," and later used by Robert W. Chambers and many writers beginning with H.P. Lovecraft
  • Valyria – from George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire universe


See also

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