Wikipedia
Atlantida is a French novel by Pierre Benoit published in February 1919. It was translated into English in 1920 as Atlantida. L'Atlantide was Benoit's second novel, following Koenigsmark, and it won the Grand Prize of the French Academy. The English translation of Atlantida was first published in the United States as a serial in Adventure magazine.
The story inspired many films.
Atlántida may refer to:
- Atlantida, a poetic name for the mythical continent of Atlantis
- Atlantida (brachiopod), a genus of brachiopods
- Atlántida, Uruguay, a town in the department of Canelones, Uruguay
- Atlántida Department, Honduras
- Atlántida Sport Club, a football club in Paraguay
- Atlantida (band), a Serbian heavy metal band.
- Editorial Atlántida, an Argentine publishing house
- Atlántida (magazine), a magazine published between 1918 and 1970 by same
- Banco Atlántida, major commercial bank in Honduras
- Atlantidae, a family of gastropod molluscs
- " L'Atlàntida", a Catalan epic poem by Jacint Verdaguer
- Atlántida (opera), a orchestral cantata by Manuel de Falla, based on Verdaguer's poem
- Atlantida (novel), a novel by Pierre Benoit
Atlántida (Atlantis) is an opera (titled a 'cantata escénica') in a prologue and three parts, by Manuel de Falla, based on the Catalan poem L'Atlàntida by Jacint Verdaguer. Falla worked on the score for twenty years but had not completed it at his death in Argentina in 1946; his disciple Ernesto Halffter prepared the score for performance.
Atlántida was a general interest and women's magazine published in Argentina between 1918 and 1970.