Table of Contents

Atlantis

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The concept of a Marvel Comics version of Atlantis predates the company's name. The civilization was first implicitly introduced alongside its most famous citizen, Namor the Sub-Mariner, in the unreleased Motion Picture Funnies Weekly #1 in 1939. Its first public appearance was in Marvel Comics #1 (October 1939), published by Timely Comics, Marvel's predecessor. Created by writer-artist Bill Everett, Namor and his undersea kingdom were part of the Golden Age of comics, standing alongside characters like the original Human Torch and captain_america. Everett's Atlantis was initially a pulp-inspired, mysterious kingdom of “Sub-Mariners.” The lore was sparse, but the core elements were present: a hidden city, advanced technology, and a deep-seated distrust of surface dwellers. When Stan Lee and Jack Kirby revived Namor for the Silver Age in Fantastic Four #4 (May 1962), they fleshed out the mythology of Atlantis significantly. They established its Greco-Roman aesthetic, its history tied to the Great Cataclysm, and its people as a distinct species, Homo mermanus. This revival cemented Atlantis's place as a cornerstone of the Marvel Universe, a recurring threat and a source of epic fantasy and political intrigue.

In-Universe Origin Story

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The history of Atlantis in the prime Marvel Universe is a sprawling saga spanning millennia, rooted in cosmic events and ancient human history. Around 21,000 years ago, Atlantis was a small, vibrant continent in the Atlantic Ocean, home to a technologically and culturally advanced civilization of humans. Its capital city, also named Atlantis, was a marvel of the ancient world. This era came to a cataclysmic end due to the intervention of the cosmic beings known as the celestials. During their “Second Host,” the Celestials judged the Deviants, a genetically unstable offshoot of humanity, unworthy. They destroyed the Deviant capital of Lemuria, an act which caused a massive tectonic upheaval across the planet known as the Great Cataclysm. This event sank the continent of Atlantis beneath the waves. A small number of Atlantean sorcerers, led by the emperor Kamuu, foresaw the disaster. They cast a powerful spell to encase their capital city in a protective dome, hoping to save it. While the dome protected the city from being crushed by the ocean's pressure, it could not prevent the continent itself from sinking. The city plunged to the ocean floor, its inhabitants trapped. Over centuries, the surviving Atlanteans faced a choice: adapt or perish. Through a combination of scientific ingenuity, magic, and natural evolution, they transformed themselves. They became an amphibious species capable of breathing water and withstanding the crushing pressures and frigid temperatures of the deep. This new race became known as Homo mermanus, characterized by their blue skin (though some, like the royal line, retain pink skin) and incredible strength. For thousands of years, Atlantis remained hidden, developing in isolation. They built a powerful monarchy, a warrior culture, and technology far in advance of the surface world's. They worshipped ancient sea gods, primarily Neptune (or Poseidon). Their modern history begins with the birth of Namor McKenzie, the hybrid son of an American sea captain, Leonard McKenzie, and Princess Fen of Atlantis. Namor's unique half-human, half-Atlantean physiology granted him powers far exceeding those of a typical Atlantean, including flight. His eventual ascension to the throne marked a new, aggressive era for Atlantis, as he vowed to protect his people from the perceived threats of the surface world, initiating the long and troubled relationship that defines the kingdom to this day.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

In the MCU, the undersea civilization is not called Atlantis but Talokan, a name rooted in Mesoamerican mythology (Tōlōcān). Its origin, as revealed in the film Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, is entirely distinct from the comics and deeply intertwined with the history of vibranium. In the 16th century, a tribe of Yucatec Mayan people was suffering from a devastating smallpox epidemic brought by Spanish conquistadors. To save his people, a shaman was guided by visions to a mysterious, vibranium-laced underwater plant. He created a potion from the plant and gave it to his people. The potion cured their disease but also triggered a profound mutation. Their skin turned blue, they grew gills, they could no longer breathe air, and they were driven to the ocean to survive. The shaman's pregnant daughter also took the elixir, but the mutation affected her unborn child differently. Her son was born with pink skin, the ability to breathe both air and water, superhuman strength, and small wings on his ankles that allowed him to fly. Believing him to be the reincarnation of the feathered serpent god, his people named him K'uk'ulkan. He would later be known to the surface world as Namor. Under K'uk'ulkan's leadership, this new civilization, the Talokanil, built a magnificent city, Talokan, hidden deep within the ocean. The city is powered and constructed using the vast vibranium deposit that also gave rise to the life-saving plant. For 500 years, Talokan remained a secret, a myth. Its people nurtured a deep-seated hatred and fear of the surface world, which had brought only disease and destruction to their ancestors. This long isolation was threatened in the 21st century when the United States, seeking new sources of vibranium after wakanda revealed itself, deployed a deep-sea mining machine that detected Talokan's vibranium signature. Viewing this as the first incursion of a new conquest, Namor led his people to the surface to destroy the operation and subsequently demanded that Wakanda turn over the scientist responsible, Riri Williams. This act brought Talokan into direct, violent conflict with Wakanda, revealing the existence of another ancient, hyper-advanced, vibranium-powered nation to the world and shattering its centuries of secrecy. The MCU's adaptation grounds the kingdom in real-world indigenous history, framing its isolationism not as simple arrogance, but as a trauma-informed response to colonialism.

Part 3: Culture, Technology & Geopolitics

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Society and Culture

Atlantean society is a rigid, feudal monarchy with a strict caste system. At the apex is the Royal Family, who command absolute loyalty. Below them are the warrior and noble classes, followed by scientists, artisans, and laborers. A significant social element is the prejudice against those with physical deformities or non-standard appearances, such as the Atlanteans with more piscine or monstrous features, who are often treated as outcasts.

Technology and Military

Despite its ancient and seemingly primitive cultural trappings, Atlantis is one of the most technologically advanced nations on Earth, particularly in fields related to marine engineering, genetics, and energy.

Geopolitics

Atlantis's foreign policy is almost exclusively defined by its ruler, Namor. His temperament dictates whether they are at peace, in cold war, or launching a full-scale invasion of the surface.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

Society and Culture (Talokan)

Talokanil society is a direct evolution of its 16th-century Mesoamerican origins, preserved and adapted for an underwater existence. It is a monolithic culture, united under the singular, semi-divine authority of their king, K'uk'ulkan.

Technology and Military (Talokan)

Talokan's technology is entirely based on vibranium, but its application is radically different from Wakanda's, having been developed for an aquatic environment.

Geopolitics (Talokan)

Talokan's foreign policy for 500 years was absolute, non-negotiable isolation. The threat of discovery forced them onto the world stage.

Part 4: Key Figures & Factions

Monarchs and Leaders

Surface World Interactions (Allies & Enemies)

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

The Great Cataclysm

Though an ancient event, the sinking of Atlantis is the foundational story for the kingdom. It is frequently referenced in comics to explain the origin of Homo mermanus, their isolation, and their technological divergence from surface humanity. This cataclysmic event, caused by the Celestials' destruction of Lemuria, set the stage for Atlantis's entire existence and is the source of their deep-seated sense of loss and historical grievance.

Atlantis Attacks

This 1989 crossover event saw the Deviant priest Ghaur attempt to bring the elder god Set to Earth. To do so, he manipulated the underwater races—the Atlanteans under Attuma and the Lemurians—into launching a massive, coordinated assault on the surface world. The storyline showcased the full might of the Atlantean military on a global scale and forced nearly every hero on Earth, from the avengers to the x-men, to unite against the invasion. It remains the quintessential “Atlantis vs. the World” storyline.

Sub-Mariner: The Depths

A 2008 Marvel Knights limited series that presented a darker, more psychological take on the legend of Atlantis. Set in the 1950s, the story follows a submarine crew searching for a mysterious underwater anomaly, only to be hunted by Namor, who is depicted not as a king but as a terrifying, almost mythical guardian of the deep. The series strips away the high fantasy and politics, recasting Atlantis and its ruler in the mold of a deep-sea horror story, emphasizing the fear and mystery the kingdom represents to the surface.

Avengers vs. X-Men

While not solely an Atlantis story, this 2012 event contained the single most impactful moment in modern Atlantean history. Namor, empowered as one of the cosmic Phoenix Five, leads his Atlantean forces in an assault on Wakanda, seeking to capture the fugitive Avengers. When the Wakandans resist, Namor, his judgment clouded by the Phoenix Force's immense power, unleashes a catastrophic tidal wave that devastates the nation. This act of war single-handedly ignited the bitter, all-consuming feud between Atlantis and Wakanda, a conflict that would define both nations for the next decade.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7)

1)
The name Namor was famously conceived by creator Bill Everett by writing “Roman” backwards.
2)
In early comics, Namor could summon sea monsters using a magical Atlantean artifact called the Horn of Proteus.
3)
The distinction between pink-skinned and blue-skinned Atlanteans has been a source of social strife within Atlantis. The blue-skinned majority are the primary species of Homo mermanus, while the pink-skinned Atlanteans are a small offshoot, of which the royal line is the most prominent.
4)
The MCU's decision to rebrand Atlantis as Talokan and tie its origins to Mesoamerican culture was a deliberate choice to differentiate it from other cinematic depictions of Atlantis (such as in the DC Extended Universe) and to ground it in a real-world culture that faced colonialism, adding depth to their isolationist motivations.
5)
The language spoken by the Talokanil in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is Yucatec Maya, a real indigenous language. The actors underwent extensive training to speak it fluently for their roles.
6)
The Serpent Crown, one of Atlantis's most dangerous artifacts, is not Atlantean in origin. It was created by Lemurian scientists under the influence of the elder god Set and has been a source of immense trouble for Namor and the entire Marvel Universe.
7)
In the comics, there is another species of aquatic humanoids called Lemurians, the inhabitants of the sunken continent of Lemuria. They are typically green-skinned and are historic enemies of the Atlanteans, as they worship Set and often ally with the Deviants.