It's hard to imagine how it could disappear. Cities In its entirety, but that is exactly what happened to these lost cities that we will be talking about in this list.

Among the many reasons that lead to the disappearance of cities, wars, natural disasters, and climate change are just a few.

Whatever the reason, Lost These lost cities were forgotten, only to be discovered centuries after their disappearance.

Lost Cities, Wonders Forgotten Through Time

Lost Cities, Carthage

Carthage is located in Tunisia Current, it was founded by Phoenician colonists and became a major power in the Mediterranean. 

The resulting rivalry with Syracuse and Rome was accompanied by several wars with each invading the other's homeland, most notably Hannibal's invasion of Italy.

The city was destroyed by the Romans in 146 BC.

The Romans went from house to house, capturing and enslaving people before setting Carthage on fire.

However, the Romans re-founded Carthage, which became one of the largest and most important cities of the empire. 

Lost Cities

Carthage

Lost Cities, Troy

Troy is a legendary city in what is now northwestern Turkey It was made famous in Homer's epic poem, the Iliad. 

According to the Iliad, this is where the Trojan War took place.

The archaeological site of Troy contains several layers of ruins.

Remains of Troy ruins

Lost Cities, Memphis

Memphis, founded around 3100 BC, is the legendary city of Menes, the king who united Upper and Lower Egypt. 

Early on, Memphis was probably a citadel from which Menes controlled the land and water routes between Upper Egypt and the Delta. 

When the Third Dynasty took over, Saqqara became a large city.

Its importance as a religious centre was undermined by the rise of Christianity.

It was abandoned after the Islamic conquest of Egypt in 640 AD.

Its ruins include the Great Temple of Ptah, royal palaces, and a colossal statue of Ramesses II. Near the Saqqara pyramids.

Lost Cities

Memphis

Caral

Karal is located in the Subi Valley in Peru , one of the oldest lost cities in the Americas.

It was inhabited between about 2600 BC and 2000 BC.

It accommodated more than 3,000 inhabitants, and is one of the largest cities of the Norte Chico civilization, andCaral was probably the center of this civilization.

Caral

Babylon

Babylon, the capital of the Babylonian Empire in Mesopotamia, was a city on the Euphrates River. 

The city fell into chaos around 1180 BC, but flourished again as a vassal state of the Assyrian Empire after the 9th century BC.

Later, it became one of the most prosperous cities in the days of Nebuchadnezzar (604-562 BC), who is credited with building Hanging Gardens Legendary.

All that remains of the famous city today is a mound of broken brick buildings and rubble in the fertile Mesopotamian plain between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in Iraq.

Lost Cities

Babylonian mosaic found in Berlin, Germany

Taxila

Located in northwestern Pakistan, Taxila is an ancient city that was annexed by the Persian King Darius the Great in 518 BC. 

In 326 BC the city was handed over to Alexander the Great.

The city, ruled by a series of conquerors, became an important Buddhist center.

Taxila's prosperity in ancient times resulted from its location at the intersection of three great trade routes.

It was later destroyed by the Huns (a nomadic people who lived in Central Asia, the Caucasus, and Eastern Europe, between the 4th and 6th centuries AD) in 5th century

Lost Cities

Taxila

Timgad

Timgad was a Roman colonial city in Algeria founded by Emperor Trajan around 100 AD.

Originally designed for a population of about 15,000, the city quickly outgrew its original specifications and sprawled beyond that.

In the 5th century, the Vandals (an eastern Germanic tribe) plundered theThe city, after two centuries, was plundered by the Berbers.

The city disappeared from history, becoming one of the lost cities of the Roman Empire, until it was excavated and rediscovered in 1881.

Timgad

Great Zimbabwe

Great Zimbabwe, a complex of stone ruins spread over a large area in modern Zimbabwe.

The word “Great” distinguishes the site from the hundreds of smaller monuments, known as Zimbabwe, scattered throughout the country.

Construction by the indigenous Bantu people began in the 11th century and continued for more than 300 years.

At its peak, Great Zimbabwe is estimated to have had as many as 18,000 inhabitants.

Historians have suggested the reasons for the disappearance of this city, making it one of the cities lost from history.

These causes were likely to be declining trade, political instability, famine, and water shortages due to climate change.

Great Zimbabwe

Persepolis

Persepolis (the capital of Persia) was the center and ceremonial capital of the Persian Empire.

It was a beautiful city, decorated with precious works of art, but unfortunately, little of it remains today. 

In 331 BC, Alexander the Great, during his conquest of the Persian Empire, burned Persepolis in revenge for the burning of the Acropolis in Athens.

Persepolis remained the capital of Persia as a province of the great Macedonian Empire but gradually disappeared and was forgotten over time.

Lost Cities

Persepolis