SYNOPSIS
The gripping, marvel-filled account of how a native son took
a casual walk up a mountain on Cape Breton Island and made
an archeological discovery of world-shaking proportions.
In the summer of 2002, at home for his parents’ fiftieth
wedding anniversary, Paul Chiasson decided to climb a mountain
he had never explored on the island where eight generations
of his Acadian family had lived. Cape Breton is one of the
oldest points of exploration and settlement in the Americas,
with a history dating back to the first days of European discovery,
and it is littered with the remnants of old settlements. But
the road that Chiasson found that day was unique. Well-made
and consistently wide, and at one time clearly bordered with
stone walls, the road had been a major undertaking. In the
two years of detective work that followed, Chiasson systematically
surveyed the history of Europeans in North America, and came
to a stunning conclusion: the ruins he stumbled upon did not
belong to the Portuguese, the French or the English – in
fact, they pre-dated John Cabot’s “discovery” of
the island in 1497.
Using aerial and site photographs, maps and drawings, and
his own expertise as an architect, Chiasson carries the reader
along as he pieces together the clues to one of the world’s
great mysteries. While tantalizing mentions can be found in
early navigators’ journals and maps, The Island of Seven
Cities reveals for the first time the existence of a large
Chinese colony that thrived on Canadian shores well before
the European Age of Discovery.
Chiasson addresses how the colony was abandoned and forgotten,
in the New World and in China, except in the storytelling and
culture of the Mi’kmaq, whose written language, clothing,
technical knowledge, religious beliefs and legends, he argues,
expose deep cultural roots in China. The Island of Seven Cities
unveils the first tangible proof that the Chinese were in the
New World before Columbus.
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