In the movie 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Captain Nemo mentions that he is a survivor of the slave camp island called Rhura Penthe. Has this island ever existed? And, if so, then where?
Also, trekkies beware, I already know that the name was used again in one of the Star Trek Movies.
Perhaps you are right, Tripler, perhaps I am being too harsh on hansolo. I thought I made it clear, however, that I am interested in the real location of Rura Penthe, and not whatever Gene Roddenberry, or William Shatner concocted for thier movie.
Well the Klingons were a sort of take on Communist Russia, so I assumed it was meant to be a take on the Russian concentration camps hence the full name the Gulag Rhura Penthe. Is there anywhere in Russia with a name like that?
Captain Nemo makes another appearance in a Jules Verne novel, The Mysterious Island, including more details on his past - that novel does not have Nemo as a main character, and is not as popular or widely known as 20,000 Leagues Beneath the Sea.
I don’t recognize the The Mysterious Island as a legitimate work giving information about Captain Nemo. The date discrepancies between that potboiler and Professor Aronnax’s comprehensively annotated journals are enough to throw doubt on the events and conversations in that novel.
Well, those were good suggestions, “Gulag Rura Penthe,” “The Mysterious Island,” Marians Trench and all, but there is still no terrestrial reference to Rura Penthe, hence I am siding with DrFidelius and concluding that the name was made up for one of the many slave mines which produced Nitrites and Phosphates for the manufacture of explosives at the time.
Well, most of the folks in The Mysterious Island were from the US - you know those colonials, very clever with their hands but nowhere near the intellectual status of someone from the Continent, particuarly such a refined country as France.