Thursday, January 21, 2016
Hello!
I need to first cover last night’s dinner, before heading
back into the ruins of ancient Greece for today.
We went out about 7 pm heading for a place in
Loutraki called
Di Georgio’s – and, while Emmy (our GPS) apparently got us to the
right location, we could not spot the huge neon sign that was supposed to be
there…so, we figured the restaurant was closed, which isn’t surprising,
considering the time of year.
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| LOTS of salad! |
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| Now the spaghetti ... |
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| View from our balcony this morning |
Decided
then to head back toward the
Diolkos
and see what places along the sea were open.
Chose the one closest to our place, and in we went.
Well…There was only one other person in the entire room, but
of course, he was smoking.
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| More from our balcony |
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| On the road again ... |
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| Lots of snow! |
That left us
with either taking the corner farthest away, or sitting on the patio outside,
which, to be honest, never entered our calculations.
So, we ended up in the far corner.
Honestly, neither of us was really that
hungry, and we should have stayed in and eaten our wonderful Greek cheese with
crackers and tangerines, and have done with it, but we didn’t.
So…I ordered a salad of rocket lettuce (aka
arugula) with parmesan and tomatoes with a balsamic dressing, and R ordered
their eggplant salad.
My salad was truly
enormous!
You could have fed a family of
six on the rocket lettuce alone!
It was
very good, but I could hardly make a dent in it.
R’s eggplant salad was much smaller, and came
with some wonderful
crostini.
The cooking at this place was really very
good!
For mains, we both had ordered
spaghetti Bolognese, and it was delicious – although again, the portion sizes
were huge!
Finally finished and
scampered back to our hotel for the night.
There were stars out and boy, was it chilly as well, but it seems that
the front has moved through, which is great news.
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| Acrocorinth |
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| Acrocorinth and its walls |
Up this morning about 6, and reassembled and down for
breakfast by 7:30 am. Checked out about
8 and headed to Acrocorinth, our stop
from yesterday to see if we could actually see things, or if it was still lost
somewhere in the clouds. Talk about a
view! In fact, all of the ruins we
visited today seemed to focus around tops of hills with stunning countryside
all around.
Arcocorinth has
been inhabited since ancient times, and became a Byzantine fortress in the
middle ages. It seems that anybody who
is anybody has passed through there – Venetians, Franks, Turks, etc. And each successive generation attempted to
further fortify the series of three walls that were built around the compound. Unfortunately, not too much of the truly
ancient was still remaining, having been built over repeatedly, so we moved on
to Nemea, our second stop on today’s
list.
Nemea was about 10
km from
Corinth, and we came upon the
ancient stadium and locker room (yes, really – a locker room for the athletes!)
before we got to the site itself.
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| "Locker room" at Nemea |
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| Tunnel through which the participants entered |
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| Starting line in stadium |
As it
turns out, in Ancient Greece, there were four Panhellenic games held at
different times at
Delphi, Nemea, Olympia
and
Isthmia.
One of them took place each year, with the
Olympics being held every four years, and the
Pythian games at
Delphi also
every four, but two years off the Olympics.
The
Nemean and
Isthmian games made up the other two
years.
Each games awarded the winners
with different types of wreath crowns – olive for the Olympians, Laurel for
Pythian, Wild Celery for
Nemea and Pine for the
Isthemian games.
But of course the winners received far more
than that, from their home towns in which they gained automatic “hero”
status.
Nemea was first
and foremost a sanctuary to Zeus and Heracles. The competitors who came from all over Greece
would stay at the sanctuary to prepare themselves for the competitions. The stadium that we walked around still
contains the ancient starting line for the running races! And believe it or not, in the museum we were
able to see pieces of the starting line that had indentations cut out of the
stone where the competitors were to put their feet to ensure a fair race. The Nemea
museum also had a very good video explaining the construction of the Greek “fair
start” device – it was a very complex construction that, when the starter
yelled “GO” (or whatever one says in Greek) he dropped the line, and the rope
in front of the contestants would automatically drop at the same time for
everyone. Very ingenious device, we
thought. [Note: Runners who committed a
false start were flogged!]
Additionally, from the locker room to the stadium, the
contestants entered through a 36 meter-long tunnel that has been fully
restored.
Quite something, actually, to
come out of the dark tunnel into the bright sunshine of the stadium.
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| Sinks in Nemea bath |
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| Ancient plumbing in Nemea bath! |
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| Temple of Zeus at Nemea |
From the stadium, locker room and tunnel, we drove around
the corner to the
Sanctuary of Zeus
and their small museum.
The University
of California, Berkeley has done a lot of restoration work on the temple, and
helped put back several of the main columns.
There is also a large bath complex that has been restored and is now
under a great roof for protection.
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| Temple of Zeus |
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| Downed columns were everywhere! |
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| Nemea Museum starting block with place for toes! |
From Nemea, we
headed to Mycenae, the Palace of the Mycenaeans in Greece that was found and
first excavated by von Schliemann (who, of course, also found the ruins of
Troy). The Mycenaean culture was prominent from about 1600 BC to 1100 BC. Again, the scenery was absolutely stunning,
especially with the heavily snow-covered mountains in the distance. We decided to go through the site itself
first, and then the museum. There was
actually a big tour bus pulled up outside of the entrance – and after having Nemea all to ourselves, it felt a little
odd to actually see people at a site!
There weren’t too many of them, fortunately, and they seemed to be
heading out as we were heading in. Most
of the time, we had the place entirely to ourselves, which was wonderful. We are definitely getting spoiled!
It was quite a hike through the
Lion’s Gate and then up to the top of the site.
It is still under excavation, and some of the
signage was missing, but we were able to make out a fair amount of text.
We found the palace outlines and royal grave
circle, as well as the ancient cistern that still has water in it!
The museum contained the grave goods of a
variety of
tholos and pit graves that
had been discovered over the years.
The
collection of grave goods – from beautifully painted vases to votive statues to
table ware and jewelry was impressive.
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| Lion Gate at Mycenae |
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| Grave circle inside walls |
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| View from Mycenae |
It was lunchtime by the time we got back to the car, so we
decided to picnic on the Greek cheese we had purchased several days earlier,
along with some very good crackers and tangerines. All in all, a very satisfying lunch!
Our next stop was at the
Treasury
of Atreus, just down the hill from
Mycenae.
This was an absolutely
HUGE beehive shaped tomb from around 1250 BC.
The acoustics were incredible, as was the
general construction – circular corbelled courses of stone.
As far as we can tell, this structure is the
original, not a reconstruction.
The
lintel stone above the doorway weighs 120
tons, and in its monumental shape and grandeur it is one of the most impressive
monuments surviving from
Mycenaean Greece.
And again, we had it all to ourselves!
From there, we decided to head to Nafplio, where we will be staying at the Letonuevo Hotel for the next couple of nights. It really wasn’t hard to find – but again, it
sits on a dead-end street which makes parking rather interesting. Not sure how I’m going to get out tomorrow
morning, but we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it … or possibly not,
depending on the bridge!
We are in room 152, which is very tiny, but on the top floor
of the hotel, with a very nice balcony overlooking the Nafplio harbor. We’re going
to have an interesting time trying to keep all our possessions together and
still move around the room. As R says,
it’s a “one person moves at a time” place.
However, the view is wonderful, and we don’t plan on staying in the room
all that much anyway.
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| Down the "back" slope at Mycenae |
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| Robert! |
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| Steps into the cistern |
We dropped the luggage, R made sure we had internet access,
and we headed downhill to try and make the Archeological Museum before it
closed at 3 pm.
Actually, it took us
less than 10 minutes to find the museum, which is just off the central square
in town.
The town itself is really quite
lovely, with all sorts of nice shops to look into…R’s favorite occupation!
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| Me near back gate at Mycenae |
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| Grave good from Mycenae |
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| Love the vase! |
The museum was very good, and contained finds not only from
Nafplio but all of the surrounding
region, including
Argos and
Tiryns, where we are headed
tomorrow.
Finished the museum and headed
out into the main square.
We found a
very nice place (with no smokers in sight) to have some wine and sit in the
sun.
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| Tholos tomb outside Mycenae Museum |
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| HUGE tholos tomb |
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| Looking up from inside |
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| Nafplio harbor |
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| R on our balcony! |
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| Mirror! |
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| Nafplio fortifications |
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| Enjoying the sunshine |
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Just to add scale!
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Very, very relaxing. R was hoping we could just stay there for the
next several hours, thereby not having to walk back up those steps again and then
back down for dinner, but I needed to start the blog, so up we went. Whew!
We’ve identified a possible place for dinner tonight, but it
didn’t look like it would be too difficult to find a place. We just need to go early so hopefully we can
avoid the smoke!
More later!
m
xxx
Never would I have thought of Greece having so many mountains
ReplyDeletesandy