Thursday, February 28, 2008

Leaving for Greece

Greece Trip, Day 1

There's not so much to tell for the first day ... We had a many-hour bus ride from Rome to Bari, where we got on a cruise ship for Greece. In Bari we visited the Church of St. Nicholas, where his body remains today.

The ship, called the Superfast Ferry, does not provide adequate portions of food for teenaged boys. Luckly, I had packed some food as well, so everything was fine. It was a cool ship, though, and many of us hung out on the deck and talked or just watched the sea and the islands as we passed.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Pozzuoli #2

Day 2: We walk to the bus stop, and ask each bus if it goes to Cumae. The second one takes us close, and tells us how to catch the bus for Cumae. 'Twas a bit better than the day before.

We saw the archaeological site at Cumae, entered the Cave of the Sibyl, and read from Virgil's Aeneid. It's well worth doing if you're ever in Italy. The cave itself is impressive, and it's a strange feeling to be reading a myth about the place you're standing in, especially when you've translated that myth from the original Latin in the past.

From the top of a hill where a temple to Apollo stands, we looked out at the Mediterranean Sea, and saw horse-drawn carts going up and down on the beach. It was beautiful.

On the way back we stopped at Largo Averno, a beautiful, secluded lake surrounded by hills. And, after taking the wrong bus on the way back, we arrived at our hotel overlooking the bay, watched the sunset, played many rounds of "Control," and discussed manly subjects over beer.

One of the best trips I've been on in my life.

Friday, February 22, 2008

Pozzuoli #1

Lesson 1: Just because there's a sign with an arrow for a particular location, doesn't mean it's anywhere close.

Lesson 2: Buses are your friends. Learn how to use them.

Lesson 3: If you ever have a chance to walk in a volcano with active gas jets and boiling mud, take it.

It was a three day weekend, the women were all off at their retreat, so Greg, Pete, Tristan, and I decided to head off for Pozzuoli, which is south of Rome by Naples. The train and metro ride there were uneventful, but upon arriving in Pozzuoli we discovered that the we were just off the edge of the only map we had: a less-than-useful printout from Google Maps. But, the locals were much friendlier than in Rome, and we had several people who came up to us offering directions. So, after hiking for about a mile to the top of a hill outside town, we found the hotel.

It was about 2 pm at this point, so we decided we'd head off to Cumae. Cumae is a small town west of Pozzuoli, where Aeneas entered the Cave of the Sibyl and descended to hell, according to Book 6 of the Aeneid. However, none of us had had lunch yet, so the first priority was to find a supermarket -- we had spent enough on the hotel; none of us wanted to eat at a restaurant.

Coming down the hill into town, we passed the entrance to Solfatara. After a quick debate, we decided that we were here to see cool things, not eat, and went into the volcano. It was awesome. It got perceptively hotter as we went in -- there were areas of the ground that were best to step over, due to the steam rising from them. These areas were hot enough to cook an egg on. It smelled like someone already had, and they all has the faint yellow tint of sulfur. We soon forgot about the steam due to the pits of boiling mud and the gas jets. The jets were over 300° and quite forceful, and the ground was hissing beneath our feet as we approached. Solfatara is not some tame government-regulated site like you find in America. No, if you were going to be stupid here, natural selection would have its say. We walked right up to these jets, and could have put our hands in them -- but hey, those hands would still have been required to write papers back on campus.

We were still hungry. Upon leaving Solfatara we saw a sign for a supermarket, and decided to follow it, assuming that it must be nearby. After walking along a highway with no exits for about 5 miles, we revised this assumption. It finally looped around, and we, having finished every bit of the little food in our backpacks (one roll purloined from the last meal we had on campus, and 3/4 of a bar of chocolate), worked our way back into town. We stopped at a newspaper stand to ask for directions. They told us how to get to Cumae, and laughed at us we said we were planning on walking there that day. By this time, sunset was an hour away. We found out later it was an hour ride by bus.

We were still hungry. We asked if there was a supermarket nearby. They gave us a funny look, and pointed 100 yards down the street at the big "Supermercato" sign. After buying some bus tickets, we bought food and made our way to the bus stop, praying fervently that the next bus would be going past "Academia Aeronautica," the only landmark by our hotel we could remember.

We made it back at about 6pm, ate lunch, and laughed at ourselves. But hey, it was a Friday in lent -- a good time for fasting.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

San Clemente

The latest Art & Arch trip was to the church of San Clemente, located by the Colosseum in Rome. It's actually four sites in one:
  1. Before 64 AD, there was something built in this location, but we can't tell what it was. It burned in the great fire of Rome in 64 AD, and the ashes provided the foundation for what was to follow.
  2. Sometime in the 1st century, a house was built on the ashes. St. Clement, the fourth pope, lived in this house for a time, possibly as a slave. There is also a shrine to the pagan god Mithras and a warehouse on this level.
  3. In the 4th century, the house was filled in and used as the foundation for a church to St. Clement. (Side note: this church contains the first known instance of Italian, as opposed to Latin. It's Clement calling the people who tried to arrest him SOBs. 'Twas amusing.)
  4. The first church was filled in when it started to fall apart, and a new church was built on top of it in the 11th century. This church is still standing today.
As you can see, time here is vertical -- as you go down, you go back in time, and many structures are preserved that would otherwise have been lost. Like Pompeii, it's a surreal feeling. How often do we get to walk on streets that were in use two millennia before we were born? Even pieces of the walls and ceiling are intact, giving us an accurate picture of what the average house might have looked like. There really is no substitute for being three stories under ground level, and seeing a shrine to a pagan god that had been forgotten for so long. Rome, ancient Rome, is real. And it's here.