Spring break, parts 2 and 3: Rome and Paris

I am back in Berlin after a great spring break, completely exhausted but thankful for the unbelievable amount of things I saw and did over the course of ten days. I wrote about the first three days (Athens) in my last post, so I will tell you about Rome and Paris in this post.

I spent my first day in Rome by visiting the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore, the largest church in Rome dedicated to Mary, and walked down to the Colosseum in the evening. I did not go inside at this time because most major sites close by 5:00, but I walked around it looked at the Arc of Constantine and a few other things near the Palatine Hill, where the Roman Forum was situated. The next morning I met up with two of my friends from the international program in Berlin and we walked around the city all day. We started at the Pantheon, which was very impressive on the inside, and wandered from there to the Fountain di Trevi, one of the most famous fountains in the world. After walking through Piazza Navona we got to Castel Sant’Angelo and the Sant’Angelo Bridge, which are very close to the Vatican. After lunch we entered the Vatican and walked around St. Peter’s Square.


After a little while we took the long walk from the Vatican down to the Colosseum and paid the admission price to go inside. The Colosseum looks so huge from the outside that it looked somewhat smaller on the inside than I imagined, but I’m sure that didn’t subtract from the intense gladiatorial contests, mock sea battles, and executions which some 60-70,000 people crowded inside to see during the first centuries A.D. The original ground floor is no longer there, exposing the underground passageways and cages where gladiators and animals were kept before being brought up to the arena.


Later in the evening we got dinner at a restaurant in a piazza called Trilussa, which was one of those areas with narrow, winding streets that many people think of when they think of Italy. I had my first authentic Italian meal there, and it was as good as they say it is. The next day we took a train from Rome down to Naples central station. It was about a 3 hour ride, but the landscape between Rome and Naples was beautiful. From Naples it was a separate 20 minute train ride to Pompeii, which has a modern city but we were there for the ancient city, which was destroyed and buried in volcanic ash by the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 A.D. Seeing the ruins of walls, streets, and buildings, and also preserved human figures was all very moving.


Back in Rome the next day, I went back to the Vatican having a ticket for entrance to the Vatican museums (which aren’t really museums, as much as they are former residences of popes which hold one of the greatest collections of art in the world), the Sistine Chapel with Michelangelo’s painted ceiling, and St. Peter’s Basilica. Michelangelo’s Pietà is kept in the basilica:

This was all so incredible to see, and it took 5 hours to cover everything. For the second half of the day we caught a train down to Lago Albano – a volcanic crater lake – at Castel Gandolfo, which is a small town 45 minutes south of Rome where the pope spends the summer. There was not too much to do here besides sit by the lake and find a restaurant for dinner, but it was a nice relaxing end to the four days in Rome. (pic)


On Friday morning I flew from Rome to Paris for the last couple days of break. After checking into my hostel, I walked around the area a lot. Paris is a very expensive city when compared to Berlin. I ended up buying some fruit for lunch – but even apples and bananas cost twice as much as what I’m used to in the U.S. I took the metro down to the Eiffel Tower in the evening, bought a Nutella crêpe from a food stand for dinner, and sat in a park opposite the tower watching the lights go on the tower. You can walk right up underneath the tower and pay to take an elevator up to the very top, but it was sort of expensive and the line was too long. Still, it was cool to see the tower. I wrote a report on its history in 7th grade but never thought I’d be there.


The next day I visited some of the other famous sites in Paris, starting at the garden area at the Louvre. I walked from there to the little island on the Seine River on which Notre Dame cathedral is situated. Notre Dame is one of the largest churches in the world, and the inside – the Gothic architecture with huge stained glass windows – was very impressive. I went from there to the Luxembourg Gardens, which was a very large, green area in the middle of the city. It was nice to see some trees and grass for a change!


The next day after I checked out of the hostel I had a few hours to burn before my flight back to Berlin, so I went down to see the Arc de Triomphe, and then walked up the Montmartre hill, the highest point of the city. At the top is a famous church called Sacre Coeur. I climbed the very narrow spiral staircase up to the dome of the church for a view of the whole city:


After this I grabbed my bag from the hostel and went to the airport. As I went from place to place over these ten days it was sometimes difficult to comprehend the deep historical significance of everything I was seeing. Many of the things I saw in Athens and Rome I have learned about in Latin and history courses in high school and at MLC, which is why I picked Athens and Rome – but it is strange to think that I was actually there. These ten days were so packed full and I will probably never see so much in ten days again. Back in Berlin now, I am starting to pull together sources for the term papers I need to write for my music and history class, and also getting things figured out for short 2-day trips for the weekends in April (don’t worry; the Luther sites are coming, I promise). That’s all for now!

Tschüss,

Collin

Spring break, part 1: Athens

Hello from Rome!

The past couple of weeks have been rather busy, with projects due and midterm tests last week. But it feels great to be done with them now and be on spring break without any school to worry about for 10 days. This also marks the half-way point of my semester abroad, which is pretty hard to believe. I feel like I am just now really starting to feel in place in Berlin. I know the second half is going to go even more quickly, with tentative trips planned for each remaining weekend.

Last Friday the 17th, spring break began for those in the Freie Universität’s international program. I flew to Athens early Friday morning. (Waking up at 2:30 AM is the price to pay for the cheaper, early morning flights.) By the time I got out of the Athens airport, found the right metro, and found my hostel, it was about noon and I could check in. Even though I was running on an hour and a half of sleep I kept moving because with only 3 days to see Athens, there was simply no time to nap! I started by walking through Athens’ Central Market, which is kind of like Pike Place Market in Seattle, if you’ve been there, only 4 times the amount of fish and fish smell. After a classic Greek lunch of souvlaki and wine, I kept going to Monastiraki Square, another market, but one with restaurants and gift shops. This offered my first glimpse of the Acropolis:

Next I saw the Athenian Roman Agora and wove through the streets towards Mt. Lycabettus, the highest point in the city. It didn’t take too long to climb and the view was well worth it – overlooking the entire city with the Acropolis and the gulf to the west:Image may contain: sky and outdoor

My second day in Athens started with the National Archaeological Museum. There was too much to see inside to be able to take everything in, but I recognized many things which I have learned about in my curriculum at MLC in Rise of the West, Latin, and Homer’s Iliad, including decorated pottery from Ancient Athens depicting Greek myth, and Linear B tablets from Mycenaean civilization (riveting stuff, I know). After this I went to the Areopagus, near the base of the Acropolis, which gives a different view of the city. We know from Acts 17 that the Apostle Paul had spent time on the Areopagus, speaking to large numbers of Athenians about Christianity. It was so cool to have walked where Paul walked, while trying to imagine what the area looked like 2000 years ago.

Next I walked over to Socrates’ prison, where he was kept after being found guilty of corrupting the minds of the Athenian youth and was forced to drink the poison hemlock – (my pastor track classmates who went through Plato’s Apology can appreciate this). To end the day I climbed back up Mt. Lycabettus to see the city lit up after dark:

I started my last day in Athens by finally going up the Acropolis. At the base is the Teatre of Dionysus, where we could sit on the stone seats and have the same view as ancient Greek theatre-goers. Then, seeing the Parthenon at the top was my favorite part of the stay in Athens.

I headed back down the hill and to the Ancient Agora, with the Temple of Hephaestus on its crest, looking back towards the Acropolis:

Later in the afternoon I went around to the Temple of Olympian Zeus, with Hadrian’s Arch nearby, and just beyond that was Athens’ Panathenaic Stadium, which hosted the first modern Olympic games in 1896. Underneath we could go into a room where the collection of most of the Olympic torches are kept.

In the evening after dinner I was going to go back to my hostel because I had scheduled myself for another one of those 2:30 mornings to the airport, but it looked like it was going to be a good sunset so I went back up the Areopagus to watch. The view was stunning – the most impressive one I’ve ever seen:

Now I am in Rome and have another whole agenda to accomplish in a few short days! Tomorrow I am meeting up with a couple of my friends from the program to start walking around Rome. That’s all for now! Watch for my next post, hopefully in the next week or so, to hear about the rest of spring break.

Tschüss,

Collin