Study Tour to Greece~

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Study Tour to Greece~ Tour is open to: • All students • Alumnae Trip Highlights~ Enhance your studies at some of the greatest ancient sites in the Study Tour to world. We owe our western view of the world to the modern- thinking Greeks. Theatre and psychology come together in this 10- Greece~ day trip to Athens and Santorini. Daily excursions take us to Delphi, the ancient center of the Earth the Naval Stone, the Parthenon, the With Professor Roxanne Amico and Acropolis, the Agora, Mycene and Epidaurus, Theatre of Dionysus, Lycabettus Hill and wonderful museums. You will enjoy great food Dr. Sharon Himmanen and nightlife in historic Plaka, the location of our hotel at the foot of May 14--May 25, 2017 the Acropolis and some free time in Syntagma Square in Athens, the seaport of Piraeus and the old flea market and shopping area of Course: THS / PSY 260- (1 credit) Monastiraki. Reading lists will be available for all travelers. In the Footsteps of the Ancient Greeks Students seeking course credit will have play readings and writing assignments focused on the relationship between ancient psychology Students are encouraged to take class if and philosophy and Greek drama. participating in travel component. THS / PSY 260 are not “free—standing” Included in Program Fee: classes. o Round Trip shuttle between campus and the airport o International flights to/from Athens Contact: Mary Anne Kucserik o Airport transfers in Athens Director of Global Initiatives & o 8 overnights in twin-shared accommodations in Athens International Programs & 2 overnights in Santorini, with daily breakfast included Curtis 201 o One welcome and one farewell dinner included o Round trip transfer to Santorini to include guided [email protected] cultural visits and entries 610-606-4666, ext. 4551 o Guided tour of Athens, Acropolis & Museum, National Archaeological Museum, Syntagma Square, Monastiraki, Study Tour application deadline: Piraeus. Tuesday, October 25, with application o Day trips to: Delphi; Mycene & Epidaurus; Corinth form and non-refundable deposit. o Emergency medical/accident insurance o Tips & gratuities Details at upcoming info sessions! Not included: Stay tuned! o Daily lunches and dinners (2 dinners included) o Trip cancellation & interruption insurance o Passport and personal spending money .
Recommended publications
  • The Conditions of Dramatic Production to the Death of Aeschylus Hammond, N G L Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies; Winter 1972; 13, 4; Proquest Pg
    The Conditions of Dramatic Production to the Death of Aeschylus Hammond, N G L Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies; Winter 1972; 13, 4; ProQuest pg. 387 The Conditions of Dramatic Production to the Death of Aeschylus N. G. L. Hammond TUDENTS of ancient history sometimes fall into the error of read­ Sing their history backwards. They assume that the features of a fully developed institution were already there in its earliest form. Something similar seems to have happened recently in the study of the early Attic theatre. Thus T. B. L. Webster introduces his excellent list of monuments illustrating tragedy and satyr-play with the following sentences: "Nothing, except the remains of the old Dionysos temple, helps us to envisage the earliest tragic background. The references to the plays of Aeschylus are to the lines of the Loeb edition. I am most grateful to G. S. Kirk, H. D. F. Kitto, D. W. Lucas, F. H. Sandbach, B. A. Sparkes and Homer Thompson for their criticisms, which have contributed greatly to the final form of this article. The students of the Classical Society at Bristol produce a Greek play each year, and on one occasion they combined with the boys of Bristol Grammar School and the Cathedral School to produce Aeschylus' Oresteia; they have made me think about the problems of staging. The following abbreviations are used: AAG: The Athenian Agora, a Guide to the Excavation and Museum! (Athens 1962). ARNon, Conventions: P. D. Arnott, Greek Scenic Conventions in the Fifth Century B.C. (Oxford 1962). BIEBER, History: M. Bieber, The History of the Greek and Roman Theatre2 (Princeton 1961).
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  • Storytelling and Community: Beyond the Origins of the Ancient
    STORYTELLING AND COMMUNITY: BEYOND THE ORIGINS OF THE ANCIENT THEATRE, GREEK AND ROMAN by Sarah Kellis Jennings Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Departmental Honors in the Department of Theatre Texas Christian University Fort Worth, Texas May 3, 2013 ii STORYTELLING AND COMMUNITY: BEYOND THE ORIGINS OF THE ANCIENT THEATRE, GREEK AND ROMAN Project Approved: T.J. Walsh, Ph.D. Department of Theatre (Supervising Professor) Harry Parker, Ph.D. Department of Theatre Kindra Santamaria, Ph.D. Department of Modern Language Studies iii TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................iv INTRODUCTION ...............................................................................................................1 GREEK THEATRE .............................................................................................................1 The Dithyramb ................................................................................................................2 Grecian Tragedy .............................................................................................................4 The Greek Actor ............................................................................................................. 8 The Satyr Play ................................................................................................................9 The Greek Theatre Structure and Technical Flourishes ...............................................10 Grecian
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  • The Form of the Orchestra in the Early Greek Theater
    THE FORM OF THE ORCHESTRA IN THE EARLY GREEK THEATER (PLATE 89) T HE "orchestra" was essentially a dancing place as the name implies.' The word is generally used of the space between the seats and the scene-building in the ancient theater. In a few theaters of a developed, monumental type, such as at Epidauros (built no earlier than 300 B.C.), the orchestra is defined by a white marble curb which forms a complete circle.2 It is from this beautiful theater, known since 1881, and from the idea of a chorus dancing in a circle around an altar, that the notion of the orchestra as a circular dancing place grew.3 It is not surprising then that W. D6rpfeld expected to find an original orchestra circle when he conducted excavations in the theater of Dionysos at Athens in 1886. The remains on which he based his conclusions were published ten years later in his great work on the Greek theater, which included plans and descriptions of eleven other theaters. On the plan of every theater an orchestra circle is restored, although only at Epidauros does it actually exist. The last ninety years have produced a long bibliography about the form of the theater of Dionysos in its various periods and about the dates of those periods, and much work has been done in the field to uncover other theaters.4 But in all the exam- 1 opXeaat, to dance. Nouns ending in -arrpa signify a place in which some specific activity takes place. See C. D. Buck and W.
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  • The Acropolis Museum: Contextual Contradictions, Conceptual Complexities by Ersi Filippopoulou
    The Acropolis Museum: Contextual Contradictions, Conceptual Complexities by Ersi Filippopoulou 20 | MUSEUM international rsi Filippopoulou is an architect and a jurist, specialised in archaeological museums planning and programming. She served as Director Eof Museum Studies in the Greek Ministry of Culture, and was also responsible for the new Acropolis museum project over 18 years. She worked as Director of the Greek Managing Authority for the European Union, co-financed cultural projects for six years. She served as an adjunct faculty member at the Departments of Architecture of the Universities of Thessaloniki and Patras, Greece. She was elected chairperson of the ICOM International Committee for Architecture and Museum Techniques (ICAMT) twice on a three-year mandate. Since 2012, she has been working as an advisor on heritage issues to the Peloponnese Regional Governor. She recently published a book entitled Τo neo Mouseio tis Acropolis—dia Pyros kai Sidirou, which retraces the new Acropolis Museum’s tumultuous history from its inception to its inauguration (Papasotiriou Publishers 2011). Her current research project is a comparative approach to the Greek archaeological museum paradigm. MUSEUM international | 21 he visitor to the new Acropolis Museum in Athens, climbing to the up- per floor and passing through the exhibition gallery door to an all-glass space flooded with natural light, is suddenly awestruck by the breathtak- ing view of the Parthenon rising up above the surrounding city (Fig. 1). Enjoying the holistic experience inspired by the natural and cultural landscape, the viewer is unaware of past controversies about the mu- seum’s location, and is certain that is the right place to be for anyone wishing to admire the ancient monument together with its architectur- al sculptures.
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  • Lecture 05 Greek Architecture Part 2
    Readings Pages 54-60, A World History of Architecture, Fazio, Michael, Moffet & Wodehousecopoy Pages 60– 65 Great Architecture of the World ARCH 1121 HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURAL TECHNOLOGY Photo: Alexander Aptekar © 2009 Gardner Art Through the Ages Classical Greek Architecture 480 – 431BCE: Known as the Classical Period in Greek History Assertion that human intelligence puts man above the rest of nature Architecture began in the service of religion 7th century BCE – 1st efforts to create proper shapes and design Beauty = Gods Secret of beauty lay in ratios and proportions Invented democracy and philosophy Created works of art in drama, sculpture and architecture Greek Architecture 480 – 431BCE Temples first built with wood, then stone w/ terra cotta tiles Purely formal objects Greeks pursued the beauty through architecture and materials The home of the Gods Became the principal ornaments in the cities, generally on hills or other prominent locations www.greatbuildings.com www.greatbuildings.com Temple of Hephaestus megron Athenian Treasury Classical Orders In classical Greek architecture, beauty lay in systems of the ratios and proportions. A system or order defined the ideal proportions for all the components of the temples according to mathematical ratios – based on the diameter of the columns. What is an order? An order includes the total assemblage of parts consisting of the column and its appropriate entablature which is based on the diameter of the column. Temple of Hera II (Poseidon) 450 BCE The column is vertical and supports the structure. Its diameter sets the proportion of the other parts. The entablature is horizontal and consists of many elements.
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  • NEW EOT-English:Layout 1
    TOUR OF ATHENS, stage 10 FROM OMONIA SQUARE TO KYPSELI Tour of Athens, Stage 10: Papadiamantis Square), former- umental staircases lead to the 107. Bell-shaped FROM MONIA QUARE ly a garden city (with villas, Ionian style four-column propy- idol with O S two-storey blocks of flats, laea of the ground floor, a copy movable legs TO K YPSELI densely vegetated) devel- of the northern hall of the from Thebes, oped in the 1920’s - the Erechteion ( page 13). Boeotia (early 7th century suburban style has been B.C.), a model preserved notwithstanding 1.2 ¢ “Acropol Palace” of the mascot of subsequent development. Hotel (1925-1926) the Athens 2004 Olympic Games A five-story building (In the photo designed by the archi- THE SIGHTS: an exact copy tect I. Mayiasis, the of the idol. You may purchase 1.1 ¢Polytechnic Acropol Palace is a dis- tinctive example of one at the shops School (National Athens Art Nouveau ar- of the Metsovio Polytechnic) Archaeological chitecture. Designed by the ar- Resources Fund – T.A.P.). chitect L. Kaftan - 1.3 tzoglou, the ¢Tositsa Str Polytechnic was built A wide pedestrian zone, from 1861-1876. It is an flanked by the National archetype of the urban tra- Metsovio Polytechnic dition of Athens. It compris- and the garden of the 72 es of a central building and T- National Archaeological 73 shaped wings facing Patision Museum, with a row of trees in Str. It has two floors and the the middle, Tositsa Str is a development, entrance is elevated. Two mon- place to relax and stroll.
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  • Illustrations and Maps
    Illustrations and Maps 1 The Parthenon, the Propylaea and the Erechtheum, Athens, built in the fifth century b.c. Photo © AISA/Bridgeman Images. 2 View of the Pnyx from the Observatory. ASCS. 3 Reconstruction of Athens, fifth century b.c., after drawing by Ru Dièn-Jen. 4 Pericles, marble portrait bust, Roman copy of an earlier Greek original, second century. © The Trustees of the British Museum. 5 View of the Theatre of Dionysus from the Acropolis. White Images/Scala, Florence. 6 Demosthenes, Roman copy of an early Hellenistic portrait statue. Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen, photo by Ole Haupt. 7 Aeschines, statue from Pisoni’s villa at Herculaneum, Naples, Archaeological Museum. Photo by Sailko. 8 Socrates, marble portrait bust, Vatican. Photo Scala, Florence. 9 Plato, herm, Vatican. Photo Scala, Florence. 10 Aristotle, marble portrait bust, Museo Archeologico Regionale Antonio Salinas. DeAgostini Picture Library/Scala, Florence. 11 Detail from a kylix by the Kleomelos Painter depicting a male athlete with discus, c. 510–500 b.c. Musée du Louvre, collection of Giampietro Campana di Cavelli, purchased 1861. 12 Kylix by the Tarquinia Painter depicting a symposium with female entertainers, c. 470–460 b.c. © Antikenmuseum Basel und Sammlung Ludwig/A. Voegelin. 13 Terracotta lekythos attributed to the Amasis Painter depicting women weaving, c. 550–530 b.c. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fletcher Fund, 1931 (31.11.10). Image © The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 14 Red-figured hydria depicting a woman reading with three attendants, c. 450 b.c. © The Trustees of the British Museum. vi ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS vii 15 Terracotta hydria attributed to the Class of Hamburg depicting women collecting water at a fountain house, c.
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  • The Staging of Suppliant Plays , Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies, 29:3 (1988:Autumn) P.263
    REHM, RUSH, The Staging of Suppliant Plays , Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies, 29:3 (1988:Autumn) p.263 The Staging of Suppliant Plays Rush Rehm HE ORIGINAL STAGING of Greek tragedy has become an area of T increasing interest, owing in no small part to the work of Oliver Taplin. His The Stagecraft of Aeschylus, followed by Greek Tragedy in Action, legitimized-for a new generation of classicists­ the study of tragedy as a creation in and for the theater.l The new emphasis is welcome, but its promise has often gone unfulfilled, owing to certain misconceptions about the space in which plays were orig­ inally staged; these misconceptions continue to distort our under­ standing of the plays as they were performed in fifth-century Athens. Chief among these involves the presence and function in the theater of Dionysus of an altar or altars, of critical importance in the staging of suppliant drama.2 The currently held view-that the altar used in suppliant plays was I The following will be cited by author's name: J. T. ALLEN, The Greek Theater of the Fifth Century Before Christ (Berkeley 1920); P. ARNOTT, Greek Scenic Conven­ tions (Oxford 1962); D. BAIN, Actors and Audience (Oxford 1977); C. COLLARD, Euripides. Supplices (Groningen 1975); W. B. DINSMOOR, "The Athenian Theater of the Fifth Century," in Studies Presented to David M. Robinson I (St Louis 1951) 309- 30; W. DORPFELD and E. REISCH, Das griechische Theater (Athens 1896); R. C. FLICKINGER, The Greek Theater and its Drama 3 (Chicago 1926); A. F. GARVIE, Aeschylus.
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  • Athens – Greece, 8-11 October 2015
    Serafim Sotiriades & Associates Law Office IAG Assembly Program & Information: Athens – Greece, 8-11 October 2015 Athens is considered one of the top destinations in the world. We will try to make this Assembly an unforgettable experience for you! The Program Thursday, 8 October 2015 Evening 19:00 Welcome drink and registration at the Electra Palace lounge-bar (lobby) Delegates and guests are welcomed in a private area at the Electra Palace with White Prosecco and the traditional Greek Ouzo drink. 20:00 Walk around Athens Ancient City Centre (15 minutes) We will fuel your appetite with a night-walk around Athens Ancient City Centre (15 minutes). During our first short walk, we will admire the narrow streets of Plaka, called “the neighbourhood of the Gods”, and Anafiotika area, that looks like a small island within Athens. 20:15 Greek Traditional Dinner at Plaka Area We will taste typical Greek dishes at the famous greek “tavernas”, all made of excellent quality fresh ingredients and flooded with the famous Greek olive oil. Tip: A taverna is a small Greek restaurant that serves traditional Greek cuisine, an integral part of Greek culture. Typical dishes are Greek salad, feta, mousakas, tzatziki, fava, ntolmadakia, etc. Special Interest Group: Starting with a Cocktail night at Plaka Area 4, Likavittou Street, 106 71 Athens – Greece Tel: +30-210 3388822, Fax: +30-210 3388813, e-mail: [email protected] Serafim Sotiriades & Associates Law Office Friday, 9 October 2015 Morning Business Session for delegates only. Includes lunch. The business session will take place in Electra Palace Ballroom. The detailed program to be announced.
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  • The Theatre of Dionysus
    29 NOVEMBER 2018 The Theatre of Dionysus PROFESSOR EDITH HALL On the south slope of the Athenian Acropolis, you can visit the ancient Athenian theatre of Dionysus today. It is here that some of the first dramas as we know them were ever produced. The first excavators to explore the site were the Greek Archaeological Society in 1838. The site contains not only the theatre but the remains of two temples of the god Dionysus, one which was probably built in the 6th century BCE, when Athenian state theatre began to be performed, and the other rather later, after most of our surviving plays premiered. The introduction of theatre began under the tyrant of Athens, Peisistratus, who ruled for most of the mid-6th century BCE. He was responsible for a major expansion of Athenian festivals, including those for Dionysus, an ancient Greek god whose worship goes back to Mycenaean times and is intimately connected with wine cultivation, colonisation, poetry and theatre. But the theatre in which plays were performed in Dionysus’ honour was not originally built of stone. It probably had permanent wooden benches from around 498 BCE, that is, not long after the Athens expelled the tyrant family and inaugurated their first democracy in 507 BCE. The stone theatre we can see today was not to be built until the fourth century, well after the premieres of the great dramas which we can see performed on our 21st- century stages. The theatre consisted of a central dancing floor, circular in the case of Athens but rectangular in some other early theatres.
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  • It's Role in Greek Society
    The Development of Greek Theatre And It’s Role in Greek Society Egyptian Drama • Ancient Egyptians first to write drama. •King Menes (Narmer) of the 32 nd C. BC. •1st dramatic text along mans’s history on earth. •This text called,”the Memphis drama”. •Memphis; Egypt’s capital King Memes( Narmer) King Menes EGYPT King Menes unites Lower and Upper Egypt into one great 30 civilization. Menes 00 was the first Pharaoh. B The Egyptian civilization was a C great civilization that lasted for about 3,000 years. FROM EGYPT TO GREECE •8500 BC: Primitive tribal dance and ritual. •3100 BC: Egyption coronation play. •2750 BC: Egyption Ritual dramas. •2500 BC: Shamanism ritual. •1887 BC: Passion Play of Abydos. •800 BC: Dramatic Dance •600 BC: Myth and Storytelling: Greek Theatre starts. THE ROLE OF THEATRE IN ANCIENT SOCIETY This is about the way theatre was received and the influence it had. The question is of the place given To theatre by ancient society, the place it had in people ’s lives. The use to which theatre was put at this period was new. “Theatre became an identifier of Greeks as compared to foreigners and a setting in which Greeks emphasized their common identity. Small wonder that Alexander staged a major theatrical event in Tyre in 331 BC and it must have been an act calculated in these terms. It could hardly have meaning for the local population. From there, theatre became a reference point throughout the remainder of antiquity ”. (J.R. Green) Tyre Tyre (Latin Tyrus; Hebrew Zor ), the most important city of ancient Phoenicia, located at the site of present-day Sûr in southern Lebanon.
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  • Planning Development of Kerameikos up to 35 International Competition 1 Historical and Urban Planning Development of Kerameikos
    INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION FOR ARCHITECTS UP TO STUDENT HOUSING 35 HISTORICAL AND URBAN PLANNING DEVELOPMENT OF KERAMEIKOS UP TO 35 INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION 1 HISTORICAL AND URBAN PLANNING DEVELOPMENT OF KERAMEIKOS CONTENTS EARLY ANTIQUITY ......................................................................................................................... p.2-3 CLASSICAL ERA (478-338 BC) .................................................................................................. p.4-5 The municipality of Kerameis POST ANTIQUITY ........................................................................................................................... p.6-7 MIDDLE AGES ................................................................................................................................ p.8-9 RECENT YEARS ........................................................................................................................ p.10-22 A. From the establishment of Athens as capital city of the neo-Greek state until the end of 19th century. I. The first maps of Athens and the urban planning development II. The district of Metaxourgeion • Inclusion of the area in the plan of Kleanthis-Schaubert • The effect of the proposition of Klenze regarding the construction of the palace in Kerameikos • Consequences of the transfer of the palace to Syntagma square • The silk mill factory and the industrialization of the area • The crystallization of the mixed suburban character of the district B. 20th century I. The reformation projects
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