Hagia Eirene

Unlike the Haiga Sofia, the Hagia Eirene next door has never been a mosque. It is still used as a concert hall, but all of its old Christian iconography is still intact. An ancient ecumenical councilLæs mere
A Day in the Harem, Topkapi

It is hard to imagine that by the nineteenth century the Ottoman Emperors needed a new palace, but they built one nevertheless. The old palace, called Topkapi (the Cannons) is still magnificent. WeLæs mere
The Grand Bazaar of Istanbul

The Grand Bazaar of Istanbul is a cross between a middle eastern suq and a modern shopping mall. In business since 1461 there are still to be found little stalls selling spices, flowers and leather,Læs mere
The Blue Mosque

The Sultanahmet Mosque is also known as the Blue Mosque because of the lovely blue light that comes through the stained glass windows. There was a place reserved for prayer but the vast majority ofLæs mere
The Hippodrome

Visiting the Hippodrome amazed me! It sits just between the Hagia Sofia and the Blue Mosque. It was adjacent to the palace of the Caesars who followed Constantine in the Eastern Roman Empire. OfLæs mere
Pneumonia in Mikonos

My fever spiked again last night at 103.8, so obviously I’m not out of the woods yet. I went to the ship’s medical center, where Dr. Dylan Belton from Bermuda and PA Rohen from South Africa wereLæs mere
Recovery

Enormous relief! When I woke at 5:00 A. M. my temperature was normal, and I felt like myself again. I had other IV’s at 8:00 A. M., 2:00 P. M. and at 10:00 P. M. At 2:00 my attendant was nurseLæs mere
Herculaneum, Last Refuge from Vesuvius

I awoke to a beautiful sunrise over Mt. Vesuvius. An 8 A. M. visit to Dr. Dylan Belton had him removing my IV port, and giving me two more boxes of different antibiotics. At breakfast we had aLæs mere
Treasures of the Vatican

We started with a 90 minute bus ride from Civitavecchia to Rome. Guide Monica showed us the old fort at Civitavecchia, built by Michaelangelo. We came into Rome via the old Aurelian road to see firstLæs mere
Lunch at Hotel Bernini

Our drive to the Hotel Bernini for lunch revealed more information about Roman imperial history, as we drove down the street where Julius Caesar’s birthplace once stood. The hotel was modern, clean,Læs mere
The Flavian Amphitheater

In the afternoon we visited the Colosseum (properly called the Flavian Amphitheater). Glenda was troubled by the many tragic deaths that occurred there. The drive back to Civitavecchia took us throughLæs mere
Frigid Morning in Florence

Florence is unspeakably beautiful. A lovely bus ride from Livorno to Florence took us through a most beautiful part of Tuscany. I was surprised that the ancestral villages of Vinci, and that of theLæs mere
The Art of Florence

Our guide Elizabetha was an art major as well as a guide, and she explained that the genius of Michaelangelo's statue of David lies in his face. Unlike its predecessors, which show a bloody head ofLæs mere
Pisa: Quiet Grandeur

We drove west from Florence to arrive in Pisa just as the sun set. We passed the quarries where the Carara marble was mined for the greatest statues in history. We saw the famous Leaning Tower, theLæs mere
Aix en Provence: Capstone of the Tour

We took a bus tour from the port at Toulon, France up to the town of Aix-en-Provence with our guide Olivier. We had a leisurely walk through the old town, and enjoyed its Roman and medievalLæs mere
From Barcelona to Home

We sailed to Barcelona and immediately were bussed to the airport. There we hooked up with Shirley and Martin for the trip home.