• Bruce Winters
  • Karen Winters
  • Bruce Winters
  • Karen Winters

Europe -October 2024

Began with Moskows visiting, then 3 days in Madrid, 2 days in Barcelona and followed by two back to back Oceania Cruises (24 days) Czytaj więcej
  • SPLIT, Croatia 4 of 4

    20 października 2024, Chorwacja ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F

    GASPINA WATERMILL
    Until the caly 20th century, when cement factories were built in the creo, Solin was a cattle and agricultural area, and the river lodro, known os Riko then, was the source to everything that lived here. Along its banks were pastures and rich gardens, and a water mill. Riko was the only river in the entire area from Sibenik to Omis with water all year round, and for this reason became the center of the milling industry in the entire area.. Boats arrived from the island of Ciovo, Broc, Solto, Korculo, to wait their for turn lined by the river banks.
    The Gaspina Watermill is among the few still preserved watermills on the Jodro. It wos built in 1711. The complex is oriented north to south, where as water arrived from its eastern side, through chutes directed to lower ports of the mill that is, to the blades fixed to the mill shaft.

    Above the main entrance door, to the western side, turned is a Roman stela tombstone.

    Milling ended in late 19th century but this mill lasted until 1960.
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  • BARI, Italy - 3 of 4

    21 października 2024, Włochy ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

    Visit Air Piccola, Visit Belvedere, Visit Rhone Monti, Visit Church St. Anthony
    VISIT TRULLI HOUSES!

    Trulli houses - what is a Trullo and Trulli?
    A trullo, plural trulli, is a type of traditional stone dwelling with a cone-shaped roof. They are unique to the Puglia region of Italy, in particular the Itria Valley, where, nestled among the lush greenery, the olive trees and the vineyards, you’ll find the town of Alberobello.

    Alberobello is by far the best place to see trulli: here, rows of trulli jostle for space along winding streets, their whitewashed limestone exteriors glistening in the Italian sun. The town is home to over 1,500 of the structures - enough for it to be designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996.

    With their charming interiors, rustic stone construction, and unique ambience, the trulli houses of Puglia are the perfect option for those seeking a getaway with a difference: a luxury villa with striking cultural heritage.
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  • BARI, Italy - 4 of 4

    21 października 2024, Włochy ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

    History of Trulli houses
    According to UNESCO, the trulli of Alberobello date back to the mid-fourteenth century. They can be found at many locations in and around the Itria Valley, but their highest concentration is in the quarters of Rione Monti and Aja Piccola in Alberobello.

    How are Trulli houses built?
    Trulli are built using a dry stone construction method, evidence of which dates back thousands of years in areas across the Mediterranean.

    This is a large part of what makes trulli so unique. Unlike other forms of masonry, dry stone construction does not use mortar or cement. Instead, the builders of the trulli carefully selected rocks, a mixture of limestone excavated onsite and boulders collected from the surrounding area. They chose the rocks for their weight and shape, and fitted them into place expertly, creating a stable structure by allowing each stone to rest on and support each other.

    This style of construction is a testament to the ingenuity of Puglia’s historical inhabitants, and the sight of the coned roofs still standing all these centuries later serves as a reminder of the region's rich history. More than this, it also provides excellent thermal insulation, keeping the interior of each trullo warm in the winter and cool in the summer.

    Why were Trulli Houses built?
    While the trulli today make the perfect luxury villas in Italy, they were originally built with a quite different purpose in mind.

    Perhaps the most popular explanation for the unique construction and prevalence of the trulli is that they were built as an early form of tax avoidance. In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, around the time that the first trulli houses in Puglia started to show up, the region’s rulers began levying high taxes on property.

    Residents were none too pleased. But they couldn’t simply do without dwellings. They settled on an unconventional solution: why not pretend that they didn’t have any permanent residences at all?

    They began to avoid mortar in favour of dry stone construction, for the simple reason that dry stone dwellings are easier to dismantle. When the early inhabitants of the trulli heard the tax collectors were approaching, they could remove the roofs and perhaps even take down their houses altogether. They could then avoid having to pay the onerous property tax. And when the tax collectors moved on, they could simply rebuild their homes.

    While this is just one theory for the emergence of the trulli, it is an entertaining one - and one that highlights the creativity and inventiveness of the historical people of Puglia.
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  • CORFU, Greece 2 of 2

    22 października 2024, Grecja ⋅ 🌙 61 °F

    Museum of Palaeopolis & Mon Repos Estate
    Mon Repos is a former royal summer residence on the island of Corfu, Greece. It lies south of Corfu City in the forest of Palaeopolis. Since 2001, it has housed the Museum of Palaiopolis—Mon Repos. British Lord High Commissioner of the United States of the Ionian Islands, Frederick Adam, and his second wife (a Corfiot), Diamantina 'Nina' Palatino, in 1828–1831. After the union with Greece in 1864, the villa and the gardens were gifted to King George I of the Hellenes as a summer residence; he renamed it "Mon Repos" (French for "My Rest"). The Greek royal family used it as a summer residence up until King Constantine II fled the country in 1967. The villa subsequently became derelict, but was restored in the 1990s. Several royal births have taken place at the villa, including those of Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark on 26 June 1914. It was the birthplace of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (the husband of Queen Elizabeth II) and Princess Alexia of Greece and Denmark. Philip was born on the dining room table.

    Archaeology - Contacts with the Past
    The science of archaeology is largely social in character. Through the material remains of the past, it studies the birth and development of civilizations and cultures and attempts to understand the history of mankind. In the modern age, archaeological research approaches the past as a complex cultural phenomenon and attempts to provide explanations for its various manifestations and transformations. Archaeological finds are treated as evidence for particular processes rather than as fossilized relics of the past.

    A variety of factors may lead on occasion to conflict between the dynamic, changing present and the static, immutable past, which is often to the detriment of the monuments.

    In post-war, Greece such conflicts have arisen from the expansion of towns, industrial and tourist development, changes in farming methods, and large-scale public works. Museums and monuments are part of the cultural heritage of Greece.Museums serve as repositories, for the benefit of society, of objects from archaeological and historical sites, and help us to derive inspiration, knowledge and pleasure from them. Monuments are, in themselves, open museums.

    Trade
    A major role was played in the control and development of trade on Corcyra by the island's naval superiority, concentrated on its two harbours and the area of the Agora. The economic power of Corcyra is also attested by the existence of a local mint. Corcyra founded its own mint in the late 6th c. BC. The economic development of the city, which resulted from its strategic location and its desire for political and economic independence, was a decisive factor in the rapid establishment of Corcyraean coins, especially silver issues, which were recognised throughout Greece as a reliable vehicle for commercial exchanges.
    Study of Corcyraean coins, and also the coins of other cities found in excavations on the island, provides attests to the existence of a busy Agora with considerable commercial activity. In the Agora have been found hoards of Corcyraean and foreign coins buried during the course of the civil war that shook the island at the end of the 5th c. BC (Thucydides 3, 74, 2).

    The Worship of Poseidon
    We have no firm epigraphic or excavation evidence so far for the name of the deity worshipped in the small Doric temple at Kardaki, which was built in the 6th c. BC, directly above the spring of the same name. The scant archaeological data support the view that on the site where the altar now stands, outdoor rituals were held in honor of a chthonic deity or a local hero whose memory was preserved. It is not impossible, however, that this temple was given over to the worship of Poseidon. Such a hypothesis is supported by the mythological connection between the god of the sea and Corcyra.
    In the Odyssey, Poseidon's son Nausithoös is regarded as the father of Alkinoös, and another source claims that Poseidon brought the Nymph Corcyra to the island. The excavation evidence, however, which includes an altar and a terracotta statuette of Cybele, dating from the 2nd c. BC, probably affords confirmation for the view that a chthonic deity was worshipped in the temple.

    Trireme
    "The Phaeacians of the long oars, mariners renowned."Odyssey xiii, 168
    The trireme is the greatest achievement of ancient Greek shipbuilding. The first triremes were built in Corinth or on Samos, about 650-610 BC. The most perfect of them were the Athenian triremes, which were 37 m. long, 5.20 m. wide, and reached speeds of 9 to 12 knots. The motive power was the muscular strength of 179 oarsmen, arranged in three rows. The trireme had one main mast with a large square sail, with a smaller mast towards the prow.
    According to the historians Herodotus and Thucydides, Corcyra was the leading Greek naval power in the 5th c. BC, with a fleet of 120 triremes.
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  • OLYMPIA, Greece - Ancient Ruins 1 of 2

    23 października 2024, Grecja ⋅ ☀️ 54 °F

    Archaeological Site of Olympia
    The site of Olympia, in a valley in the Peloponnesus, has been inhabited since prehistoric times. In the 10th century B.C., Olympia became a centre for the worship of Zeus. The Altis – the sanctuary to the gods – has one of the highest concentrations of masterpieces from the ancient Greek world. In addition to temples, there are the remains of all the sports structures erected for the Olympic Games, which were held in Olympia every four years beginning in 776 B.C. Czytaj więcej

  • OLYMPIA, Greece - Ancient Ruins 2 of 2

    23 października 2024, Grecja ⋅ ☀️ 63 °F

    The Pan-Hellenic sanctuary has been established in the history of culture, as the most important religious, political and sports centre, with a history that dates back to the end of the Neolithic times (4th millennium BC). The famous sanctuary became the centre of worship of Zeus, the father of the twelve Olympian gods. For the Altis, the sacred grove and the centre of the sanctuary, some of the most remarkable works of art and technique have been created, constituting a milestone in the history of art. Great artists, such as Pheidias, have put their personal stamp of inspiration and creativity, offering unique artistic creations to the world. In this universal place, the Olympic Idea was born, making Olympia a unique universal symbol of peace and competition at the service of virtue. Here, too, prominence was given to the ideals of physical and mental harmony, of noble contest, of how to compete well, of the Sacred Truce; values, which remain unchanged in perpetuity.

    See video of Pythagoras Cup!!!
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  • OLYMPIA- ZORBA 1 of 3

    23 października 2024, Grecja ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F

    OUZO SPEAKS FOR ITSELF!!!

    Ouzo, Greece's national spirit, is a clear colored liqueur made from grape must (unfermented juice remnants pressed from grapes for winemaking) and has a very strong anise taste. Along with anise, ouzo may contain other spices like fennel, cinnamon, or cardamom.
    Drink it straight, on the rocks, with a little water or........
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  • SIRACUSA, Sicily - 1 of 3

    24 października 2024, Włochy ⋅ ☁️ 66 °F

    The city is notable for its rich Greek and Roman history, culture, amphitheatres, architecture, and as the birthplace and home of the pre-eminent mathematician and engineer Archimedes. This 2,700-year-old city played a key role in ancient times, when it was one of the major powers of the Mediterranean world.

    TEMPLE OF APOLLO
    It is the oldest doric peripterus stone temple in Sicily (6th century B.C.).
    Oriented in the E-W direction, it had a second row of monolithic columns on the main façade; the cell was divided into three naves by a double colonnade on two floors.

    A dedicatory inscription is visible on the last step of the ancient entrance.
    Over the centuries, the temple was transformed into a Byzantine church, Arab mosque, Norman church and Spanish military barracks, until, after the Fascist period, it was freed from the buildings that had hidden it.
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  • SIRACUSA, Sicily - 2 of 3

    24 października 2024, Włochy ⋅ ☁️ 70 °F

    See Jewish Quarter- GALLERIA REGIONALE DI PALAZZO BELLOMO

    ARA DI IERONE
    The largest altar of greek world and one of the most important monuments desired by Hieron Il in the III century BC

    Syracuse is a city on the Ionian coast of Sicily, Italy. It's known for its ancient ruins. The central Archaeological Park Neapolis comprises the Roman Amphitheater, the Teatro Greco and the Orecchio di Dionisio, a limestone cave shaped like a human ear. The Museo Archeologico Regionale Paolo Orsi exhibits terracotta artifacts, Roman portraits and Old Testament scenes carved into white marble

    The Ear of Dionysus, before the collapse of the gigantic stone quarry vault, guarded a darkness so deep that we cannot imagine it. In that darkness, for centuries, were confined the prisoners.and slaves condemned to work in the quarry and die there. The great face of "Tindaro", legendary King
    of Sparta, becomes the tympanum of this gigantic ear, stretched out to listen to the world, and to try to understand its pain and hope. The statue emerges from the darkness to be the symbol of all the multitudes who have dreamed of flying away from that prison, like Icarus, and who have left their voices, their dreams of freedom, their labours, but also the imprint of their courage and dignity in there. Daedalus is the unwitting builder of a prison that ultimately imprisoned him, and Tindarus represents his humiliated and wounded but not
    defeated humanity.
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  • SIRACUSA, Sicily - 3 of 3

    24 października 2024, Włochy ⋅ ☁️ 70 °F

    ORTIGIA

    PIAZZA DUOMO
    Piazza Duomo, with its semi-elliptical shape, occupies the highest part
    of Ortigia.

    It is surrounded by baroque style buildings, including the Cathedral of the Nativity of Maria Santissima which incorporates the most important doric temple of the ancient Greek Syracuse, dedicated to Athena (5th century B.C.), Palazzo Vermexio (city hall), Palazzo Arcivescovile, the church of S. Lucia alla Badia, Palazzo Beneventano del Bosco, Palazzo Arezzo della Targia, Palazzo della Sovrintendenza ai Beni Culturali, Palazzo Borgia del Casale. Czytaj więcej