An exhausting full day trip

Today was our first full day trip outside of Athens.  We met at the bus stop at 7:30am, way too early for most of us.  We had a lecture on the bus on the way to our first stop, the Amphiareion.  The Amphiareion was a sanctuary, with a temple dedicated to Amphiraeus, where people would come to be healed (for quite a high fee, of course).  People who were sick would come, pay the fee in front of the priest, and sacrifice a goat.  Then they would sleep in the goat’s skin in the temple.  The cure for their ailments was supposed to come to them in a dream, in the form of the god standing at the diseased’s head and telling him what to do.  Healthy people came to the sanctuary as well; it was also like a spa, where they would relax and be entertained. 


The next stop was Eretria, but to get there we had to take a ferry across a strait.  The views were beautiful, and I got a little preview of what the six-hour ferry ride on Friday will be like.  Not too bad for 20 minutes, but I’m not sure about 6 hours.  At Eretria, there is a museum with the contents from many graves (pots, jewelry, etc) on display.  There are many steles, or grave monuments, there as well.  The site of the town was across the street from the museum and had the foundations of many houses and graveyards.  Most of it just looks like rocks on the ground, with some walls visible, and you can make out the squares that were the houses or rooms of houses.  It’s very hard to imagine what it looked like in ancient times because nothing is left standing now. 


Our third stop was Lefkandi, where two graves were found, a man and his wife, along with two horses, indicating he was a warrior and probably important.  The wife is buried with lots of jewelry and a dagger by her head, so it is not clear if she was buried when she died naturally or if she was sacrificed once her husband died.  A house was built around their graves, but it is no longer standing.  We had to look at this site from the road because the keys to the gate to get in didn’t work, but this site was smaller, so we could see everything from outside the fence.


The final stop was the museum in Halkis.  Here we saw more household objects and jewelry, as well as many statues.  The museum was pretty small, but the items are impressive. 
We had a late lunch (around 2pm), which is the normal lunch time here, in the town of Halkis.  This city is by the sea, so there was plenty of fish to choose from, but it was expensive!  I tried to stay in the seafood theme and got crab salad.  The crab salad was not different from crab salad at home, but hopefully I’ll have some delicious fresh fish when I go to Santorini or sometime in Pireus, the port near Athens.  After lunch, most of us slept on the way back to Athens, including me.  Now, as is becoming usual, it’s back to reading for class tomorrow.

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