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* Reylari Socrates
"your reason, and your passion are the rudder and sail of your seafarer soul."
April 24 , 2008
Apollona Posted at 12:00 EST
apolloplaque.pngHope to find my way here again to celebrate this and the return of the god Apollo.

Very sorry to have missed this wonderful event. Iam delighted with Delphi in Phochis!

December 15 , 2007
HAPPY HOLIDAYS! Posted at 08:00 EST
I swear to_* I do not remember any of it!kalliisdrag.png

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OOOPA!

August 13 , 2007
The Great Panatheaea 402 BC Posted at 18:00 EST
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This was the great religious festival of Athens, the birthday festival of Athena, the patron goddess of the city. It will conclude with the masculine beauty pageant to be held at the Temple of Apollo & Athena in Piraeus. The apobate chariot race and the boat race are also there. So get out the chariot and the boat and show Athena (goddess of strength and wisdom) what you really are made of.

this is the Greek experience of the golden age of Athens, the time of the great Pericles and Aspasia.

XAIPE!~

July 15 , 2007
Hecatombaion Posted at 04:00 EST
Noumenia, is the Festival of the new Moon and the 1st day of Hecatombaion. This month celebrates the mysteries of Athena in Ancient Athens. We are now preparing to celebrate the Panatheanic games. This is the first month of the Hellenic calendar. The new year in ancient Hellas began with the birth of Athena, the child who sprang full grown from the head of her father.

HECATOMBAION AGENDA

Join us at the Great Stoa as we examine the day to day life of Ancient Athens.

March 21 , 2007
Kyrenia-Elftheria Posted at 08:00 EST
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Spring Dance!

It is wonderful to be back in Hellas. So much is going on. After a year of being absent there is much to catch up on. Spring is the most beautiful time of the year!

HAPPY HAPPY SPRING! HAPPY! HAPPY! EVERYTHING!

Spring has sprung and it is cause to rejoice, give thanks, sing and dance! Last week was the week of the last horrendous snowfall, I hope. [We always have four snows in the month of April here]. Thus far we have only had two snows this month. If only it will not get to hot to fast. I am filled with the energy and vigor of spring, and there is so much cleaning to do. Finally I got the electricity going again and I will be able to do a back load of laundry. There is so much to look forward to. The bare branches are now full of tiny buds. "Rejoice, give thanks, and sing"!

This weekend hopefully was the last snowfall. The parking lot where I work was like an arctic wasteland. Did not even wear boots because this is spring? Only 6 to 10 inches. It is melting now. Just so it does not get to hot to fast. Have so many chores to do, I must go cold turkey here to put my real life back in order.

Gship.jpg
Kyrenia-Eltheria
Read about this and more in the latest edition of Kathamerini.

XAIPE!

Hope that everyone at Ancient Worlds will find their way to the Springfest today. Athens is getting ready to celebrate!

I am proud to be an Athenian. The celebration continues. The more things change, the more they stay the same. XAIPE!

April 24 , 2004
KATHAMERINI Posted at 08:00 EST
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Kathamerini
This is an English language Greek Newspaper.

~*~KATHAMERINI~*~

A Greek actress playing the role of a priestess, releases a dove after the lighting of the Olympic Flame in a steel concave mirror near the Temple of Hera in Ancient Olympia, where the Olympics were born in 776 BC.

By Nikos Konstandaras

What seemed doomed to be kitsch — the lighting of the Olympic Flame for the Athens Games with a supplication to “Apollo, god of the sun and the idea of light” — turned out to be a moving and profound moment. Although burdened further by the contrived symbolism of being held on Greece’s independence day, and performed with a ponderous, Germanic classicism that died out decades ago, the ceremony seemed to reach deep into the past and pull up something of the lean and gracious ritual of a very different time. The ephemeral fell away under the weight of ceremony. At last, the Olympics broke through the cloud of uncertainty concerning the state of the world and, secondarily, Athens’s readiness. The Games are truly here.

March 25 was a moment of unity, a marriage of distance and time. The rays of the sun lit a flame on the earth, the ancient birthplace of the Olympic Games served as the starting point for their latest manifestation, runners set out in a relay to carry the flame to all five continents on which humans live. These are the Olympics today — an ancient concept in the age of globalization. They are more meaningful and more magnificent than any problems they may face, because they represent the willing unity of all humanity. Like the great invention of our era, the United Nations, they bring every nation together. But the Olympics seem to take on a greater significance, both because of their ancient pedigree and the fact that they bring together the best in every nation’s youth.

And surely no ideal can be a more modern concept than the fact that the rambunctious city states that competed in the ancient Games observed a truce to allow them all to take part. The idea of an Olympic Truce, which has been pushed so hard by Greece and adopted enthusiastically by the United Nations, is truly something worth fighting for so that the Games can take on even greater significance for the world. And the flame-lighting ceremony on March 25 gave us an indication of the significance of this.

The ceremony was held at a time when the world has seldom seemed more dark and more desperate, where insecurity and uncertainty stretch into the future. There is a feeling of war in the air.

The specter of messianic terrorism hovers over the whole earth, with no one able to guess where the next massacre will take place. Greece, host of the first great international event in the age of mass terror, finds itself at the center of concern. In our neighborhood, the Middle East is as restive and unpredictable as ever, with the US invasion of Iraq having had the opposite effect to that which its evangelists had proclaimed: No weapons of mass destruction were found and the multiple genies of ethnic power grabs and anti-Western fury are at loose over Baghdad and the region. The credibility of the United States has been shaken, which is bad for a world that has to depend on the one superpower to throw its weight behind the decisions of the United Nations. The Balkans are still struggling to come to terms with ethnic strife as last week’s rampage by Albanians in Kosovo made so clear. Tragically, the West’s rush to war on the former Yugoslavia continues to enjoy the complicity of international news media that did little then and does little now to illustrate both the complexity of the situation and the simple truth that those to whom harm is done will do harm in turn. (The Balkans, like the Middle East, though, are defined by the fact that no two groups can agree on the original sin and the final blow.) So although Slobodan Milosevic might be on trial in The Hague, Serbia’s future is still shaky and Kosovo remains an open wound — no one wants to touch it and no one knows what it will turn into. Greece’s immediate neighbors — Albania, Bulgaria and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia — are all struggling, with success and setbacks, to improve the lot of their citizens but are plagued by a pandemic of organized crime. Greece’s relations with Turkey, incomparably better than they were just five years ago, still depend very much on what kind of settlement will be reached over Cyprus and, even more so, on how things work out between the island’s two communities as they come to reconcile fact and fantasy in their past, present and future. (The solution to the Cyprus problem will be the beginning of a new story more than the end of a previous one, so the prenuptial agreement counts.) These specific risks, seen against a backdrop of general economic malaise in the world, including Europe, create a sense of unease as to what the future holds. But Greece also has a host of domestic issues to deal with, from the need for pension reform and greater competitiveness to getting ready for the Olympics and paying for them.

And then suddenly, Sisyphus glimpses a ray of light ahead and senses that this time he is close to the peak toward which he labors. It may all be hocus pocus and fancy dress, with actresses dressed as the priestesses of long-dead gods, but the fact is that the light is there and so are we. And the high priestess’s voice chokes with emotion and awe the way she would if Hera — proud, always ready to sulk and scold — loomed over her. The crowd that broke the security cordon to be near the ceremony was also real, and not in fancy dress. The excitement of the people along the route, and who will line the flame’s course across so much of the world, will be real, focused on something that is unique. The gods of Olympia may be dead. Maybe all gods are dead and idols gone. But maybe in this world of endless chatter, when we can have everything and nothing, our devotion to the significant moment is not just another step for Sisyphus but a place of rest. Because the rituals we have chosen to honor live on, through us. And in a world unhinged, the traveling circus of the Olympic Games suddenly becomes something to honor and protect. And Greece, like an actress dressed as a high priestess, will cry real tears of pride.







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