|
Ruined Erechtheion temple, Acropolis. |
It might
have been nice to leave on Thursday night, but we couldn’t leave any earlier than
Monday because of the way Eid Al Adha was declared this year. Late. With less
than a week to go, we learned from rumours published in the official national
newspapers that the Public Sector would get a full nine days off. The
government decreed that the Private Sector could come in to work on both Sunday
14
th and Thursday 17
th October and like it.
Beloved
Wife had booked Monday to Saturday, anticipating that these days at least would
not be work days for her, and we set off for Athens at 10am on Monday morning.
I’ve never been to Greece.
In keeping
with tradition, custom, and practice, the flight was 20 minutes late out of Dubai. Oh, and left from
Terminal 1. It’s a long walk from the T3 taxi dropoff to the aircraft.
Breakfast
in McGettigan’s (the airport Irish pub formerly known as the Irish Village)
consisted of an ‘Irish Breakfast’ plus a pint of Guinness for me, and Eggs
Benedict and cider for Beloved Wife. An Irish friend of mine assures me that
it’s soda bread that turns a Full English into a Full Irish. Breakfast was
yummy, albeit not even slightly Irish. Apart from the Guinness, obviously. And
with the sun barely over the yard-arm. I’m shocked at myself.
I think
I’ve found a way to get peace aboard aircraft: wear earplugs under the
headphones. The plugs cut out virtually all of the jet roar and infants’
screams, but it’s still possible to hear the movie soundtrack. One disadvantage
is the way that earplugs tend to allow internal sounds to seem exaggerated.
Eating cream crackers makes one helluva din.
There were
about three of us in the EU Citizens queue at Athens airport, so poor, foreign Beloved Wife
had to weave back and forth while her Goat wandered around and picked up some
discount cards that apparently work at museums, restaurants, shops, and spas. They don't. "Athens Spotlighted' cards were absolutely useless wherever we presented them.
The metro
took us straight into central Athens at a cost of €14 for two (travelling
together (compare with €8 each for singles)), and it took around 45 minutes to get to our hotel. We decided not to rush and immediately buy week-long transport
passes at €20 a pop, airport trips excluded (when single journeys were €1.20), partly because the map in our Lonely Planet guidebook seemed rather to suggest that all the stuff we were likely to want to see was within
walking distance of our hotel.
The Hotel Fresh was excellent. It's Four-Star and therefore a bit pricy, and is in a grotty area of town. However, it's clean, the rooftop bar and restaurant are very good, breakfast is marvellous and extremely comprehensive, and there's free wireless internet all over the building. It's also a short walk to the tourist area and ancient sites, and to the Metro.
Having
checked in, chilled out, and fought with my computer, we retired to the rooftop
bar for beer o’clock and a sunset look over the Athenian rooftops to the
mountains beyond and the Acropolis, which is surprisingly close.
|
Part of the view from the hotel's rooftop bar. |
The evening
walk from the hotel down to the tourist area took us through a seedy-looking
neighbourhood. It looked like the hardware souq. Most of the tourist shops were
selling the same selection of alabaster gods and heroes. One shopkeeper did
agree with me that it was a bit odd selling images of ancient
Sparta
in
Athens: the
Spartans and the Athenians basically hated each other’s guts. Oh, and of the
fauns and satyrs for sale, most were – to say the least - anatomically
ambitious, which is more than you can say about Greek gods and heroes.
|
This Is Athens. Not Sparta. |
The only
thing, aside from food, that we bought this evening was a hat. Muggins forgot
his Very Pterry Hat, and on Tuesday would be appearing in public on the
Acropolis as a bekilted Goat From Del Monte.
Tuesday: "Acropolis" is more-or-less Greek for "Uptown."
Nobody
knows if Athens is named after Athena, or the
goddess Athena is named after Athens.
But what is certain is that the ancient Greeks adopted Athena as their own
goddess of wisdom, chastity and moderation and built a huge temple on top of a
hill in the middle of the city.
And to this
temple we slogged. It’s uphill all the way. The basic fee to see the Parthenon
on the Acropolis is €12, and this includes various other sights and sites such
as the Theatre of Dionysos, and Agora. If you buy individual admissions to the
smaller sites, you’ll still get hit up for €12 for the Parthenon, so pay for
the lot up front. Thank you Lonely Planet.
|
Erectheion by night. |
|
Front row of caryatids at the Erectheion. These are copies.
Five of the originals are in the Acropolis Museum in Athens;
the sixth is in the British Museum in London. |
|
The Parthenon. Nearest to the camera is the southeast corner. |
I confess
to a little gentle Photoshoppery. I’ve trued up the verticals and removed the
cranes that make the Acropolis look like a building site.
Several
people ‘liked’ my kilt, in a Facebook sort of way. Mostly Aussies and Canucks,
plus a couple of Greeks. One mature American lady confessed to “Really liking
MIKs.” As a Utiliclan member, I’m an unpaid ambassador for Utilikilts,
so I dished out business cards. Brace yourselves, Utilikilts Seattle!
|
Kilted photographer at the Theatre of Dionysos. |
|
Kilted photographer was allowed to take pictures without flash,
except in the Acropolis Museum where all photography was forbidden. |
It was a
minor disappointment not to be able to walk around inside the ruined temples,
but they were building sites, so I basically understand. What was less
understandable was the outright ban on photography in the Acropolis Museum
(unless, apparently, it was undertaken surreptitiously with a telephone.) Muggins with his DSLR stood no chance.
|
Acropolis Museum main entrance.
Below is part of ancient Athens. |
The museum
is very interesting. The top floor is an exact layout of the top of the
Parthenon, and the friezes and marbles, or copies, are displayed exactly as
they would have appeared on the monument if it hadn’t been vandalised by arsonists
in the fourth century AD, the early Christian church, the Turks who turned it
into a mosque, the genius who stored gunpowder inside and had an explosion,
more Turks who tore bits down to make a signal tower, and Lord Elgin.
The museum
very much takes the attitude that the twirly-moustachioed villain Lord Elgin
took advantage, and stole the Marbles for his own purposes. They’re in the
British Museum, along with one of the columns
and a caryatid from the Erechtheion, an adjacent temple. In one version of the
story promulgated by the museum, the Turks were using marble from the Parthenon
to build their own new tower and Elgin realised that he could obtain permission
to take the Marbles before they became part of a new structure. In another
version,
Elgin’s
cronies hacked the Marbles off and stole them away without Greek consent.
But I feel
that, as most of the site was being pillaged by all and sundry in 1801, it’s
far better that the Marbles ended up in a foreign museum than as a Turkish
tower or hardcore beneath a new road. How many different bas-reliefs of
Centaurs fighting Lapiths does one museum need? Should the British Museum give
the reliefs back to Greece? I really don’t know.
|
The friezes are on display on the top floor. |
Back to the
museum. The lower floors are orientated to fit the adjacent streets, so the top
floor is at a peculiar angle. Parts of the ground floor are glass, and it’s
possible to look beneath the museum at the walls and wells of ancient Athens, plus
archaeologists working on them under glass but in air-conditioned comfort. The
columns holding up this magnificent new building carefully avoid the
archaeology, you will be relieved to learn.
|
The Odeon of Herodes Atticus used to have a roof. |
Presently,
Beloved Wife declared Cake O’Clock, which was followed by more walking, this
time around the southern side of the Acropolis. Agora (Roman; temple; ruins)
closed at 3pm, so we’d have to visit that tomorrow. I attempted to order my
coffee and salad by reading the Greek and mispronouncing it at the waiter.
Success at my third attempt: I must have the world’s worst Greek accent.
I gave to a
busker who was standing in front of Roman Agora and playing a tenor recorder.
One of my musical instruments of choice, he was clearly a better player than I,
but he was helped by a microphone, amplifier, and a backing track.
|
A busker, recordering in front of Roman Agora. |
We
discovered the flea market. Definitely the place to go for crappy, broken
furniture, dodgy fake Reeboks, and military apparel. The place was overrun by
army surplus stores. Having bought precisely nothing, we headed back to the
hotel for a short siesta prior to heading out for food.
Wednesday: Oh noes!
Rain.
|
“Zoomorphic vase” or “piggy bank”? |
Beloved
Wife declared Cake O’Clock, and we retired to the basement level for cake and
coffee. The rain was still hurling down in the middle of the quadrangle, and we
had the choice of either fresh air and tobacco, or stale indoor air and coffee.
We chose the latter, mostly because all the tables in the covered arcade were
occupied.
|
Zeus, King of the Gods.
It looks like the thunderbolt he's throwing has been lost in the mists of time. |
|
Funerary monument to a fallen Greek warrior. |
The museum
shop missed a trick, though. There are a lot of examples of Mycenaean jewellery
on display and, according to Beloved Wife, reproductions of these should have
been available for sale.
There was a
special exhibition of the Antikythera Shipwreck. The vessel sank in the first
century BC and took a wealth of bronze, glass, marble, and The Antikythera Mechanism
to the sea bed off the west end of Crete. Sponge divers discovered it in 1900,
and Jacques Cousteau had another go in 1976. The museum made a big thing of The
Mechanism, with a 3D film and displays showing how, over 2000 years ago, a
mechanical device existed that could do celestial calculations. As I understand
it (from the Greek soundtrack), you wound the handle to set the date and time,
and pointers showed sunrise, sunset, moon phase, that sort of stuff. It’s the
earliest example so far found of a portable astronomical calendar calculator,
and predates similar machinery by an incredible millennium and a half.
The museum
staff threw everyone out at about 1530, but by then the rain had at last
stopped. We wove our way back to the hotel pausing to obtain beer, Coke, and
crisps in a mini-mart. The plan was to take a break, and then to go out again
for a late afternoon to evening session of sightseeing and restaurant.
We ended up
at a streetside restaurant in the Plaka area, right on the northern slope of
the Acropolis. There has been a town here for nearly 3000 years. The restaurant
was very traditional, right down to the live bouzouki players and ritual breaking
of crockery on the flagstones. I had lamb kleftiko for the first time since a
few years ago in Cyprus: lamb, cooked slowly in a clay pot for several hours
until it’s melt-in-the-mouth tender.
Also much
in evidence were souvenir statuettes of gods and heroes. Beloved Wife has
instructed that no such tchotchkes shall adorn the Crumbling Villa.
Thursday: Markets and Old Town
“Partly
cloudy. 20°C” said the weather website. With blue skies overhead, we set out
without an umbrella.
Ancient
Agora and the Temple of Hephaestus were on the menu, along with the local food market. On our way around the market, some random Greek dude insisted that
he have his picture taken with the bekilted Muggins. Shortly thereafter, he
chased us down with a note containing (presumably) his name and address. He’d managed to work out that without this information, there would be no way we
could let him have the picture. He even attempted to pay us for it.
Unfortunately I managed to lose the scrap of paper, so if you know this guy,
please get him to contact me.
|
Do you know this man? |
|
The meat market. There's absolutely no doubt what this guy is selling. |
|
Spices for sale. Beloved Wife bought some "Award-winning" olive oil,
but we have no idea what it's like. |
Presently,
we entered Ancient Agora using part of our ‘Acropolis and Everything’ tickets
and, in accordance with the guide book, headed for a reconstructed arcade to
get orientation about the site. The Stoa of Attalos has a museum on the ground
floor and lots of statues and models on the upper floor that overlooks the site
of ancient
Athens.
|
Waiting for the rain to stop. |
The big
selling point is the
Temple
of Hephaestus, the best-preserved
ancient temple in the world. It protrudes from multiple shades of greenery and
really sells the place as Classical. At this point the heavens opened so, like
everyone else, we hung around the ground-floor museum and then sat and waited
for the rain to stop. By the time we got to the
Temple of Hephaestus,
the sky was blue and the damp ground was starting to steam in the sunlight.
|
The Temple of Hephaestus is surrounded by greenery. |
|
South west corner of the Temple. |
Many
photographs later, at 1430 we were abruptly thrown out. The staff clearly want
to go home spot on 1500.
|
Ancient Agora and the Acropolis, as seen from the Temple of Hephaestus. |
Beloved
Wife advised that the
Museum
of Cycladic Art was
recommended by both the guide book and her friends. It was a tidy step away –
at least a mile – but by curious happenstance was advertised as open until 2000
on Thursdays. So off we ambled, through the tourist shops and then the
National Gardens (a park), pausing only once for
coffee and cake.
It’s a
small museum, but there are four floors of it. Paying our admission, we were
advised to go to the top floor and work our way down. At the top were exhibits
about Life in Ancient Greece, with artifacts, illustrations, and even a video
of Scenes From Everyday Life. (Birth, betrothal, marriage, going off to war,
funeral rites).
|
The Cup Bearer. Carved from marble about 5000 years ago. |
The third
floor contains a display of ancient art and culture from
Cyprus, with
items dating from 4000BC to 1800AD; mostly the very old stuff, and a lot of it
in amazingly good condition. On the second floor are displays of ancient Greek
art, with a lot of pottery and bronze, plus some glass and a number of
interactive displays.
The first floor
houses Cycladic art. Dating from 3000BC or thereabouts, this is the stuff that
developed in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages in the Greek islands. There are many
marble figurines in a distinctive style that could have been 20th
century modern art. Picasso is one of the artists who nicked the style. The
Cycladic people had little in the way of arable land, and scratched a living
with a little agriculture and animal husbandry. But they had the sea, and
became big-time maritime explorers and traders, and they also had masses of
marble.
This museum
had not missed the same trick as the Archaeology Museum, offering for sale
reproductions of the bling in the glass cases and reproductions of the marble
figurines.
It became
sunset and time to find food, so we staggered back through the shopping centre
until we located a quiet restaurant in Plaka. I am pleased to note that I have
failed to notice any McDonald’s outlets. In fact, the only big-name restaurant
I’ve spotted so far is a TGI Friday’s, and that’s out among the foreign
embassies and not in the middle of town.
Friday: Funicular fun
Today we
went up the funicular railway to the Chapel of Agios Georgios. This chapel and
attendant café and bar is right at the top of a hill a mile or so north west of the
Acropolis. Owing to yesterday’s rain, the atmosphere was pretty clear, and I
hoped to get some reasonable views and photos looking down on to ancient Agora.
I wasn’t disappointed.
|
The green patch represents most of Ancient Athens. |
Beloved
Wife decreed that we’d take the metro two stops to the foot of the hill. We
alighted at Evangelismos and headed up a seemingly never-ending flight of
steps. I’m really glad I don’t have a job delivering grand pianos to the
apartments served by these steps. Just as well we’d not walked from the hotel
too. More than halfway up is the lower station for the funicular. It cost €7
return each. We were planning to get the train up and then walk down, but
single tickets were not available. They are from the ticket machine at the top,
which is a bit weird.
St George’s is a tiny traditional Byzantine
chapel. The whitewashed exterior is inevitably covered with spray-painted
graffiti, as is every other vertical surface in Athens. The hilltop is also covered with
masts and antennae, so it’s quite a fiddle to get photos whilst avoiding these
and their guy wires.
Coke and
cake followed, as did beer. It was, perhaps surprisingly, not ludicrously
priced bearing in mind the location. We speculated as to the lack of rooftop
swimming pools and shortage of solar panels on the apartments stretching off to
the edge of the Attic
Basin.
It seemed a
very long walk down from the funicular to the main street. Beloved Wife wished
to visit the Byzantine and Christian
Museum. This is
magnificently laid out, and takes the visitor from the fourth century AD up to
the nineteenth. Frescoes rescued from old churches that were flooded by
reservoir schemes, stone bas-reliefs, icons. That sort of thing. It did occur
to me that a huge Last Judgment could have been used by the artist to take all
sorts of cheap shots at unpopular public figures by portraying their likenesses
burning in the fiery pits of hell.
|
Elijah ascends to Heaven aboard a fiery chariot. |
|
Fourteenth-century centaur, from an equally old church. |
I was
pretty iconed out by the time beer o’clock occurred, and then Beloved Wife
mentioned that the Changing of the Guard was due to happen on the hour just
down the road. We made it in good time to see the actually rather difficult
high-stepping drill by the Greek soldiers in their ceremonial tunics, hose, and
hobnailed shoes with pompoms. The two guys who started their one-hour stint at
1700 stand to attention for half an hour, then do ten minutes of pacing up and
down, then stand for a further twenty minutes before being relieved. They’re
back on duty at 2300. There’s a third Superintendent, whose job appears to be
to talk to onlookers, prevent them from molesting the guards or taking the
piss, and to ensure that the guards’ uniforms are exactly right.
|
Changing of the Guard. They do this on the hour, every hour. |
|
The new guard makes the most of his time in the shade. |
The first
train to the airport on Saturday leaves at an unholy 0536. The hotel has, at
least, offered a packed breakfast because we’re leaving before the breakfast
we’ve paid for starts being served. And we’re doing our packing this evening,
prior to our Riotous Night Out with one of Beloved Wife’s old friends and
former colleagues from Dubai, now living in Athens.
Saturday: Back to reality
I do not
function well on three hours’ sleep a night, and it was pretty much Dawn of the
Living Dead by the time we rolled into Athens airport. I do not know how
Emirates gets their aircraft back to Dubai from Athens, but we were obliged to
fly Aegean to Milan in order to catch an Emirates flight. The self-check-in was
a recalcitrant machine that showed us our flight details and then refused to
issue boarding passes for the Emirates flight. And as we were carrying liquids,
we had to check a bag, so we needed to deal with a person anyway.
I think we
encountered the only Lawful Neutral person in Greece. It turns out that, in
order to prevent leaking liquid food from ruining everyone’s luggage, Aegean
has an inane rule that requires liquids to be packed in a wooden box. That a tin
of olive oil – not a fragile glass bottle – was wrapped in plastic, then padded
with underwear, then inside a suitcase was not good enough. No wooden box: no
olive oil, and Beloved Wife found a Greek couple to give it away to.
Had we been
desperate for some Greek olive oil, it would have been possible to buy it in
the airport shop and transport it as carry-on. I hate the capricious ill-logic
of airline security rules.
Aegean left
late, so much so that someone met us at Milan and led us very swiftly across
the entire, huge airport to where our Emirates flight was waiting. I asked, and
was assured that our checked bag was on board, which it wasn’t, as we learned
in Dubai six hours later. One of our aisle seats was also as far from an aisle
as it’s possible to get on an Airbus A340; a lie that we discovered about five
minutes after being spun this whopper.
When the bag was finally delivered some 24 hours later, it
had been ripped open by persons unknown. Presumably by either cack-handed
baggage handlers or airport security. Nothing was missing, and I went to
Emirates the following day bag in hand, and eventually received financial
compensation.
All in all, then, a fun break in Athens that was ruined at
the end by airline security and mishandled luggage.
]}:-{>