Statue of God Apollo Unearthed at Ancient Etruscan and Roman Baths

Statue of Apollo "Lizard Slayer" found at an ancient Etruscan and Roman Bath in Italy
Fragments of the statue of Apollo “Lizard-Slayer” discovered at ancient Etruscan and Roman baths. Credit: Ministry of Culture (Italy)

In a recent archaeological discovery at San Casciano dei Bagni in Tuscany, Italy, experts stumbled upon a marble statue of Apollo Sauroctonos, also known as the “Lizard-Slayer.” This finding occurred during excavations of an ancient Etruscan and Roman bath.

The bath, powered by geothermal springs, provided the Etruscans with water at a comfy 42 degrees Celsius (108 °F) for the Balnea Clusinae complex.

Legend has it that Porsenna, an Etruscan king of Chiusi, founded the site. However, archaeologists lean towards the idea that the Etruscans built the complex in the third century BC. In Roman times, the spa gained fame for its healing properties, drawing in important figures like Caesar Augustus, who visited regularly, as reported by Heritage Daily.

Apollo statue found at ancient Etruscan and Roman baths

Archaeologists discovered pieces of a life-sized Apollo Sauroctonos statue near the Great Bath. These fragments are Roman replicas of a bronze statue crafted by the famous Greek sculptor Praxiteles, who was a leading artist in Attica during the 4th century BC.

Typically made between the 1st and 2nd century AD, these copies show Apollo in his youthful form, ready to catch a lizard climbing a tree. The Roman poet Martial even wrote a short poem, or epigram, about these statues, warning: “Spare the lizard, treacherous boy, creeping toward you; it desires to perish by your hands.”

Apollo, a revered deity linked to healing and ailments, was the recipient of votive offerings from those seeking remedies for their health issues. The portrayal of Apollo hunting a lizard holds a connection to ophthalmology, as lizards were believed to have healing properties for eye complaints.

Among the findings, excavations revealed a travertine votive altar dating back to the first century AD. This altar had a bilingual inscription in both Latin and Etruscan, highlighting the continued influence of Etruscan culture well into the Roman Imperial Era.

Dancing Apollo figure was previously uncovered

Among the remarkable bronze findings in 2022 was a dancing Apollo figure unearthed from the oldest basin at the sanctuary. This figure is estimated to be from around 100 BC.

In terms of size and style, the marble Apollo Sauroctonos likely dates back to the second century AD.

However, it suffered damage in the early fifth century AD, when the Christianization of the area resulted in the toppling of temples and statues into the basins, leading to the closure of the sanctuary, according to The History Blog.

The hot springs and mineral waters of San Casciano dei Bagni were thought to have healing powers, believed to be bestowed by divine figures skilled in medicine such as Hygieia (Greek goddess of health), Apollo (Greek god of healing and diseases), and Asclepius (Greek god of health).

Those who bathed in the hot springs believed they were directly connecting with these gods, seeking cures for various illnesses and conditions.

Theodoros Griego, the First Greek to Set Foot in America

Theodoros Griego first greek america
Statue of Doroteo Theodoro, or “Theodoros Griego,” the first Greek to ever set foot in America. Clearwater Beach, Florida. Credit: Public domain

Almost five centuries ago the first Greek arrived in America, a country that is now home to many Greeks of the diaspora. His name was Theodoros Griego, and he arrived on April 14, 1528.

It was June 17, 1527 when a fleet of five ships with 600 men left the Spanish port of Sanlucar de Barrameda on a journey to conquer the land making up today’s Florida and westward of Florida. The head of the mission was conquistador Panfilo de Narvaez. After stops in Santo Domingo and Cuba, Narvaez left Cuba in February with five ships and 400 men to land in what is now the Tampa Bay area.

Among the men who landed in Florida was a Greek man who appeared later in the description of the expedition written by Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca. Theodoros Griego was not only part of the group but also played an important role in later developments.

“Theodoros Griego” means “Theodore Greek” in Spanish; his actual name was Doroteo Teodoro, but he was variously identified as “Don Teodoro” or as just a “Greek Christian” in the book “Relacion,” written by Cabeza de Vaca. The book describing the group’s exploits was published in 1542 and again, after a revision, in 1555.

Theodoros Griego was part of a mission in search of gold

At one point, the Spanish conquistadors brutally killed the mother of the local Native American chief and cut off the nose of the chief. They then moved to northern Florida searching for the gold of which the indigenous people had spoken.

The Greek man was a part of the mission which moved northward in search of the gold.

Once further north, the Spaniards were trapped in the mountains and attacked by Native Americans.

The hardships, hunger and attacks of native peoples brought invaders to their knees. Most of them were killed and survivors were forced to flee.

However, a solution was proffered by the ingenious Greek.

Theodoros Griego built five boats of leather, wood, and resin. “A Greek, Don Teodoro, made pitch from certain pine resins. Even though we had only one carpenter, work proceeded so rapidly from Aug. 4, when it began, that by Sept. 20 five barges, each 22 elbow-lengths (30 to 32 feet long), caulked with palmetto oakum and tarred with pine-pitch, were finished,” Cabeza de Vaca wrote.

Using the makeshift boats, the Spanish conquistadors managed to escape using the tributaries of the great Mississippi River.

A month later they came out onto a shoreline, most likely on the Gulf of Mexico, but they had no idea where they were. Amazingly, the bedraggled group then met native people who were willing to offer them sustenance. Theodoros, along with another sailor, abandoned one of the boats and followed them.

The first Greek in America disappeared mysteriously

The Native Americans returned with food and water but without Theodoros. The Spaniards attempted to locate him were unsuccessful. After almost ten years spent adventuring and exploring the vast new lands, they returned to Spain in 1537.

A number of legends arose about the cunning Greek. The Spaniards considered that his disappearance was simply an act of disobedience. Others believed that he befriended the native people so that he would acquire all the gold for himself.

In 1540, Spanish historian Gonzalo Valdez went to the area where the Greek man had disappeared and undertook a detailed search for him. The indigenous people told him that two Christians had been living with them, but at some point, they had been killed.

According to historian Cyclone Covey, soldiers exploring the land with Hernando de Soto encountered a group of indigenous people who claimed to remember the Greek, even producing a dagger that had belonged to him.

In Covey’s account, the native people claimed to have killed Griego. Covey has speculated that Theodoros might have gone ashore willingly because he thought that was his best chance of survival.

If the story of the Native Americans is in fact true, Theodoros Griego was not only the first Greek to set foot in America but also the first Greek to have lived with the native people of the New World.

Today, in Clearwater Beach, Florida stands a bronze statue of the brave Theodoros Griego. The words on the plaque below read: “The history of Greeks (Hellenes) in America starts from here.”

Koufonisia Islands: The Hidden Greek Paradise

Koufonisia Greek islands
Koufonisia Islands, Greece. Credit: Carlo Pelagalli / Wikimedia Commons CC BY 3.0

The Koufonisia islands have been described as Greece’s “hidden paradise,” and they have recently become a favorite vacation spot for both Greek and foreign tourists.

Koufonisia is a group of islands belonging to the East Cyclades archipelago consisting of Pano Koufonisi (Upper Koufonisi) and Kato Koufonisi (Lower Koufonisi).

These idyllic isles are known for their calm beaches with golden sand and turquoise waters, their many natural pools, and magnificent sea caves.

Naturally, there are many excellent dining choices featuring the islands’ abundant fresh fish and seafood.

Experience Greek island life on Koufonisia

The Chora (the center or main village of an island) of Koufonisi is a typical Cycladic village with picturesque streets, pristine white houses, and a white windmill. Located in the village center is a church dedicated to St. George, the patron saint of Koufonisia.

The islands also offer excellent opportunities for hiking and discovering all the natural delights they have to offer since they are quite small and all distances can be covered on foot within two or three hours.

The locals are famous for their good cheer as well as their hospitality, and visitors feel like they’re at home when they are in the Koufonisia islands.

Traditional products of the island range from fresh fish and seafood to ibex (a type of goat) meat and a type of cheese called ksinomyzithra cheese, which you should be sure to sample while there.

Tourists can also make use of the small boats regularly connecting Chora with remote beaches and nearby islands. One can go scuba diving or snorkeling in the sparkling aquamarine waters surrounding the island chain.

Keros was a major ancient site

The nearby island of Keros is well deserving of mention since the small, uninhabited island was once one of the major centers of the Cycladic civilization.

There have been important archaeological findings made in an early Cycladic cemetery there, including 100 marble figurines, some of which are now exhibited at the Archaeological Museum of Athens.

Gála Beach is a largely unknown beach on Ano Koufonissi.

Many people know the three islands known as Koufonissia (Ano Koufonissi, Kato Koufonissi, and Keros) for their spectacular beaches and their untouched natural character, as they are for the most part off the radar screen for mass tourism.

Fewer people have ever heard of Gála Beach, a true miracle of nature, which offers a rare spectacle due to its unique geomorphology.

Gála Beach is comprised of a massive white-washed rock which the waters of the Aegean have sculpted into intriguing shapes throughout the centuries.

This natural, rocky sculpture has created a tiny beach inside the very rock, creating a natural ”swimming pool” of sorts, which takes on some of the most spectacular colors, depending on the weather and the sunlight.

The waves which crash onto the outer side of the cliff somehow manage to come under it as well, and they flow through it to the other side, forming a pool full of sea water enclosed by the rocky ”walls” of the island’s terrain.

Due to the white sand of the area and the color of the rock, the water that comes into this natural pool sometimes takes on a shimmering, pearly tone which is also similar to the color of milk.

This is why the beach is called Gála, since ”gála” (γάλα) in Greek means ”milk.”
One can find Gala Beach by foot near the beach of Pori, and if he or she is lucky enough to find it without other visitors, then the experience is guaranteed to be unique and completely unforgettable!

United Resumes Washington DC-Athens Flights Earlier Than Planned

United flights Athens Greece
The carrier also operates flights to Athens from Newark Liberty International Airport and Dulles International Airport. Public Domain

United Airlines resumed flights between Washington DC and Athens, Greece on Sunday almost three weeks earlier than planned.

The flights, which will operate daily for the next several months, will be exclusively operated by the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner.

United previously planned to restart the service early in May, but the airline reportedly moved the start date up last fall as part of a shake-up to many of its transatlantic route plans. Throughout the route’s run this year, the US legacy carrier will offer nearly 95,000 seats.

The seasonal service originates from United’s hub, Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD), and is scheduled for a nine-hour, 45-minute journey to Athens International Airport Eleftherios Venizelos (ATH). The return flight is slightly longer, scheduled at 11 hours to account for the typical headwinds on westbound flights.

According to aviation data and analytics provider Cirium, the service will run once daily with flights each direction through October. Unlike last year, United will only deploy the 787-8 on the route.

With the flights beginning this week, the airline has a total of 33 flights scheduled for the remainder of the month, 17 from IAD to ATH and 16 for the return trip. The 787-8 accommodates 243 passengers in a three-class configuration. The United Polaris business class features 28 suites with fully lie-flat beds and privacy dividers.

United’s new nonstop flight to Athens from Chicago

In February, United Airlines announced that from May 23rd, it is launching a new nonstop flight from Chicago O’Hare International Airport to Athens.

Boeing 787-8s will operate the new seasonal route with a capacity of 243 passengers in a three-cabin configuration.

Adding a route from Chicago will mean United will have three Athens routes, as the carrier also operates flights from Newark Liberty International Airport and Dulles International Airport.

“United continues to have the largest and most diverse network across the Atlantic and we are excited to announce this further expansion of our route network from Greece to the U.S. with new summer seasonal service between Athens and Chicago O’Hare,” said Marcel Fuchs, United’s Managing Director International Sales.

United will go head-to-head with American Airlines on this new route, as American also flies between the two cities seasonally from May to October. American uses Boeing 787s for its services but deploys a larger variant than United and has a capacity of 285 passengers.

Athens is the only Greek city with nonstop flights from the United States, and seven routes connect it to the US. According to Cirium data, Athens is connected to Boston, New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia, Newark, Washington DC, and Atlanta.

Thousands Attend Greek Independence Day Parade in New York

Greek parade
Greek Independence Day Parade in New York. Credit: Elpidophoros / X

Thousands of Greek-Americans and others descended onto Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue in New York on Sunday, April 14th to watch the traditional parade and participate in the festivities to mark the anniversary of the Greek War of Independence against the Ottoman Turks.

American football star George Karlaftis, who just won his second Super Bowl with the Kansas City Chiefs, was the Grand Marshall of the parade alongside Stefanos Kasselakis, the leader of Greek Opposition party SYRIZA and Cyprus’ Minister of Transport, Communications, and Works Alexis Vafeades.

Greek Defense Minister Nikos Dendias who was due to attend on behalf of the Greek government left urgently for Athens as a result of escalating conflict in the Middle East. The parade was live-streamed on Facebook and Instagram.

Annual parade commemorating Greek heritage since 1938

The annual event, a celebration of Hellenic identity, culture, and achievements in the world, has been organized since 1938 by the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York, a non-profit organization committed to fostering an appreciation of Greek-American heritage and achievement.

“This significant occasion marks the commencement of Greece’s revolution for liberation from Ottoman Turkish rule on March 25th, 1821, emphasizing the enduring spirit of freedom cherished by the Greek American Community,” the organizers said in an announcement.

It was added that the parade also serves as a platform for the Greek American Community to express solidarity with the Republic of Cyprus and its people, as it commemorates the 50th solemn anniversary of the illegal Turkish invasion and continuing occupation of 37 percent of Cyprus.

“Turkey’s flagrant violation of international law and persistent disregard of UN resolutions prevented any serious attempt for a just and viable solution,” it commented.

Three-day celebratory event

The 2024 Greek Independence Parade Weekend celebrated the 203rd anniversary of the Greek War for Independence.

The three-day event kicked off on Friday, April 12th, with the Flag Raising ceremony at Bowling Green, attended by NYC Mayor Eric Adams, who had also welcomed the Greek American community at Gracie Mansion on Wednesday.

The Evzones of the Presidential Guard and the famous Mantzaros Philharmonic band of Corfu marched under heavy rain for the flag-raising ceremony.

“Raising the Blue and White Ensign of Greece and Cyprus reminds all of us that the struggle to defend freedom is never complete. We raise it with pride and exultation, for we know that it represents the blood and toil of our ancestors,” Archbishop Elpidophoros of America captioned photos from the event on Twitter.

The Independence Parade Gala at the Hilton Hotel in Midtown followed on Saturday, April 13th. This was hosted by the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York and was held prior to the festivities and majestic parade on Fifth Avenue, held between 64th to 79th Streets, on Sunday.

“In the course of our long history, Hellenism has experienced both triumphs and tragedies; it is our duty, in memory of our ancestors, to remember, to honor, to persist,” Greek Defense Minister Dendias told the gala attendees.

Greece on Alert, Calls for Restraint as Israel-Iran Crisis Escalates

Greece Israel Iran
Greece condemned Iran’s attack on Israel. Credit: Ministry of Foreign Affairs

The government in Greece issued a stern condemnation of Iran’s recent attacks on Israel, labeling them as a “significant escalation.”

Authorities are maintaining a state of alert and staying in close contact with Western allies, while Greek missions remain active in the wider region.

PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis expressed his condemnation of Iran’s attack and called for restraint to avoid a wider regional conflict.

“These are extremely unpleasant and very disturbing developments that are sparking a new conflagration in our wider neighborhood and of course in the Middle East,” Mitsotakis said.

“I want to start with the clear and unequivocal condemnation of the Greek Government and me personally against Iran’s attack on Israel,” he added in a message on social media.

Greece monitors Israel-Iran crisis

Greece “unequivocally condemns the attack against Israel” and calls for “restraint from all sides in order to avoid a wider regional conflict,” Pavlos Marinakis, a government spokesman, said on Sunday.

In response to the escalating situation, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis convened an emergency session of the National Security Governmental Council on Sunday afternoon to assess the security situation.

“During the meeting, the latest developments in the region after Iran’s attacks against Israel were discussed and the security situation was reviewed,” Marinakis said.

Diplomatic sources in Athens say that while an Israeli response is expected, its extent remains uncertain.

Two Greek frigates are positioned in the region with Hydra in the Red Sea and Lemnos engaged in UNIFIL operations in Lebanon. The European mission Aspides, in which the Hydra frigate participates, has effectively been upgraded but also presents increased risks.

Greeks have been advised to cancel non-essential travel to Israel and Iran. The Minister of National Defense Nikos Dendias interrupted his visit to the US and returned to Athens after the escalation in the Middle East. He was due to attend the parade in New York celebrating Greek Independence.

“I always say in my speeches that Greece is not blessed in its geographical location. We are in an area with crises that happen again and again,” Dendias said before departing for Athens.

Israel vows revenge against Iran

Israel has vowed to “exact a price” from Iran in retaliation for the large-scale aerial assault on the Jewish state this weekend. While some analysts expect Israel to respond, the timing and extent of that retaliation remains in question.

Iran launched more than three hundred drones and missiles against military targets into Israel on Saturday in what President Joe Biden described as “unprecedented.”

While President Biden has pledged an “ironclad” commitment to Israel’s security against Iranian threats, he has also made clear to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu the US will not participate in any offensive operations against Iran, a senior administration official told NBC News.

Related: Possible Conflict Between Israel and Iran Threatens To Engulf the Middle East

The Parallel Visions of Alexander the Great and Kapodistrias for Greece

Alexander the Great and Kapodistrias
Public Domain/Greek Reporter illustration

The efforts of Alexander the Great and the first President of modern Greece Ioannis Kapodistrias to employ Hellenic civilization for the good of humanity reflect the greatness of ancient Greece / Hellas.

By Evaggelos Vallianatos

Alexander accomplished so much so soon and so young that he rightly earned the honor of greatness. He was a hero and a genius. His mother Olympias tried to convince him he was the son of Zeus. Alexander loved and trusted his mother. He probably assured himself he was the son of Zeus. His hero, Achilles, was the son of the goddess Thetis.

But the young man loved Aristotle who tutored him in Homer, Greek history, politics, philosophy, and international affairs. In addition, Aristotle passed on to his pupil the enormous knowledge and respect he had for Homer, the teacher of the Greeks for millennia. He edited the Iliad of Homer for Alexander. He urged him to unite the Greeks and to eliminate the Persian danger. Alexander did both.

Alexander was inspired by Aristotle. The result was unprecedented in history. His general Ptolemaios / Ptolemy, who was also a student of Aristotle, became king of Egypt and materialized the dream of Aristotle. He built a Mouseion-university and a library in Alexandria. He opened the doors of these institutes for advanced studies to the best Greek minds. The enlightenment that emerged in Alexandria was astonishing. It made our world. Alexandria became the capital polis of civilization for several centuries in the Mediterranean. And that really was the legacy of Homer, Aristotle, and Alexander.

Alexander’s dream

Alexander the Great
Public Domain

The other dream of Alexander was to create a united ecumene, in effect a world society and government under the rule of reason. This interpretation of Alexander comes from a Greek living in the Roman Empire that had abolished Greek freedom, conquering Greece in 146 BC and making it a province of Rome. Plutarch was that voice. He was a Greek philosopher, prolific writer, and a priest of Apollo. He lived from about the second half of the first century to the first twenty of so years of the second century of our times. He served Rome but remained Greek.

Plutarch said that Plato, Aristotle, and other thinkers like the Stoic Zeno wrote and taught how to live in ideal cities but never translated their ideas into political reality. Alexander did.

He conquered Asia, but his purpose was more than warfare. He dressed like the Asians did. He tried convincing his officers to marry Persian women. He married a princess from Afghanistan. He also established dozens of Greek cities in Asia, all of them governed by justice and the rule of law, thus eliminating injustice in large regions of his empire. Plutarch argues correctly that the conquest of Alexander brought peace, justice, and civilization to Asia.

“[Without Alexander,] Says Plutarch, “Egypt would not have Alexandria, Mesopotamia would be without Seleucia, Sogdiana would not have Prophthasia, India would be without Bucephalia, and the Caucasus would be without Alexandria in the Caucasus. It was by living as citizens of these cities that the bad and unacceptable were extinguished. The lives of the citizens improved by familiarity with better ways of living.

Philosophers pride themselves in refining the brutal and boorish aspects of human nature. Alexander did what philosophers say they do. He succeeded in reforming the bestial nature of countless nations. He certainly is a great philosopher…. Alexander believed that the gods sent him to unite the world and create one commonwealth of equality and justice and civilization.”

Alexander was a revolutionary. In trying to reform his empire and add non-Greeks to Greek culture, he faced resistance from his Greek officers and the local elites in

Asia. After all, for the first time in history a conqueror abandoned violence as a governing principle. Alexander wanted to convince the vast majority of the conquered people he was their friend. He joined Europe and Asia by marriages, similar clothing, and the equal administration of justice and by founding Greek cities all over Asia so Asians could see the difference.

After Alexander the Great

Unfortunately, Alexander died young. He was barely 33 years old when he died in Babylon in 322 BC. Alexander and his successors ignored the rising power of Rome. This turned out to be a fatal error. Romans learned from the Greeks. However, the wars among Alexander’s successors weakened them and gave the Romans a free hand in the West. They dismembered Macedonia and Greece and, by the end of the first century BC, the main kingdoms of Alexander in Asia and Egypt were provinces of Rome.

The Roman Republic became Roman Empire, a vast territory that included Alexander’s empire and Europe. Some of the emperors were responsible leaders, but most of the remaining emperors were ruthless and corrupt.

One of them, Constantine, dumped Greco-Roman religion and culture for a messianic and semitic religion, Christianity. Such a violent policy turned Greco-Roman civilization upside down. The Roman government and the church in the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire, Constantinople, hired northern European barbarians to smash the Greek temples, burn libraries, and otherwise level the magnificent treasures the ancient Greeks had built.

The great Alexandrian Library went up in flames in the late fourth century. In 415, Christian monks tore to pieces Hypatia, director of a philosophy school in Alexandria. Her crime was teaching Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy.

Egypt and Greece belonged to the Eastern Roman Empire. The Western Roman Empire after the fourth century had fallen to the hands of European barbarians. This political division exacerbated divisions within Christianity, which blossomed to a civilization Schism of 1054. The anathemas hurled by the Pope and the Patriarch against each other, and their version of Christianity, brought the crusades against the Moslems and against East and West.

The fourth crusade of 1204, instead of going to Jerusalem to fight the Moslems, it turned its wrath against the Greeks. French, German, and Venetian troops captured Constantinople, thus inflicting a giant wound on the security of medieval Greece. Mongol Turks took notice. They took advantage of the Christian civil war. They kept attacking the Greeks. In 1453, they captured medieval Greece, which also exposed the West to the Mongol Turkish menace.

Greece suffered enormously from the loss of its freedom. Its best scholars left the country for Italy. They were loaded with the surviving manuscripts of ancient Greece. These Greek books were translated into Latin and started the Renaissance and made our world. In 1821, the Greek Revolution brought into being an independent state. In 1828, the European powers, Russia, England, and France, appointed Ioannes Kapodistrias as the first President of Greece.

Kapodistrias follows Alexander the Great’s steps

Alexander the Great and Kapodistrias parallels
Ioannis Kapodistrias, first leader of Greece (May 1827 – October 9, 1831). Credit: Public Domain

Kapodistrias, 1776-1831, was from the Greek island of Kerkyra in the Ionian Sea. He was educated in philosophy, law, and medicine at the University of Padua. He proved himself a genius in diplomacy. Tsar Alexander I of Russia was so impressed by Kapodistrias he made him Minister of Foreign Affairs. Kapodistrias served in that powerful post from 1816 to 1822. In 1822, he took a leave of absence and set up home in Geneva where he founded the Philomusse Society to raise funds for the Greek Revolution and expand the cause of European Philhellenism.

The rise to power of Kapodistrias disturbed the Chancellor of Austria Klemens von Metternich. He ordered Austrian diplomats and senior police officials to watch him. One of the senior military officers named Joseph Chervenka, interviewed people who knew Kapodistrias. Chervenka summarized the impressions of those who spoke to him about Kapodistrias. On February 13, 1816, he wrote a report and sent it to Metternich.

Chervenka said to Metternich that Kapodistrias had quite an agenda for making modern Greece into Hellas. He said:

“Kapodistrias expected all powers unanimously to agree in establishing an independent Hellas with inviolable borders. Hellas would be neutral, not allowing any foreign intervention or influence in the country. Her sole purpose would be to cultivate the sciences and enlightenment for the benefit of humanity. Hellas would send teachers, artists, and laws to all countries. The rulers of those countries would be educated in Hellas. And in concert with their Greek teachers, they would be able to rule their people with fairness and justice in the spirit of Hellenic civilization. The geographical position of Hellas between East and West would help her to maintain a balance of security and peace. Kapodistrias also insisted that humanity would declare Hellas a sacred country.”

There are differences in the visions of Alexander and Kapodistrias. These two Greeks dreamt about the power of Hellas to the rest of the world. One of the two, Alexander, had the power of the greatest king and emperor. His word was law. He created the largest empire the world has ever seen. He tried and to some degree succeeded to Hellenize the world, or at least, he put the first stone for an edifice of reason and civilization in a planetary governance. His premature death, however, put the brakes to his original idea for a better world.

A similar misfortune struck Kapodistrias. In 1828, he took over a tiny, impoverished state threatened by Turkey and barely tolerated by the “great” European powers: England, Russia, and France. England was the least friendly to the new state of Greece. It never wished to see an independent Greece. England occupied the Greek Ionian islands and had strategic ambitions for capturing Cyprus, then occupied by Turkey. Moreover, England kept in its national museum looted Parthenon treasures. England could barely stand the ambitious policies of Kapodistrias to create the foundations of an independent Greek state. Here was a well-educated Greek who had served as Russia’s chief diplomat. But even before Kapodistrias was appointed to be the foreign minister of Russia, he had created an independent and neutral Switzerland and had prevented the division of France after the defeat of Napoleon in 1815.

Moreover, Kapodistrias was a patriot who did not tolerate the influence by foreign powers. He established the Greek armed forces, schools, the statistical service, a bank and national currency, and taxation. This caused resistance among those Greeks who had large estates. But Kapodistrias favored the peasants and tried to eliminate the disparities in the countryside. He used his personal wealth to fund the government.

The British watched and supported the small-scale resistance to Kapodistrias. British government officials could not tolerate a free and independent Greece governed by such a talented politician. Kapodistrias was the best European diplomat of his age. In all likelihood, the British funded two Greeks from Mani, Peloponnesos, Constantine and George Mavromichalis, who assassinated Kapodistrias on September 27, 1831.

The model of Hellas by Alexander the Great and Kapodistrias

The efforts of Alexander the Great and the first President of modern Greece Ioannis Kapodistrias to employ Hellenic civilization for the good of humanity reflect the greatness of ancient Greece / Hellas.

Greece had the good fortune of becoming the lighthouse of the world. For several centuries it gave birth to science and civilization of unprecedented beauty, reason, justice, and virtue.

This good fortune came into being in the works of the epic poets Homer and Hesiod; the tragic poets Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides; historians Herodotos and Thucydides, the comic poet Aristophanes; philosophers / scientists who probed the heavens to such detail, that one of them, Democritus in the fifth century BCE, discovered the Atomic Theory and another, Aristarchos of Samos, in the third century BCE, proposed the Heliocentric Theory of the universe.

Euclid in late fourth century BCE and Archimedes in the third century BCE pretty much created mathematics. Archimedes also advanced mathematical physics and engineering. Still yet another scientist, Hipparchos, set the foundations of mathematical astronomy in the second century BCE in Rhodes. He also left his fingertips all over the Antikythera Mechanism, an immaculate geared bronze computer of genius, the progenitor of our computers.

Add to this extraordinary galaxy of intelligence and foresight, Aristotle, tutor of Alexander the Great and inventor of the science of zoology in the fourth century BCE, and you have lasting science and civilization power.

The Greeks lived in poleis (city-states) all over the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, “like ants or frogs in the sea and around a pond,” according to Plato.3 To make polis living enjoyable and tolerable and to protect themselves from each other and enemies, the Greeks invented political theory, democracy, jury courts, and laws published on acres of stone and marble for all to see.

They built magnificent temples to honor their anthropomorphic gods. They sculpted bronze and marble statues of the gods and handsome nude heroes, athletes, and dressed or naked women. They also shared the virtues of individuality, courage, the rule of law and justice, often democracy, science, technology, beautiful architecture and arts and crafts, theater, Panhellenic games, and festivals like the Olympics. And despite their conflicts, they created an admirable science-based civilization that became Western civilization.

The price for abandoning Hellas

However, the United States and the rest of the countries of the world have abandoned most of the virtues of the Greeks (democracy, equality, rule of law, science for the public good and the discovery of truth, and love of the natural world), with the result they are poisoning and damaging the planet and its ecosystems.

The worst result of such carelessness and hubris is climate change. It threatens civilization, humanity, and the planet. The main conclusion of the US Fifth National Climate Assessment, Nov. 14, 2024, warns:

“The more the planet warms, the greater the impacts. Without rapid and deep reductions in global greenhouse gas emissions from human activities, the risks of accelerating sea level rise, intensifying extreme weather, and other harmful climate impacts will continue to grow. Each additional increment of warming is expected to lead to more damage and greater economic losses compared to previous increments of warming, while the risk of catastrophic or unforeseen consequences also increases….

“The global warming observed over the industrial era is unequivocally caused by greenhouse gas emissions from human activities—primarily burning fossil fuels. Atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2)—the primary greenhouse gas produced by human activities—and other greenhouse gases continue to rise due to ongoing global emissions. Stopping global warming would require both reducing emissions of CO2 to net zero and rapid and deep reductions in other greenhouse gases. Net-zero CO2 emissions means that CO2 emissions decline to zero.”

But the most startling and devastating conclusion of the Fifth National Climate Assessment is that the US is beyond the charts. Its obsession with petroleum and petroleum-powered machines (cars, trucks, busses, ships, yachts, airplanes, leaf blowers, military fleets of airplanes and navies) has made the country extremely vulnerable to private greed, and to the forces of nature.

Ceaseless dumping in the atmosphere of unfathomable amounts of planet-warming gases are threatening the country with thermal death. “The things Americans value most are at risk,” says the Fifth National Climate Assessment. “More intense extreme events and long-term climate changes make it harder to maintain safe homes and healthy families, reliable public services, a sustainable economy, thriving ecosystems and strong communities… The United States has warmed 68 percent faster than Earth as a whole over the past 50 years.”

In addition, the United States and a few other countries possess nuclear weapons, the ultimate means of extinction. The intentional or accidental explosion of a single nuclear bomb is certain to cause dramatic and planetary damage and death. Nuclear war is unthinkable. It will destroy humanity, civilization, and the planet. It’s necessary, therefore, to abolish these evil weapons and find an alternative to the dangerous system of state and international governance.

A new renaissance

Neither Alexander nor Kapodistrias could have foreseen the moral abyss of the modern world. The idea of Hellas is still relevant to forestall the resurrection of dark age, or to slow down its spread all over the planet.

Kapodistrias knew his age of authoritarianism, official slavery, European colonization of the tropics, and monarchies was destined to continue warfare as the only means of resolving conflicts and protecting the selfish interests of the landed oligarchy and governing classes.

He thought that ancient Hellas in modern times could become the school for humanity. This thought was uppermost in his mind, but did not have the opportunity to translate it into a formal proposal. He hoped that Russia, England, and France would bless that idea by securing the territorial integrity and independence of this new country, resurrected Hellas. This country would do nothing else but cultivate the sciences for the enlightenment of humanity.

Kapodistrias’ proposal merits support and testing. Would a resurrected Hellas devoted to virtuous activities for the benefit of humanity make a difference? Could this Hellenic polis become the paradigm for the future of humanity and the planet? I would answer both questions in the affirmative.

If some ancient Greek books could trigger the Renaissance among the Arabs in the 8th century and among the Europeans in the 15th century, imagine what a country devoted to enlightenment and the public and environmental good what it could accomplish. The challenge is to convince the large powers of our time, the third decade of the 21st century (the United States, China, Russia, India, and the European Union), to embrace such a new idea and give it a try.

After all, except India and China, which were on the borders of Alexander’s empire, the European Union, the United States, and Russia own their existence to Hellenic civilization.

Evaggelos Vallianatos, Ph.D., is a historian and ecopolitical theorist. He studied zoology, and ancient and medieval Greek history at the University of Illinois. He earned his Ph.D. in modern Greek and European history at the University of Wisconsin. He did postdoctoral studies in the history of science at Harvard. He worked on Capitol Hill and the US Environmental Protection Agency. He taught at several universities. He authored hundreds of articles and seven books, including The Antikythera Mechanism: The Story Behind the Genius of the Greek Computer

Cruise Ship Cancels Santorini Visit Due to Overcrowding

Cruise ship Santorini
Waiting for the sunset on Santorini. Credit: Klearchos Kapoutsis, CC2/Wikipedia

A massive cruise ship that can carry thousands of guests announced over the weekend it is canceling its planned visit to Santorini due to overcrowding.

The Sun Princess, a cruise ship operated by Princess Cruises, has notified its guests that it will not be making a stop at the Greek island on upcoming voyages due to congestion.

In an email communication to guests, the company stated, “Please note that there is a change to our scheduled itinerary. Due to cruise ship congestion, we will no longer call to Santorini, Greece.”

The email elaborated that the anticipated situation would lead to significant overcrowding, detracting from the overall visitor experience.

“We apologize for the inconvenience and disappointment this change may cause,” the message conveyed.

Originally slated to visit Santorini on June 11, the 15-deck Sun Princess will now redirect its course to Chania, located on the southern island of Crete, as an alternative destination.

On June 11 four other ships are also scheduled for visit Santorini – Star Clipper, Costa Fascinosa, MSC Divina, and Odyssey of the Seas. When combined with Sun Princess‘ capacity of 4,300 guests, this could mean more than 17,000 cruise travelers visiting the island in a single day.

Specialist publication Cruise Hive reports that some travelers question why an itinerary may be originally planned only to be changed just weeks before sailing, when cruise lines may have known all along what ships are scheduled for a port on what date.

While cruise lines do plan itineraries far in advance, not every cruise line confirms visits at the same time. It may be that when Sun Princess was originally scheduled for the now-impacted itineraries, fewer ships were confirmed for Santorini, Cruise Hive adds.

Santorini overcrowding

Santorini, with a population of around 15,000, attracts millions of visitors annually. This translates to a significant imbalance, with some sources estimating over 1,300 tourists per resident.

The island sees frequent cruise ship arrivals, dislodging large numbers of tourists in a short span, overwhelming infrastructure and popular areas.

As Michael Ermogenis, the founding member of the “Save Oia” Campaign, wrote in Greek Reporter recently, two of the most familiar sights for those lucky enough to live on the cliffs of the Santorini caldera are the sunrise arrivals of large cruise ships and the sunset procession as they leave. Both are beautiful to watch.

But, as he noted the problem for the island (and the visitors), are not these events. It is what happens in between.

The problems begin as soon as these passengers get off their ships and set foot on the island. It’s a process which can take up to three hours during peak season, as everyone must be collected by local launches which can only carry only so many at a time.

These boats feverishly carry passengers to the old and new ports, as well as all the way to Oia. At the old port, visitors must wait their turn to take the chair-lift up to the main town, and this too can often take over an hour. Very few of them will brave climbing the three hundred steps into Fira on foot.

Before they have even arrived on Santorini, cruise passengers have been sold “excursions” for their few hours on this fantasy island. The vast majority of them will have bought an excursion that includes a “visit to Oia.”

Why? Because they have all seen the incredible photos of this magnificent village perched on the cliff face… but there is another reason. It’s free! Free that is, for the cruise lines, the tour operators, and the bus operators which make millions every year from exploiting the extraordinary beauty of this tiny, iconic village.

On the other side of the island, there are historical priceless ancient ruins, thousands of years old… but the cruise lines don’t like to mention Akrotiri, because it costs money to get in. Oia is free, leaving them with a far better margin on every excursion sold. In other words, the passengers are paying for something cruise lines and tour operators get for free.

The result is chaos at the ports and chaos in the buses, which are all trying to get to Oia on roads, Ermogenis says.

Cruise ship can host 4,300 passengers

Launched in 2024, Sun Princess holds the title of Princess Cruises’ largest ship ever built. With a gross tonnage of 175,500, it can comfortably host 4,300 passengers.

The ship offers over 2162 cabins, 29 restaurants and bars, Multiple pools, jacuzzis, a jogging track, and an outdoor movie screen to cater to those seeking leisure.

Sun Princess boasts unique architectural features. The Dome, a geodesic glass-enclosed structure inspired by Santorini, offers stunning ocean views, while The Sphere, a suspended central atrium, takes the ship’s social hub to a new level.

Related: Overtourism and the Sustainable Future of Hospitality in Greece

The Tragic Story of the Four Greeks Who Perished on the Titanic

Greeks titanic
The Titanic as it departed from the port of Southampton, on April 10, 1912. Source: Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain

April 15th marks the sinking of the Titanic. Each year, hundreds of different stories are related of the most famous maritime tragedy in modern history when many souls, including those of four Greeks, perished in the shipwreck.

It was on this day in 1912 that the Titanic, the largest British passenger liner ever constructed, sank in the North Atlantic Ocean after colliding with an iceberg during her maiden voyage from Southampton to New York City.

Of the estimated 2,224 passengers and crew aboard, more than 1,500 died, making it one of modern history’s deadliest commercial marine disasters during peacetime.

Another story, certainly less well-known and without the glamour of the world-famous film adaptations, is the tale of four Greek men whose fate is forever intertwined with that of the giant ship.

They were the only Greek passengers to sail on the Titanic.

Greeks who died on the Titanic dreamed of a better life in America

Greeks titanic
The bow of the wrecked RMS Titanic, as it rests on the ocean floor at a depth of more than 15,000 feet (4600 meters). Photographed in June 2004. Source: Wikimedia Commons/ Public Domain

Panagiotis Lymberopoulos, Vassilios Katavelos, Apostolos Chronopoulos, and Demetrios Chronopoulos all came from the same village, Agios Sostis in the Messinia region of the Peloponnese. The last two men were brothers.

Like many of the passengers, the four friends were young—the oldest one was only 33 years old—and they wanted to go to America in search of a better life.

Tragically, their dreams, like those of so many others who perished on that starry night, never materialized.

They all died in the most famous shipwreck in maritime history, and the bodies of the two brothers have never been found.

Lymberopoulos was the owner of a small factory in New York who had traveled back to Greece to visit his homeland for his son’s baptism.

Despite his wife’s warning, he decided to return to America after the baptism, and he took the Chronopoulos brothers with him.

Lymberopoulos was the only one who managed to be on one of the lifeboats since his knowledge of English helped him find his way to the deck.

Victims of Titanic shipwreck never forgotten in their hometown in Greece

However, the lifeboat Lymberopoulos was on was never found. The tragedy of his death was compounded by the fact that he had changed his ticket, along with Katavelos, so the four could travel together on the Titanic.

A small memorial erected outside the local church in their village in Messinia serves as the only memorial their families will ever have of the men.

greeks titanic
The memorial in Messinia.

It is also a small piece of the history of the Titanic disaster and an eternal reminder of the unforgiving sea.

Unknown victims lie buried with honors in Halifax, Nova Scotia

It is possible, however, that their remains lie buried at Fairview Lawn Cemetery in Halifax, Nova Scotia, not far from where many of the bodies of the Titanic victims washed ashore during the months that followed the tragedy.

One hundred and twenty-one victims of the RMS Titanic sinking are interred at Fairview— representing more Titanic victims than any other cemetery in the entire world.

Most of them are memorialized there with small gray granite markers with the name and date of death.

However, the occupants of one-third of the graves have sadly never been identified, and their granite markers contain just the date of death and marker number.

Cemetery surveyor E. W. Christie had laid out three long lines of graves in gentle curves following the contours of the sloping site of the area. By a strange coincidence, the curved shape of the graves suggests the outline of the bow of a ship.

Forensic excavations over the years have been able to give conclusive evidence of the previously-unknown occupants of the graves, including a child whose entire family had been killed in the wreck and an Irishman who had worked in the great boiler rooms of the enormous ship.

Related: New Titanic Footage Shows Wreck in ‘Highest-Ever Quality’

Burials With Fine Glass Goods Along Roman Road Found in France

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Burials With Fine Glass Goods
Archaeologists uncovered Roman burials with fine glass goods in France. Credit: C. Coeuret, Inrap

Archaeologists from the French National Institute for Preventive Archaeological Research (INRAP) recently dug up some ancient artifacts in Nîmes, France.

They found many old objects buried underground on Rue de Beaucaire. These treasures date back to when the Romans were ruling from about the 2nd century BC to the 2nd century AD.

In the past, Nîmes was called Nemausus and prospered as a Roman colony around the 1st century BC. It is situated where the flat land of the Vistrenque River meets the hills of Mont Duplan to the northeast, Montaury to the southwest, and Mt. Cavalier and Canteduc Knoll to the west.

In old writings, Nîmes is mentioned as dede matrebo Namausikabo, meaning “he has given to the mothers of Nîmes,” and “toutios Namausatis,” meaning “citizen of Nîmes.” Nemausus was the god worshipped by the local Volcae Arecomici tribe.

The city was well-planned, with streets running north to south and east to west, meeting at a central plaza called the forum. One building from that time that stands out is the Maison Carrée, a fancy temple built in the late 1st century BC, according to Archaeology magazine.

Romans prohibited burials within city limits

The recent digs on Rue de Beaucaire uncovered many burial spots, such as locations where people were cremated and then buried as well as spots where people were reburied following cremation. These graves were in special areas, showing that Romans didn’t bury people within their cities.

There were about fifteen graves found, mostly with cremated remains, but some had bodies buried whole. One touching find was the burial of a small child with a clay jug and lamp, showing how the Romans honored their dead with special items, as reported by Archaeology.

In antiquity, cremation was a common way to handle funerals. They would burn the bodies on pyres made from rocks or bricks or just in holes dug in the ground. After burning, they would gather the ashes and put them in graves near the pyre or nearby spots. People often buried tools such as grooming tools, pots, ceramics, and lamps with the dead.

Well-preserved Roman artifacts including glass vases

Archaeologists found many well-preserved glass vases. Some of these were used in special feasts called the refrigerium, during which people honored the dead. These feasts, led by female priests, usually involved drinking wine from these glass vases.

They also discovered a well buried under modern buildings. Even though that well is not empty, there’s a chance for more discoveries if they dig deeper into it later on.

The excavation site opened up for everyone on Saturday, April 13th. Archaeologists will be there to guide tours and show people the amazing discoveries found under the streets of Nîmes.