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General Program Description
2008
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Education Abroad in ATHENS
Spend Spring Semester 2008 in
Greece
Learn first hand about the birthplace of Western civilization
Greece. The name conjures up images and ideas that have become part of the fabric of Western civilization.
The myths and legends of the Greeks inhabit the imagination: Theseus slaying the Minotaur in the great
Labyrinth at Minos' palace on Crete, the abduction of Helen and the Trojan War, the wanderings of Odysseus.
Places and monuments call to mind ancient gods: Athena and the Parthenon, Zeus and Olympia, Apollo and Delphi.
Events that shaped the world took place here: Marathon, Thermopylae, and Salamis--great battles of the Persian
War, the birth of Athenian democracy, and the birth of Alexander the Great. Tragedy and philosophy, history
and rhetoric, all had their beginnings in Greece.
Since 1989 over 270 Penn State and other CIC students have studied
Greek history and culture in the shadow of the Parthenon. In courses
covering such areas as Greek archaeology and art, the origins of philosophy
and rhetoric, Greek drama and poetry, Greek religion, Greek warfare,
the history of sport and athletics in Greece, the Byzantine and Ottoman
Empires, and modern Greek language and customs, these students have
climbed ancient walls, walked in ancient temples, studied ancient texts,
and immersed themselves in the fountainhead of Western culture while
they have explored a thriving, modern, exciting European society. Their
course work has taken them to many of the major historical sites in
Greece: Sparta, the home of Helen and training ground of the most formidable
warriors of ancient Greece; Mycenae, the fortified citadel of Agamemnon
where fabulous riches were discovered just over a century ago; Knossos,
the labyrinthine palace of the Minoans on the island of Crete, source
of legends and home to bull-vaulting athletes of old; Olympia, site
of the first organized sporting contests in the Western world; Delphi,
where kings and conquerors gave gifts of thanks to Apollo, and where
the Pythian priestess delivered her oracles, perhaps after breathing
magical vapors from deep within the earth; and of course, Athens, where
Pericles brought democracy into its Golden Age, where Socrates spoke
with those who gathered in the Agora, and Plato taught in the gardens
of the Academy. Virtually all previous participants agree that there
is no better way to learn about the history and culture of this extraordinary
country than to spend a semester in this program. It is truly a once-in-a-lifetime
experience.
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The Acropolis of Athens
The Acropolis from the South
The Parthenon
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