Final Corinth Blog
by jfriesenWhile I am writing Steve is packing up our bags for the next leg of the trip. This morning we are supposed to fly to Samos. This is an island just off of Turkey. I am looking forward to being on an island. It has gotten very hot here and getting to the beach is a challenge witihout a car. I am not sure what Samos will be like. It is Friday and we will stay there over the weekend and then go to Turkey for a few days and then be on our way home.
I hope I will be able to write about Samos and Ephesus in the blog, but I don’t know what type of Internet connection I will have.
I was hoping on this last blog to have an update to the kiln and a picture of the finished kiln. Unfortunately, I was not able to make it out there yesterday and so I do not have a picture. I did go and talk with Paniotis and Maria to say goodbye. Paniotis gave me some corpozi (watermelon). He is always feeding me something when I stop by. Here is Theo having some stuffed zuccini that he made one time when we stopped by!
Yesterday he told me about finding coins. He has always been an antique coin collector. As a child he learned that after the rain he could go and pick out the coins that came to the surface. He has collected over a thousand coins. While he was collecting he also learned about them and how to clean them. Someday he may set up a coin museum in back of his pottery store.
He explained why he thought that was different than antiquities theft. Antiquities theft is like what I wrote about the tombs being looted. It is not like Paniotis finding and collecting coins. People actually search for treasure and then they sell it for LARGE amounts of money to dealers who eventually sell the pieces for millions of dollars to museums. This has happened to a lot of very important items from Iraq and has been happening with items from Greece. Many countries are very concerned about losing evidence of their rich histories. Recently there has been a crack down on museums to prove where they got certain items and to return what they cannot prove to the countries that they came from. You may have seen some of that news in the papers.
Here in Corinth there was a large theft of items directly from the museum. Because of good record keeping the curator of the museum was able to clearly identify all of the pieces that were missing and they were eventually returned to the museum, but this does not always happen. All of these items are now on display in a special part of the museum. 
There is a big difference between collecting things that you find in your own area and keeping them and searching for things to sell for huge amounts of money. In the United States in many places this is an issue for Indian Tribes because people have found and collected things from their ancestors that have become valuable.
Here are a few stray dog pics to finish out the blog for today!





There are many stray dogs wandering around Corinth and when I visited Athens I saw even more. These dogs seem pretty friendly, but they are very skinny and just go around freely. They also sleep all of the time. When we were first here there was a scandal because one of the stray dogs was found killed. No one knows who killed the dog, but they say that some of the people in the villages do not like these stray dogs. Sometimes they set out poisons for them to eat and Norma has almost died because of this.
Here is a picture of a birthday card sent by my sister who did not even know about Melos. I thought it was perfect!
This morning I went to visit an orphanage here with a friend who is an artist. The orphanage was started by a group called Childern’s Ark. He is helping the kids there to create a sculpture. It will be a column in two halves. It starts with a form that the artist, John, created lined with clay. Then the kids came and decorated the clay by pressing toys and their hands into it. Then cement was poured into the mold and after two days of drying the clay will be removed and the columns will be done and ready to put up. I wish I had a picture of the final project, but here are some pictures of the orphanage and the process of making the sculpture.


I promised you more bones today and I am going to do what I said. We went for a visit to a very special place today called Kenchreai. It is not a place like Corinth that a lot of people have heard about and that has a museum. There are no tour busses visiting here, but there are some fascinating things happening.
Joe Rife and Tom Tartaron, archaeologists from the United States are working with the Greek Archaeological Service on an ancient graveyard. In this particular area there are lots and lots of tombs. Each tomb has several big chambers for burial and smaller niches in the top where ashes or urns can be placed for cremation. The problem here is that there are lots of looters who dig around to find the tombs and then steal anything of value from them. There is a lot of money in selling ancient finds which sometimes even end up in museums. These theives find pots and jewelry, but leave the bones. Archaeologists also like to find these things of value, but they are even more interested in what they can learn from the tombs, so even though they don’t like the looting, they can go in after the looters and clean up what is left and make sense of it. The looters are not interested in the bones, so they leave them and lots of other evidence of what the tombs were like originally.
Would you like to go down this hole? It would not be my first choice of an activity, but since I was with other people I went down. All over this hillside there are underground tombs. Joe and others think that people built the tombs for themselves, their families. their descendents and and possibly for servants working for them. Right now they have only been allowed by the government to dig out the tombs that had already been looted. Next year they will be allowed to do their own excavation and hopefully find tombs that are fully intact.
Once you step down through the hole it is pretty nice inside the tomb. This tomb was painted all over the inside with beautiful designs. One part of it used a paint that was very rare called Egyptian blue. Most of the tombs were plastered and left white.
There were some really nice people working on the tombs that invited us to eat lunch with them. I asked them if they ever saw ghosts and unfortunately they had no good ghost stories for me. However, they did tell me two stories that are unique to their dig. They also had a mysterious discovery while I was there.
Story 2: This goat head is their mascot. If any of them gets a scratch that bleeds they must rub some blood on the mascots head or else, it is said, it will cloud over and rain and they will not be able to swim in the beautiful beach in the afternoon. This actually did happen to one of the girls who works there, so they do have some proof that it is true. The site that they are working on is up on a cliff, but right down below is VERY beautiful beach and EVERY afternoon after working hard all day they get to go swimming. Maybe it is not so bad being an archaeologist and climbing in those holes and digging up bones. 


The walls of the basin and the stairs were covered with plaster originally. This picture shows some of the remains of the plaster.
Plateia is your Greek word today. It means the central part of a city. In Kansas City they have “the plaza” which is a similar idea. Here in Old Corinth it is where three roads come together and there are a bunch of restaurants and bars right there where people congregate. There are also two small grocery stores and quite a few shops selling items for tourists. 

Saturday evening we wandered down to the plateia at about 7 pm to see what was going on. The first thing we see every time we walk down to the plateia is the columns. These are the columns of a temple called the Archaic Temple built for Apollo. They are huge! I am including a picture of some people next to them (someone taking wedding pictures) so that you can see how huge the columns are. 
First we visited with Paniotis who was in the first shop where he sells pots that he has painted. You can see is shopon the left in the picture. These are replicas of ancient pottery and are not made in the same way as in ancient times, but are souvenirs that a lot of people buy. He offered us apricots (which are in season right now) and so we sat and ate some apricots with him. He told us that there was a race coming to town and that the finish line was just down the street and it should be coming any time, so after that we wandered down the street and found a place at a restaurant where we could sit outside and wait for the runners to come.

Luke asked me how they made boats. I decided to write just a little about the Athenians because their boats (triremes) were very important to them. In the Classical period there was no state of Greece like there is now. Instead there were cities that had their own governments called city-states. Athens was one of them. They were very powerful because of their triremes. I am putting a timeline back in so you can look at what time I am talking about. It was a long time ago. Remember that on the side of the blog there is a link where you can download this same timeline in Excel format and change it or add to it. If you find out something that should be added please let me know! 
An orange tree-right now there are lots of orange trees with fruit around old Corinth. When I was here before there were a lot of pomegranate trees full of pomegranates. Right now you can also see grapevines that are full of grapes (green ones), but they aren’t ripe yet. We are eating lots of fresh cherries and apricots.
While walking to the dig yesterday I was thinking about how it can be that so much stuff is left for archaeologists to dig up. It seems like our houses are so solid that it is hard to imagine them falling apart. How do you think that a house, like the picture on the left becomes a dig like the picture on the right? 
One other picture I took was of a place called the Demeter Sanctuary. This was a site that was excavated many years ago. It is up on Acrocorinth. The archaeologists found lots of small dining rooms, sort of like a restaurant, but this was a special one where they came to sacrifice to a god (Demeter). They ate on couches lying down. Maybe my friend Al can write a bit more about it, since that is about the extent of my knowledge! 
This morning I went out to watch the dig for a while and I found out something REALLY important. The archaeologists are NOT looking for pots, statues, bones or inscriptions! They are looking for information and I have proof. In one of the trenches there was this pot sticking up from the ground. My first impulse would be to dig it right out so that I could see the whole pot…but not the archaeologists! They dig by stratas or layers. I waited and waited for them to get back to the pot, but an hour later they were still digging the same inch layer of the trench! They may find the top of something really curious, but they dig the whole layer and then the next and so on to see what is happening all around the item before coming to where the item can be removed!
Here is a coin in the ground. I don’t think I would even recognize it and pick it up, but the archaeologists and workers at the dig know what they are looking for. When a coin is found it looks like this:
When a coin is found it is brought into the museum and a card is filled out with information about it and then it is given to a coin specialist. He cleans the coin and fills out more information about what type it is and when it was made. Here is the SAME coin after it is clean!
The other thing that can help to predict the date is the pottery that is found. Archaeologists have learned more and more about pottery and now it is even more helpful than coins in dating what they are working on. Even just shards of broken pottery can help because the materials and types of pots from different centuries were different.











Our friends here have a daughter who is 2 1/2. She agreed to show me some of her toys. Here is a picture of her doll. She also has a stroller that you can see in the bottom right side of the picture. She put her doll into it, but only for a second and I missed the picture.
She also has a toy cell phone. It makes different noises when you press the buttons. Her dad explained that here in Greece you can get just about all of the same toys that you have in the United States. They may play more soccer than in the US, but less basketball. They love Play Station and other video games.
This week they are beginning to set up for a huge holiday that is coming at the end of June. One of the things that is already active is the carnival. The big attraction is the bumper cars, which I have heard they drive differently than most of us would. We think that the whole idea of bumper cars is bumping into each other. I have been told that here they try NOT to bump into each other and just drive in circles!

Babies had rattles.
This is a picture of a tiny chair, a tiny dog and a top (you know the kind that spins). This top is missing some parts, but was painted hot pink when it was new!
Susie asked about “the picture with the children facing each other, holding on to the front person’s waist. The two middle children have their arms held up like an arch and another looks like she/he is going under the arch”. Wasn’t that cute! They were the first grade students. The game that they played went like this. First two students formed an arch and all of the other students lined up and started going through the arch in a circle while they sang a song. When they got to a certain part the arms of the bridge went down and caught one of the kids. The bridge then asked them which side they wanted to go on. They said right or left (I think… it was Greek and I don’t know the words!) and then the bridge let them join. After all of them had been caught and chosen a side they played a tug of war where each side of the arch pulled their direction. I guess the winners were those who pulled the others the farthest??? I liked that one.
The other game “with one child in the middle and the others walking in a ring around him/her was a little hardert to figure out. They were also singing something and somehow a different person was chosen to be in the middle and the one in the middle went and joined the ring that was singing.
The Alien play had a script to it that the teacher had and so I am pretty sure that there is one “official” ending, but I think it would be a great idea to rewrite the play (or to write it as a story) with a different ending.