Writers in Greece
- Accommodations
- Meals
- Excursions & Activities
- Get to Know Your Destination
- Study Abroad Advisory of Student Risk
- Student Experience
Accommodations
During our program we will stay in central locations and in good quality A, B, or C class hotels (double occupancy rooms only). All rooms have air conditioning, TV, and a small refrigerator.
Students arriving early or staying after the program will need to make their own housing arrangements.
UC Davis reserves the right to change the accommodation location. Should this be necessary, we will arrange alternative lodging. Please note that elevators, air conditioners and other modern conveniences may not be available in all locations.
Meals
Breakfast will be provided by the hotels at all locations. Lunch and dinner are on your own. A few of the full-day field trips will include lunch. Note: If you are a vegetarian or vegan, you will find that traditional Greek cuisine offers a large variety of vegetarian and vegan dishes. Fruits and vegetables in Greece are wonderfully tasty and very fresh. A description of typical Greek food:
Breakfast
Greek breakfast, although an important start to the day, is not as heavy as its American counterpart. Most restaurants and host institutions on the program offer coffee or tea, then a variety of breads and rolls with butter, a spread of soft cheese, olives and tomatoes, boiled eggs, and perhaps a meat and cheese platter. A delicious breakfast dish: plain yogurt with honey and granola mixed-in, so refreshing before hot Mediterranean days.
Lunch
Lunch is usually served before the hottest part of the day as most places will close for afternoon rest. Some of the more common lunch options are souvlaki (skewered meat), gyros (roasted meat with tomatoes and onions inside a pita) or a large Greek salad (a block of feta cheese atop cucumbers, tomatoes, red onions, and kalamata olives). Vegetarian and vegan options are easily available with a variety of fresh vegetables grilled inside a pita with French fries on the side. Bakeries and small eateries and coffee shops also offer several inexpensive lunch options.
Dinner
Dinner is much later in the evening serving heavier pasta dishes like pastitsio (baked mac and cheese lasagna in cream sauce) or moussaka (eggplant casserole). A favorite vegetarian/vegan dish is tomatoes stuffed with rice and veggies! And of course, in true Greek fashion, finish off your meal with baklava or your favorite gelato.
Excursions & Activities
For a syllabus/activities schedule, please visit the Courses tab above.
During the program, we will be visiting some of the most important sites in Greece, including several UNESCO World Heritage Sites (UWHS). Past program excursions and activities have included:
While in Athens
- Acropolis: the Parthenon (UWHS)
- The Acropolis Museum
- The National Archeological Museum
- Temple of Poseidon in Cape Sounion
- The Oracle of Delphi: the site, stadium, theater, and museum (UWHS)
While in the Peloponnese
- The Archeological Museum of Nafplion
- Ancient Mycenae: the site, museum, and beehive tomb of Agamemnon (UWHS)
- The site of medieval Mystras near Sparta (UWHS)
- The castle of Palamidi
- The Nafplion Farmers’ Market
- The National Gallery of Athens: Nafplion Branch
While in Hydra
- Historical Archives and Museum of Hydra
- The Lazaros Koundouriotis Historic Residence
Please note: These activities and excursions are tentative and subject to change.
Get to Know Your Destination
Athens
Host of the 2004 Olympics, Athens, the capitol of Greece, is a metropolis of about 5 million people. In this ancient city several centuries of Greek history coexist. When you walk underneath the Acropolis, you will encounter not only ancient Greek ruins but also Roman sites, Ottoman buildings, and medieval Byzantine churches. Farmers' markets with fresh fruit, traditional coffee shops, and open flea markets give way to smart boutiques and expensive restaurants. And when you raise your eyes to the Attic sky, the Parthenon will stare back at you from its perch on the "sacred rock" of the Acropolis.
During our time in Athens, we will take field trips to the Acropolis and visit the New Acropolis Museum and the National Archeological Museum; the latter houses some of the most important findings from sites all over Greece. We will also go by private bus to the Temple of Poseidon in Cape Sounion and enjoy dinner at one of the Athens Riviera beaches. From Athens, we will travel to the slopes of Mount Parnassus and to Delphi where we will experience the ancient oracle, dedicated to the god Apollo, and enjoy a traditional lunch with local delicacies.
Hydra
From Athens, and from the port of Piraeus, we will ferry to Hydra to spend a few days in one of Greece's most beautiful islands, famous for its preserved traditional architecture and its gorgeous views. Hydra, a rocky island in the Aegean Sea and the site of a prehistoric Mycenaean settlement, became famous in the 19th century when its wealthy merchants spent huge fortunes in the 1821 Greek revolution against the Ottoman Empire. Their fleet and participation were determining factors in the revolution's success. While in Hydra, we will visit the Historical Museum of Hydra and the Koundouriotis Historic Residence, a mansion of a well-known local family that gave money, ships, and captains to the Greek revolution. An interesting feature of the island is that Hydra allows no cars on its narrow, cobblestone streets, so people walk, take small caiques (wooden boats) to the different villages, or ride mules and donkeys.
The Peloponnese
From the island of Hydra, we will take a short ferry ride to the Peloponnese, one of the most interesting places in Greece. Olive and citrus groves, tall mountains, rivers, fertile valleys, and a breath-taking coastline contribute to the beauty of the land while the sites of ancient Sparta, Corinth, Argos, Mycenae, and Olympia are only some distance away from the medieval sites of Mystras and Monemvassia, remnants of Byzantium's glory. Ottoman mosques in small traditional towns as well as Venetian and Frankish medieval structures recall the long and complex history of the Peloponnese.
While in the Peloponnese, we will spend a few days in the city of Nafplion (or Nauplion). Nafplion became the first capitol of Greece after the country's liberation from the Ottoman Empire. A coastal city on the Gulf of Argos in the Peloponnese, Nafplion is one of the most beautiful and architecturally interesting areas in Greece. Nafplion's beauty lies in its 19th century neoclassical houses, the Venetian castle complex of Palamidi, Akronafplia, and Bourtzi, its mosques, and beautiful shoreline. During our stay in Nafplion, we will visit the site of Mycenae with its exquisite museum and the beehive tomb of Agamemnon. We will also travel to the site of Nemea and its stadium and meet with archeologists currently excavating; on a different day we will visit ancient Messini, one of the most magnificent—and lesser known—sites in the Peloponnese.
We will also drive to the site of Mystras, a medieval castle-city on Mount Taygetos, above ancient Sparta. Though originally built by Franks, Mystras became a stronghold of the Byzantine Empire—the last emperor of Byzantium was crowned there. Konstantinos XI Palaeologos, or "the Marble King,"—the stuff of legends that remind us of King Arthur and Camelot—is believed to have died when Constantinople, the seat of the Byzantine Empire, fell to the Ottoman Empire in 1453. Like Meteora, Mystras is another World Heritage Site. After exploring the extensive grounds of the site, we will visit the monastery of Pantanassa and meet with the nuns who maintain it.
Back to Athens
The last few days of the class will be spent in Athens.
- New York Times Coverage – Greece
- U.S. Relations with Greece
- Visit Greece
- Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Sports
Study Abroad Advisory of Student Risk
Participation in this UC Davis Study Abroad program requires travel to and extended living in a foreign location(s) abroad. UC Davis Study Abroad endeavors to reduce and mitigate risk wherever possible. However, the environments and risks associated with living in these locations are substantially different than those found during a regular course of study at UC Davis. All participants must download and review the following information prior to departure. Any questions should be directed to the Program Coordinator.
Student Experience
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