In the Footsteps of Galileo

August 4, 2009

Portrait of Galileo Galilei

Portrait of Galileo Galilei

Did you know it is the 400th anniversary of Galileo’s discovery of the telescope? I am very excited to be escorting this unique trip with Smithsonian Journeys which will take us through the major landmarks where Galileo lived, studied, and wrote his most landmark achievements. Leading us is an expert in communicating the wonderment of science to all types of audiences – popular Harvard scientist, David Aguilar.

Some highlights include Venice’s Murano Glass Factory to learn about the art of glass-making and see where Galileo obtained the very glass used in his telescope lenses. Later we are off to an evening of stargazing in Padua from the place where Galileo first discovered Jupiter’s moons, telling him more of the nature of orbiting planets in our solar system and directly contradicting established beliefs that everything revolved around the Earth. In Florence, we’ll visit where the great astronomer’s theories were first attacked from the pulpit in Santa Maria Novella, the city’s first great basilica and principal Dominican church. And in Arcetri, we’ll enjoy stunning views and glimpse the Villa il Gioello, where the persecuted scientist spent the final years of his life.

Off to a fascinating voyage of discovery and we still have a few spots left – please join us!

October 11-18, 2009, with Smithsonian Journeys

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CET Teams Up with Smithsonian Journeys

July 30, 2009
Student group in Beijing

Student group in Beijing

CET is excited to announce a new avenue for high school students looking for unique study abroad opportunities for 2010. CET has now teamed up with Smithsonian Journeys and will offer study programs in Spain, Italy, and China for 2010.

CET Academic Programs is a private study abroad organization based in Washington, DC that has been designing and administering innovative educational programs abroad since 1982. CET is known for their high academic standards, innovative approaches to teaching and careful student management. Their programs integrate students into their overseas communities and lead them to create lasting relationships with their local hosts. Staffed by over 40 full-time employees in the US and abroad, CET currently sends around 1000 US students abroad annually.

Smithsonian Journeys will be offering Smithsonian Studies Abroad programs in Italy, Spain, and China summer programs geared specifically to high school students looking to take advantage of the benefits of studying abroad programs.

Students in Avila, Spain

Students in Avila, Spain

These programs will include;

Rigorous courses of study led by highly qualified teaching staff.

All programs feature a language component, cultural explorations, sightseeing, and weekend excursions.

Student accommodations feature modern facilities, internet service, most meals, and a dedicated full-time residential staff.

More about the programs;

• Florence, Italy –Renaissance Treasures

Florence offers an ideal location for students to study Italy’s rich artistic and cultural legacy. Surrounded by brilliant art and architecture, students will be uniquely immersed in contemporary Tuscan life with many opportunities to practice their language skills.

• Avila, Spain – Life in a Medievil Walled City

Located halfway between Madrid and Salamanca, medieval Avila is recognized as one of Spain’s most distinguished centers of learning. Students will strengthen existing Spanish skills during a comprehensive cultural course at the University of Salamanca.

• Beijing, China – The Heart of Imperial and Modern China

The Beijing program focuses on China’s extraordinary past and present. Students will reside at China’s top-rated Capital Normal University, located just outside of Beijing. Students will study Chinese politics, economics, history, and environmental policies, and gain a foundation in Chinese language.

To learn more, visit www.smithsonianjourneys.org

Also visit CET’s website to learn more here: www.cetacademicprograms.com

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Pompeii, Herculaneum and Mt. Vesuvius

March 26, 2009

 

Karl Brullov, The Last Day of Pompeii (1830-33)

Karl Brullov, The Last Day of Pompeii (1830-33)

In just two short days the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum lay in ruins and partially covers in a thick layer of volcanic ash.  In AD 79 Mt. Vesuvius erupted and caught the citizens of both by complete surprise.  Now excavated and a remarkable sight to behold, one can envision the likes of what these cities might have been in their prime.   Bustling city-towns of trade, large agoras and markets, amphitheaters, forums and baths where frescos and unique tile work still remain today.

The area today stands as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and has become one of the most visited location in Italy.  The region around Pompeii, the Amalfi Coast, is dotted with quaint pastel colored villages that scale volcanic cliffs and are surrounded by turquoise seas.  Positano and Amalfi are two of the areas fascinating towns, situated along the beautiful Mediterranean waters.  Sorrento is yet another seaside gem which was once a cherished retreat of poets like Byron and Keats.

Ruins of a forum in Pompeii

Ruins of a forum in Pompeii

Smithsonian Journeys offers a unique tour to this area that is unmatched.  Tour the archeological sites of Pompeii and Herculaneum and witness their story, walk the sun drenched streets of seaside towns, take a tour of Naples and its inner old city, and take in a wealth of information from Study Leader Federico Poole, an archeologist who has worked on a variety of sites in the Campania region.  Stay in four-star accommodations in Naples with views of the Castel dell’Ovo and the Mediterranean.

 

To find out more about this tour, please visit Smithsonian Journeys website for full itinerary, accommodations and tour pricing here

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Across Russia by Train

March 11, 2009
tsx-lisa-tilley-213 The Trans-Siberian Express

Completed at the end of the 19th century, the Trans-Siberian Railway allows adventurous travelers to journey 6,000 miles across Russia’s great expanse. Smithsonian Journeys and Academic Travel Abroad offer a unique travel experience in 2009 aboard the newly-renovated, luxury Golden Eagle Express, traveling from the enigmatic Russian Far East and its legendary outposts to Moscow’s Red Square, crossing eight time zones and two continents.  Along the way stopping in remote outposts to learn about the fascinating peoples and cultures of Siberia and Mongolia, visit museums, and enjoy a traditional meal in a private ger (tented home). Exclusive lectures by historian George Munro highlight Russian history from before the Romanovs to the present. Even the most experienced travelers will be spellbound by this special journey. Click here to read more…

The Trans-Siberian Expert:

George Munro

George Munro

George Munro is Professor of History at Virginia Commonwealth University. He received his Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is the recipient of several Fulbright grants, fellowships, and distinguished service awards. George has lived and studied in the former Soviet Union and served as Study Leader for many Smithsonian Journeys.

In a recent interview, Dr. Munro reflected on train travel in Russia:

“For a century and a half trains have been one of the important means of transportation in Russia. Railroads figure largely in Russian literature-see Anna Karenina! Railroad workers and factories producing equipment for the railroads played a critical role in Russia’s revolutions in the early 20th century. From train windows one glimpses some of the most beautiful Russian scenes as well as the disadvantaged areas that no country deliberately shows its visitors. The view from the train combines a little bit of everything in Russia. To actually live on a train while seeing Russia is a real treat.”

Learn more about this unique adventure here

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presented by Smithsonian Journeys
and Academic Travel Abroad


Ballooning over Egypt with Smithsonian Journeys

March 5, 2009

 

A view of where the desert meets the greens of the Nile basin.

A view of where the desert meets the greens of the Nile basin.

Last Sunday, I was on the Nile with the Smithsonian Journeys “Egyptian Odyssey” tour group. It had already been an exciting day since five of us started the morning with a hot air balloon ride over the Valley of the Kings. Delightful. Then the whole group toured Karnak Temple together, led by our guide Jihan Hussein. Magnificent!  This was my fourth time through Karnak and I never cease to be dazzled by it. Then we spent the afternoon cruising upstream on the Nile on the M/S Tamr Henna toward the Esna lock.

The tour is over now and I am relaxing with friends in Cairo. This latest Egyptian Odyssey group was, I have to say, quite wonderful. Despite being focused on Pharaonic Egypt, they were very curious about contemporary culture.   In the short couple weeks in this country, they started to really “get” modern Egypt. During the

Aloft over the Valley of the Kings

Aloft over the Valley of the Kings

 last few days of the tour, many of them expressed surprise, satisfaction, even joy at realizing how rich and varied is the culture of this crazy, gritty, delightful place.

When you first get under the surface a new culture, there is always a little bit of that feeling Howard Carter must have had when he first looked into the tomb of Tutankhamun.  “Yes,” he is reported to have replied to Lord Carnavon’s eager queries, “I see wonderful things.”

Andrew Simon
Tour Manager
Smithsonian Journeys Egyptian Odyssey


Vietnam: My Experiences

February 9, 2009

 

vietnam-istock_000001893968medium1I first visited Viet Nam in 1994 as a new employee of ATA and then again leading Smithsonian Study Tours’ first tour to country the following year.  Since then, I’ve returned to graduate school, studied Vietnamese language, history and culture, and even started work on a doctoral dissertation examining border trade between China and Viet Nam.  In all that time, I’d never actually made it back to Viet Nam.  I’d come close – Cambodia, Thailand, even looked over into Vietnam from the Friendship Gate close to Pingxiang, China, but I hadn’t been able to make it back for nearly 14 years. 

Finally, in October, 2008, I was able to make the trip.  People who’ve traveled there a lot told me I wouldn’t recognize the place, and based on my experience in China, where I frequently visit, I was expecting a complete transformation.  I was very pleasantly surprised.  To be sure, there were changes – the ride from the airport into Hanoi at midnight was along an elevated highway, crowded at the time with motorcycles overflowing with flowers headed to the wholesale flower market.  14 years ago, the road to the airport was at places unpaved and meandered through villages and farms.  There are now skyscrapers in Hanoi, mixed in with the elegant old French colonial buildings.  But it’s still recognizable as Hanoi.  Unlike their counterparts in Beijing, the Vietnamese haven’t torn down the vast majority of their city and replaced it with a hodgepodge of oddly shaped, hyper-modern buildings, or row after row of identical apartment buildings.  The old quarter looks very much as it did when I first explored it:  chaotic and colorful.  There are more cars on the road, and many, many more motorcycles, but it still feels like Hanoi. 

The biggest change I noticed was in the people.  Part of what I loved about Viet Nam when I first visited was the people  — friendly, smiling, welcoming.  They’re still that way, thankfully, but now there’s a sense of optimism and confidence that I didn’t detect before.  People in their 20s and early 30s have grown up and come of age in a period of relative openness and unprecedented economic growth, and they seem to have the feeling that anything is possible.  In the early 1990s, there was a lot less certainty.  Doi Moi had just begun, and no one was sure what would happen.  They seemed tentative, wide-eyed toward the outside world.  No more.  At least in the places I visited – admittedly all very much on the beaten track – people were hip, connected, well-informed and cosmopolitan.  I, being none of those things, felt a little out of place!

14 years ago on my first trip to Viet Nam, I received no fewer than 3 proposals of marriage from young women (none of them serious, but then again they probably weren’t completely unserious) who foresaw that their lives in Viet Nam would be bleak; this year I received none.  I like to think that this is not (only) because I am old, fat and generally unattractive but rather because the Vietnamese themselves like where they are and where they are headed.

Chris Roper
Senior Program Manager

Academic Travel Abroad 

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Smithsonian Journeys: Insider’s Florence

November 19, 2008

The Duomo of Santa Maria in Florence
The Duomo of Santa Maria in Florence

The Smithsonian Journeys Insider’s Florence tour is coming up in March, 2009. I am anticipating a successful program full of behind-the-scenes visits, memorable experiences and special access to private homes and gardens.  We will have special guest lectures, access to the restoration laboratory of the Uffizi and a private visit to the Uffizi and Vasari Corridor.
 
Florence was the birth place of the Renaissance, the city that gave us Dante, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Galileo, Toscanelli, Gucci, Pucci and many more artists, inventors, designers, and geniuses that it is fair to say the world would be immeasurably poorer and less beautiful without their efforts.

We all have our images of Tuscany in our minds: for some it’s the magnificent art, silent hill towns, gorgeous leather bags and shoes and handsome people. For others the enduring charm of Tuscany is in a relaxing glass of red wine, in the hills that look exactly as they did when Leonardo painted them, and in the waiter who’s a dead ringer for Lorenzo de’Medici.

Yet for many it is the simple, neat line of cypress trees that crown hill tops or run along roadsides like so many exclamation points that best defines Tuscany . However one approaches Tuscany, the values evoked are beauty and perfection.

A Chianti vineyard

A Chianti vineyard

Many travelers are seduced as you cannot fail to be by the picturesque landscape and the beauty that man created so much so that some settle here permanently.  That’s what happened to me, I intended to stay in Tuscany for 2 years, and that was 19 years ago.  Travelers have been coming to this region ever since the Middle Ages, to learn, to see and understand.  In the Renaissance, Tuscany served as a haven for humanist scholars, inventors, writers and artists. In our generation, it was first the English, then the Germans, Swiss, and finally the Americans  who descended on Tuscany, soaking up the sun, enjoying the food and adopting the Italian way of life.   
 
Take a week and live life in Florence; walk in the footsteps f Michelangelo and the Medici, and learn why the Renaissance was born in Florence. I hope to see you in March.

Elaine Ruffolo

Study Leader – Insider’s Florence  

Smithsonian Journeys

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Travel to Vienna for with Academic Travel Abroad

November 10, 2008

 

Christkindlmarkt (advent market) in front of the town hall of Vienna

Christkindlmarkt (advent market) in front of the town hall of Vienna

Visiting Vienna in December is a way to recapture the feelings and impressions of Christmas I felt as a child.  In December darkness falls quite early, but the sparkling lights and magical objects of the Christkindlmarkts and throughout Vienna itself made my eyes widen in excitement and my heart glow in anticipation.  December offers the pleasure of coming into a warm Viennese coffee house from chilly outdoors to order an elegant pastry or a delicious Apfelstrudel with one of the many coffee selections offered.  Vienna is quite serious about coffee.

It’s so easy to get about the city from the Hotel de France, located right on the Ringstrasse.  You can walk so easily to all the places in Vienna’s first district—or, if you get cold—hop on the streetcar that goes in both directions around the Ring.  One shop well worth a visit is The British Bookshop at Weiburggasse 24; it has a wide range of English language books. 

Vienna streets lined in Christmas lighting.

Vienna streets lined in Christmas lighting.

Vienna is truly a city of music from Hayden’s elegant quartets to Straus’s lovely waltzes.  Mozart is very much present in Vienna—you cannot escape his music or his life story.  This Christmas in Vienna program offers one an opportunity to explore and experience Vienna’s fine art and architecture.

This trip offers a full experience of the romance of Vienna and the celebration of Christmas. 

Susan Parry
Secretary Treasurer,
Academic Travel Abroad 
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Click here to learn more about this trip.

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Christmas in Canterbury with Academic Travel Abroad

October 24, 2008
Christmas in Canterbury was my first Christmas away from family, but the tour participants provided excellent conversation and fellowship for this special time of year. They were of a broad age range and from a variety of faith traditions.
 
Our Smithsonian Expert was Rosalind Hutchinson and her knowledge and guidance were always with us as we visited the various sites in and around Canterbury.
 
The highlight was visiting Canterbury Cathedral. We were treated to a special tour on our first day and attended services on the afternoon before Christmas and on Christmas morning.
 
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, presided and shook hands with everyone after the services. Day trips to London and parts of southeastern England added excellent variety to the tour.
 
John Elliott,
ATA Tour Manager
To read more about this tour, CLICK HERE.
 
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My Smithsonian Egyptian Odyssey Trip

October 20, 2008

September of 2007, I had the opportunity to go on Smithsonian Journeys’ Egyptian Odyssey trip.  It was truly an odyssey – a glimpse into a distant land, seeped in history and even an air of mystery.  When my fellow travelers were asked why they had chosen the trip, most of them responded with phrases like, “it has been a lifelong dream of mine” or “I have always been fascinated with Egypt.”  Both of which were also true for me. 

On our very first day, we approached the Great Pyramids of Giza, gazing skyward as the bright sun beat down on us.  Standing in the shadow of these monuments, one cannot imagine what a task it must have been to create such structures.  Being able to touch the huge blocks and to even climb on top of the stones was a dream come true.  Suddenly it hit me – “I’m actually in Egypt! Standing on a pyramid!” 

Throughout our journey, we learned about both ancient and modern Egypt, asking question after question of our wonderful guide and study leader.  In addition, since we were there during Ramadan, we were able to learn about and to experience this holiday firsthand.  We cruised the Nile in a felucca, rode camels, explored ancient tombs, spoke with modern Egyptian women, and marveled at the treasures in the Egyptian Museum.  We visited the Alabaster Mosque and the Hanging Church, saw the brand new library in Alexandria, danced with belly dancers, heard the call to prayer echo from minarets, and held our breath as we came upon Karnak at dawn. 

Would I go back?  In a heartbeat! Next time though, I want to make sure I make it to the Sinai Peninsula and over into Petra.      

-Annabelle Peake

Academic Travel Abroad

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