Friday, September 18, 2009

Ferento

The weekly schedule here has students in class for full days Monday through Thursday. On Friday, all Italian classes meet as well as AP classes (I teach AP Calculus, therefore have one Friday class) and then students are done at 12:30PM on Friday. About half the time, the Friday afternoons include a field trip to some site, historical or art related. As a teacher, I am encouraged to go and since I'm taking Art History with the students, the trips have great context and meaning to me. The students and I went on our first "gita" this week.

We took a local bus out to the town of (well, former town) of Ferento. There is an archeological site that is being excavated. The history of Ferento is that it, a town of Nepi and Viterbo were for many centuries enemies. They sacked each other, burned each others cities and generally didn't practice their good relationship skills. In the end, Ferento was abandoned and in the early 1900's came interest in the former city.





Your typical Central Italian countryside.






Yvonne M. (SYA Art History teacher) on left and one of the staff archeologists at the site on the right.






Students listening to the history of Ferento.






The theater of Ferento. It dates from about the 1st century AD and was a sign that Ferento had a thriving civic life. In addition, baths have been excavated which indicates that they had leisure time and were interested in hygiene.






Samples are bagged and the location of the found specimen numbered and mapped.






Found items and carefully cleaned and sorted by age and location of the find site.






Here, standing on the well used roadway (we know because of the chariot ruts in the rock) we're looking at the wall remnants of a roman home from the 1st century. Note how extensive and large it was. This home was where one entire family lived.






At the center of the domus was a fluvium (or illfluvium) which was to catch rainwater. It was sloped towards the hole which allowed water to collect in a cistern.






An archeologists toolbox






Drawings and sketches of the excavation site. They're still using compasses!






















Here you see the medieval one room home that has been built over a part of the domus. The crumbled wall in the middle is primary material. It's lack of attractiveness is because the 1st century residents either had the walls plastered or had some sort of covering. The more geometric and ordered stones were reused stones.






This is the remains of a church from medieval times. Babies that didn't make it to childhood were found buried next to the church. It is hypothesized that the rainwater that dripped off the roof of the church continuously baptized their souls so they could live eternally in the afterlife.






A theme that replays itself over and over is the reuse of materials. Note here that former columns have been used to build the wall of a building.






This is through to be the grave a child from the 1st century.



The field of archeology in Italy is dominated by women. The site here in Ferento is a real life site for training for first year students at the local university. This guy (cute, eh?) is in the minority.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Blast from the past

This is a non-Italy related posting. Last week, I got emails from two of my best friends from college and each email had a photo attached that brought back great memories of college years. Each has a great story and some back story.

The first picture is a black and white photo that was taken sometime in the Winter of 1992. A bunch of us would get together and rent Lynah Rink for an hour at 1AM for $75. I really didn't know how to play hockey but it was fun to go and skate around. Someone took the photo, which wasn't any big deal. But then another person had the brilliant idea to frame it and mount it on the wall of the Chapter House bar on Stewart Street on Ithaca. If you ever go, it's in the second room, on the South wall right at eye level in the middle of the wall. It still is there to this day.





The second photo shows the rules to a dastardly game Mike B., Jeff O., Peter S. and I played for about a week during finals in 1992. We had a dart board in our apartment which we played all the time. One day we started playing hearts and somehow got the idea to combine the two games. Somehow, I managed to pass all my finals even though we spent hours on end playing. Peter found the rules when going through one of his old books and I would say that it would be magical to round up the four of us again and play.




Here's to great friends from college and memorable times in life!

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Picnic





Gazebos in a public park in San Martino. About 250 student, faculty and families attended and the rain held off.






Someone brought an octopus/mussel/calamari salad. I pounced on that.






Tiramisu, anyone?






The city of Viterbo






Ellie T., Frank and Jeanne's older daughter.






Mary T.






Some SYA girls and their host siblings.






Myself and Elena Z., the woman who team teaches Precalculus with me.










Can you pick out which are American and which are Italian?






From left, Katia D. (Italian), Santo M. (Ancient History), Eleonora T. (Host Family Coordinator), Elena Z., Alessandra T. (Italian), Frank T. (Latin), Terry D. (English), Hwei L-D. (College Counselor).






Tug of War between students and the kids under the age of 11.






The struggle






The agony of defeat






Host moms versus kids






The dads






Baseball with Italians is fun. They have NO idea how to play the game.






Italian boys have CLEARLY never held a baseball bat in their lives. The kid here, looks ok, but to see him swing.....oof.