Category Archives: Travel

Penn Alumni Travel: Apulia

 Author: Anita L. Allen, Vice Provost for Faculty and Henry R. Silverman Professor of Law

The first thing you learn when you arrive in Apulia, is that the region occupying the heel of the boot of Italy is called “Puglia” by the Italians.  Until recently, it was difficult to get to Puglia from major cities outside of Italy. Today the “undiscovered” region is well-served by two modern airports. The Penn Alumni Travel group for which I served as a faculty host, September 17-26, 2013, arrived at one of them, Bari Airport. Along with an affable alumni group from Brown University who would be our travel companions for the week, we boarded a comfortable motor coach.  The 45 minute trip to our hotel in Polignano a Mare was narrated by AHI Travel’s campus host Mick and a local guide, Daniella.  Mick, a British expatriate, was in charge of logistics.  Daniella, a vivacious licensed guide and native of Pulgia, won us over with her detailed knowledge of history  and culture, peppered with the wit and wisdom of her  nona, her grandmother.

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Hotel Covi dei Saraceni in Polignano a Mare was dramatically situated atop a bluff overlooking the turquoise and cobalt sea. From the private balcony off my antique-filled room I had a clear view the statue of Polignano a Mare’s native son Dominico Mugdana, famous for the upbeat ballard Americans my age know as “Volare.” Every so often someone would arrive at the statue, snap a few photos and then and break out in song.

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To enjoy Polignano a Mare in September, one mostly strolls the streets of the medieval heart of the town for the unique scenery—elaborate flower boxes, stunning views of the sea, weathered doorways and modest churches.  Several ristorante occupy caves built into the bluffs.  But there is amore  traditionally sited osteria, trattoria, gelato stand and cafe on virtually every block.   The streets were not crowded and neither were the town’s several gift shops.   Many of us shopped and ate only, but some of the hardy Penn alums descended to the beach and swam in the chilly ocean every day.

Our first big outing was to central Bari.   Bari is a gorgeous city with an  air of affluence.  An impressive castle, a city gate, and winding streets impress. A personal highlight for me  was  watching ordinary people sitting in their doorways  making pasta by hand and drying it in the open air on large mesh trays.  The women of Bari are known for their version of the Puglian speciality, pasta orriechete, “little ears”. I tested out my dusty Italian on the pasta makers.

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My basic skills served me very well in Bari and throughout Puglia, where fewer people speak fluent English than in Milan or Rome.   The linguistic diversity of Puglia contributes to its authenticity and reflects its history as a meeting point of Middle Eastern, African and western civilizations.  Many dialects and languages are spoken in Puglia.  Some communities even speak a form of Greek.  The pasta makers were warm and welcoming, as were the fruit vendors, who invited our Penn Alumni group to sample freely from their stands in a universal language of big smiles and even bigger gestures.

We visited The Basilica di San Niccola in Bari at an opportune time. Dozens of Russian pilgrims, women  in brightly colored modesty attire, packed into the crypt where which the relics of Saint Nicholas are interred. Lovely chanting and song celebrated the Saint.   Daniella sat us down in the main nave to tell us about the design of the church and the  complex story of Saint Nick,  a generous cleric whose bones were brought to Italy for safe-keeping.

Southern Italy produces delicious table wines.  One of our best days began with a tour of Castel del    Monte and ended with a trip to a family winery.  From the famous, centuries-old castle we enjoyed panoramic views of a hilly national park planted with evergreen trees.

It was in the octagonal courtyard of this castle that the Penn Alums paused for a group photograph.

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We left the castle grounds for a nearby vineyard and a wine tasting.  Then, at the vineyard, the proprietor first took us on a tour of his thoroughly modern wine production room  and fields where we  tasted  delicious cabernet sauvignon  grapes straight from the vine.  They were dark, small, seeded and warmed by the sun.  On a shaded porch we were treated to a lunch and wine.

On a trip to Puglia, Daniella insisted, the dish that combines mussels, potato and rice is a must taste and the town of  Lecce is a must see.  Lecce is sometimes called the Florence of southern Italy.    The comparison is not especially apt.  Lecce centro is sunny, uncongested and unpretentious. Its ornately carved stone religious and secular architecture is the handiwork of locals without world reputations.

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And there is nothing akin to the Uffizi in Lecce.  Daniella urged us to appreciate Lecce on its own terms:  consider that artisans cut off from cosmopolitan northern Italy without marble or  money, hand-carved Baroque, Gothic and Byzantine style  ornamentation from local materials to  create their own masterpieces for their own  communities of fisherman, farmers and merchants.

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After soaking up Lecce’s architecture and its Roman ruins I took a few minutes to shop for souvenirs.  I was delighted to discover that tarantism, the subject of one of the two special lectures I had prepared for the trip to Puglia, was manifest in Lecce in the form of spiders on tee-shirts and spider-embellished  tambourines.  Tarantism began as a tradition of poor men and women farm workers claiming to have been bitten by  spiders developing  psychological and neurological-like illnesses treated by pizzica music,  manic dance and the intercession St. Paul.  Of course, I was relieved to find no souvenirs registering the reality of the topic of my other lecture: the pollution, cancer  and labor problems plaguing  the town of Taranta attributed to the Ilva steel plant.

The unique towns of Alberobello and Ostuni were both on the agenda for our penultimate day of group travel.  Both towns are UNESCO World Heritage sites, and deservedly so.  Alberobello is famous for its Trulli houses .

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The Truli neighborhoods of whitewashed rounded houses with tall domed grey slate roofs, look like  something from a fairy tale. Cruder, haphazard versions of Trulli dot the landscape of Puglia north to south in large numbers. But it is only in Alberobello that one finds the well-kept Trulli as the dominate style of domestic architecture.  We took some time before leaving Alberobello to visit the lace makers for which the town is also famous

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Ostuni is an ancient town with roots in the stone ages built inside and atop sandstones caves, some natural, some carved by hand. For centuries families and their farm animals—goats, mules and chickens– lived inside these cave homes.  After the Christian era, dozens of churches were also built into the rock.    In the 1950s the Italian government found it necessary for public health reasons to relocated the families of Ostuni to  new  housing  on the outskirts of town.  Today, the cave dwellings can be leased from the government for homes and commercial purposes under strict conditions that require a balance of modernization (such as toilets and running water) and historic preservation.  Numerous bed and breakfasts have popped up in the town, and tourism is on the rise. We visited a typical larger Ostuni  family home, now a small  museum of an earlier era.  It consisted of two sleeping areas, a kitchen and two cellars for storing  tools and food.   We also visited four churches that that been converted into wine presses,  vestiges of Byznantine era religious frescos  faintly visible on a few walls.

Our final day of group travel began with a visit to the town of Trani. Once, a wealthy shipping portal to the Adriatic,  today the town  can be enjoyed for its manicured, tree-lined  seaside park;  for views of  a commanding castle repurposed as prison and now a fine arts center;  and  for an active Roman Catholic Cathedral where pilgrims and  Crusaders once rested.  Law alumni in our group took special note of Trani’s role in the development of European maritime law and of the contemporary Italian Court of Appeals which shares a piazza with the main Cathedral.  An historic Jewish Quarter of beautiful winding streets and a vacated synagogue led us to pause for serious reflection.   Control over cultural properties from the Quarter are still a subject of active debate between Trani authorities and Jews now living in the nearby  town of  Barletta.

As we walked along a pier we stopped to chat with fisherman  selling unusual  fishes and  octopuses   to homemakers. We were startled to see how a baby octopus is prepared for market. The live creature was  flung repeatedly  against the bottom on the boat to kill and tenderize it,  then spun in a plastic tub of cold water to curl the tentacles into the shape preferred by local cooks.

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Back on the motor coach we traveled only fifteen minutes from Trani to the small town of Bisceglie. There we were treated to a cold-pressed extra virgin oil tasting and a four-course al fresco lunch of regional specialities and rose wine.  Our host was the upscale oil mill “Galantino.” founded in 1926.  After a short video on the history of the Galantino mill in a cheerful subterranean cellar, our guide Massimo escorted us around to see how the mill’s completely natural prize-winning olive oils are produced.  We saw the weigh stations where each October to December truckloads of olives, black and green, shaken from ten thousand trees, are brought in from designated local groves for processing using age-old granite stone grinding techniques with a few high-tech flourishes to ensure hygiene and environmental integrity.  The gorgeous shaded patio under which we dined on dishes that included a fava bean and chicory paste and orriechete pasta, was surrounded by peach trees, grape vines and figs trees. The fruits of these plantings became our dessert along with fresh black cherry tarts, made from olive oil pastry (no butter!) and local cherries.

We were tired and sated when we returned to our hotel. But I headed out to attend an evening  mass celebrating  what happened to be the Feast Day of Padre  Pio, a sainted Capuchin friar associated with the Puglian town of Foggia.  Sickly all his life, Pio serves as the patron saint of people with seasonal depression and stress.  Pio is believed by the faithful to have received heavenly visions and the stigmata.  I enjoyed a moving worship service and was swept into a crowd as I emerged from the  chiesa.  About two hundred were there to process through the streets of Polignano , in the company of a  life-size statue of San Pio ornamented with sun flowers and electric lights. A brass band, a group of strong men bearing an enormous wooden  cross, and priests and young women carrying crucifixes on narrow poles were also part of the sacred parade. On the way back from the procession I ran into others from my  group and we wound up in a trattoria lingering over pizza con melanzana , branzio and insalta verde.

The last day of our journey to undiscovered Italy was totally free after a morning lecture on modern Italy. That evening we joined together for a final group dinner in the hotel to say our good byes and thank our most excellent hosts and guides.

[Interested in joining a Penn Alumni Travel trip? Check out our entire 2014 schedule here. Perhaps we’ll see you in Tuscany next October!]

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Filed under Faculty perspective, Penn Alumni Travel, Travel

Jambo!

Author: Molly Rand, GED’13

 

I recently had the amazing opportunity to serve as an Alumni Relations staff-host for the Penn Travel trip: Treasures of East Africa. During the trip, I was joined by an adventurous group of 10 alumni travelers. Together, we experienced what makes Africa, and East Africa in particular, such a unique and marvelous place.

Each day of the two-week trip was spent exploring the vast land of savannahs and diverse local cultures of Tanzania and Kenya. We captured sights and snapped photos of the incredible wildlife and surrounding landscape. We enjoyed a breathtaking sunset each evening and then awoke the next morning to catch it rise again.

Masai Mara Sunset, Kenya

Masai Mara Sunset, Kenya

Serengeti Sunrise – Serengeti National Park, Tanzania

Serengeti Sunrise – Serengeti National Park, Tanzania

 

In some way, our group became a small family over the course of the trip, traveling together to take on the next adventure: to see or taste something new, to learn the next phrase for our Swahili vocabulary, and to experience another unknown treasure of East Africa.

We endured long hours and road trips in our safari vans where the bumpy and unsteady rides, or African massage as they call it, only helped bring us closer together. Our local drivers and guides quickly became our new best friends, sharing with us their vast knowledge and passion for the beautiful place they call home.

 

Our safari drivers (Left to Right: Wolfgang, Wilfred, Shafino) and Safari Director, Adam, in Tanzania

Our safari drivers (Left to Right: Wolfgang, Wilfred, Shafino) and Safari Director, Adam, in Tanzania.

 

Our group’s first stop after crossing the border from Tanzania into Kenya: Amboseli National Park

Our group’s first stop after crossing the border from Tanzania into Kenya: Amboseli National Park.

 

Spotting a herd of elephants in front of Mt. Kiliminjaro

Spotting a herd of elephants in front of Mt. Kiliminjaro.

 

Room at the Amboseli Sopa Lodge, Kenya

Room at the Amboseli Sopa Lodge, Kenya

 

Before too long, I think we all became humbly aware of how different our daily lives were from the people we encountered. Yet despite those differences, the warm smiles and kind hearts of those who we met made us all feel right at home.

Photo from our visit to the Masai village kindergarten in Tanzania

Photo from our visit to the Masai village kindergarten in Tanzania.

 

The trip offered us a unique opportunity to immerse ourselves in a culture we only knew from a distance before this journey began. It challenged us to abandon our own perspectives and approach each interaction with a pure sense of curiosity and appreciation for the unfamiliar. As each day passed, we gained a more distinct awareness for the little things in life that really matter.

As for the other stuff, “hakuna matata” as the locals would say.

 

View as we drove through Arusha and surrounding villages in Tanzania

View as we drove through Arusha and surrounding villages in Tanzania.

Traditional Masai jumping dance – a competitive jumping ritual men do to showcase their strength and agility to women in the tribe

Traditional Masai jumping dance – a competitive jumping ritual men do to showcase their strength and agility to women in the tribe.

 

At last, this would not be an accurate trip re-cap if I did not do my best to describe the unbelievable wildlife and conservation areas of Tanzania and Kenya. It is hard to truly comprehend how incredible it is to observe all of the animals until you are there, watching them run, eat, or sometimes even hunt, often only a mere 5 feet away. Our group was lucky to spot every single animal on the list – literally. We viewed all of the “Big 5” as well as the remaining four of the lineup to see what our guides noted as the “Big 9.” (Buffalo, Elephant, Leopard, Lion, Rhino, Cheetah, Giraffe, Zebra, and last but definitely not least, the Hippo).

At night, the lodge had security walk guests to their rooms after dinner, not because of any danger in the area caused by crime, but because of the animals nearby. At the Lake Naivasha Sopa Lodge in Tanzania, the hippos were notorious for coming onto the property at night. One evening, I asked a guard as he escorted me down the path, with his flashlight in hand, if the animals come up to the lodge because of all the people.

He responded very confidently, “No, no…they come close because this is their natural habitat. We are in their house.

His reaction made me realize even more the unique beauty of East Africa.

 

Hippo spotting in Serengeti National Park of Tanzania

Hippo spotting in Serengeti National Park of Tanzania.

 

Elephant crossing in front of Mt. Kilimanjaro, Kenya

Elephant crossing in front of Mt. Kilimanjaro, Kenya.

First lions of the trip in the Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania

First lions of the trip in the Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania.

 

A group of giraffes is called a journey – we spotted these in the Masai Mara of Kenya

A group of giraffes is called a journey – we spotted these in the Masai Mara of Kenya.

 

Our guides taught us that a group traveling together is called a dazzle.

Our guides taught us that a group traveling together is called a dazzle.

When someone asks me the classic post-travel question, I struggle to find an answer as to what was my favorite part of our East Africa experience. Every moment we spent in Tanzania and Kenya was memorable – whether we were observing a mother elephant protect her baby, visiting a Masai village, watching a lion hunt its prey, or having a conversation with one of our local guides.

The people of Tanzania and Kenya ask no favors of travelers except for one: “tell your friends and family about this place, let them know they should come too. And most of all, make sure to come back.

If I should ever get another opportunity to visit these countries again, I will be sure to let my new local friends know. In the meantime, make sure you add East Africa to your travel bucket list. I promise every single moment will be well worth it.

Preparing for our Penn reception at the beautiful Lake Naivasha Sopa Lodge

Preparing for our Penn reception at the beautiful Lake Naivasha Sopa Lodge.

 

Our amazing group of Penn Alumni & Friends!

Our amazing group of Penn Alumni & Friends!

 

 

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Alumni Programming, Molly Rand, Penn Alumni Travel, Travel

Penn Alumni Travel: Music Diary along the Danube

Author: Stephen Lehmann, Humanities Bibliographer, Penn Libraries (retired)

The title of our Penn Alumni Travel cruise was “Symphony on the Blue Danube,” and although we heard no symphonies (at least no complete symphonies) and spent more days off than on the Danube (which is famously green), the trip was nothing if not true to its musical theme. Even the boat (“Amadeus Elegant”) was musical, with its three inside decks named after Haydn, Strauss, and Mozart.

The trip’s musical offerings began on our first evening on the boat, docked on the Danube at Budapest, with a delightful on-board performance by the Lugosi Band – clarinet, violin, cimbalom and dancers – playing a variety of Hungarian and Hungarian-Gypsy dances (including the ubiquitous “Csardas” composed by the Italian Vittorio Monti in 1906), as well as some Brahms Hungarian Dances. Four dancers accompanied the band. It was an altogether spirited evening, and the virtuosity of the instrumentalists – not only in their musicianship, but in the rhythmic clapping and slapping of legs and heels – was striking and impressive.  Audience participation was encouraged.

Karen Goldstein being a good sport.

Karen Goldstein being a good sport.

The first on-shore concert – an optional add-on – was given on Wednesday, October 2, in the Brahms-Saal of Vienna’s historic Musikverein building, just off the Ringstrasse.   The Brahms-Saal, which was inaugurated in 1870 by Clara Schumann, is the smaller of the two second-story halls under the Musikverein’s roof. It seats about 600, and is used mainly for recitals and chamber music. It was restored in 1992-93 to its original splendor: green walls, red pilasters, a lot of gold.  (Across a small landing is the Grosser Musikvereinsaal, home to the Vienna Philharmonic, and seating over 2,000.)

The Brahms-Saal of the Musikverein.

The Brahms-Saal of the Musikverein.

The program, performed by a small orchestra dressed in 18th-century costume, consisted largely of bits and pieces of works by Mozart – one movement each from the 40th and 41st Symphonies, two movements from the G-major Violin Concerto, arias from five of the operas, and the two chestnuts, Ronda alla turca and Eine kleine Nachtmusik. The concert concluded with Johann Strauss’s Blue Danube Waltz and Radetzky March.  (A few of our group managed to get tickets to the Vienna State Opera House, where they heard Rossini’s Barber of Seville, generating a certain amount of envy among the rest of us.)

The next day (Thursday, October 3), we were treated to a morning concert: the Mozart Ensemble, a string quartet, played a full program of Mozart, Dvorak and Haydn – all, with the exception of the Dvorak (a slow movement from his “American Quartet”), performed in their entirety (Mozart Quartet K. 157 and Divertimento K. 138 and Haydn Quartet op. 9, no. 6).  Again the venue, the “Sala Terrena” (“ground-level room”), was remarkable, both historically – it is the oldest concert hall in Vienna, and Mozart played there – and aesthetically, with its 18th-century, fresco-covered vaulted space in the Renaissance Venetian style. As it seats only seventy people, the performances were given in shifts, and we attended in two groups.

Sala Terrena

Sala Terrena

In the evening, still docked in Vienna, we were treated to another on-board concert, this time a small ensemble (two violins, cello, piano, soprano) performing light Viennese music from the 19th and early 20th centuries – Strauss waltzes and polkas, arias from Strauss and Lehar operettas, pieces by composers like Johann Schrammel and Karl Michael Zierer.  Introducing the music was a very tall Viennese, who spoke easily, informatively and in excellent English.

In the dead of night on October 3 the Amadeus Elegant slipped away from Vienna, and we awoke the next morning to find ourselves in the splendid Wachau Valley. After an early stop in medieval Dürnstein (no music), we proceeded to the magnificent early eighteenth century Benedictine abbey at Melk on the Danube’s south bank. There we heard a brief organ concert – the music was not identified, but the consensus was that it was Bach – performed by an 85-year old monk, who had been our guide’s music teacher.

The Biddles and the Blairs enjoying Melk’s organ.

The Biddles and the Blairs enjoying Melk’s organ.

Early the following morning, October 5 (Saturday), we left Austria, sailing past Bavarian villages

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and on into Passau.

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The walking tour through Passau culminated in the baroque Cathedral of St. Stephen, a late 17th century structure whose organ is the fourth-largest organ and the largest cathedral organ in the world, with almost 18,000 pipes and over 200 registers. Before climbing up to her loft, the organist, Brigitte Furth, explained the workings of the Passau organ and the ways in which she would illustrate its various components and colors. The composers in her program were French (Louis James Alfred Lefébure-Wély, Jean Langlais) and German (Melchior Franck, Pachelbel, Bach). She ended with a piece by Langlais in which she sounded all five of the cathedral’s organs – each set of pipes coming from a different part of the building and ending together in a pew-shaking fortissississimo.

The only other music we heard that day came from the engines of the busses on the ride from Passau to Prague.

On our first day in Prague (Sunday, October 6), our guides took us to the beautiful, five-tier 18th-century Estate Theater, where Mozart’s Don Giovanni (1787) and La Clemenza di Tito (1891) were first performed.

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In its foyer we heard a brief concert for woodwind quintet playing arrangements from Mozart operas and a piece by the Czech composer Frantisek Saver Dusek. But the highpoint was an impromptu rendition of the Czech national anthem by Vaclav Bechyni, the theater’s charming guide.

Dana Jolley, Linda Freeman, and, in reflection, Bill Koch listening to Vaclav Bechyni singing the Czech  national anthem.

Dana Jolley, Linda Freeman, and, in reflection, Bill Koch
listening to Vaclav Bechyni singing the Czech national anthem.

That evening a number of us went to a performance of Dvorak’s three act water-nymph opera Rusalka at the State Opera, built in 1888 as Prague’s German Theatre. The production was traditional, with English super-titles helpfully provided for those of us who can’t follow the Czech.

We heard our last concert in Prague on Monday morning, October 7, at the Lobkowicz Palace – part of the vast Prague Castle complex – under three enormous chandeliers in a small hall decorated with trompe l’œil columns and niches. The performance, by a string quartet, began with a rendition of Beethoven’s Ode to Joy but came to an abrupt halt when the first violinist suffered a snapped string. He returned quickly, but rather than picking up again with the Beethoven, the musicians proceeded to the Pachelbel Canon and then on through various transcriptions (movements from a Beethoven piano sonata, Dvorak’s New World Symphony, etc.), and concluded with Amazing Grace, Roy Orbison’s Pretty Woman, and some tango.

At the Lobkowicz Palace we were also able to see some of its amazingly rich collection of music manuscripts and first editions, including a score of the Messiah with Mozart’s alterations, the orginal orchestral parts of Beethoven’s Fourth Symphony (dedicated to the seventh Prince Lobkowicz), the first edition of Beethoven’s Eroica Symphony (re-dedicated to Prince Lobkowicz after the original dedicatee, Napoleon, declared himself Emperor) and a copy of Beethoven’s Op. 18 Quartets with corrections in his own hand.

Finally, at our last stop – Cracow, Poland – we attended a private, all-Chopin recital at the city’s music conservatory on October 9 (Wednesday). Some from our group thought the pianist, Paweł Lubica, played harshly, but the acoustics didn’t help: the building had been constructed as an insurance company office, and the concert was held in a two-story former reception room with very hard surfaces.

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Lubica played three waltzes and a sampling of other forms favored by Chopin (a Ballade, a Mazurka, a Prelude, a Nocturne, a Fantasie-Impromptu, and a Polonaise). My own favorite was the Nocturne (B major, op. 62, no. 1), and I was reminded of the pianist Rudolf Serkin’s observation that he wouldn’t play the Chopin nocturnes because they were too sad.

Sadness is a good segue to our journey’s end!  But sad only because it was such a great trip – the river, the sites, the people, the music. Thank you to everyone for helping to make it such a wonderful experience.

Proud Penn Alumni along on the Danube cruise.

Proud Penn Alumni along on the Danube cruise.

[Penn Alumni Travel is heading back to Vienna and Prague during the spring of 2014. History Professor (and seasoned traveler) Thomas Max Safley will be hosting this tour. If you’re interested in learning more about this trip or any of our 2014 tours, please click here.]

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Penn Alumni Travel: Russia

Author: Professor Arthur Waldron, Lauder Professor of International Relations, Department of History

Any trip, according to the great travel writer Lawrence Durrell, “begins with a moment of panic.” I and my family certainly felt that “panic” repeatedly in the days before we finally locked the front door and set out to join Penn Alumni Travel’s “Waterways of Russia” tour of which I was to be the leader. We knew this was going to be something new and memorable, but were a little nervous as well.

The Waldrons in Russia

The Waldron family in Moscow.

As soon as we boarded our flight our feeling of panic turned into excitement and anticipation. We flew from Philadelphia to Frankfurt where we changed to the Lufthansa flight to Moscow. No more than two minutes after we boarded our new flight, a cheerful lady in the row just in front of us turned and looked carefully at me, extended her hand to me and said “Hi.” Then, turning to her husband, the said: “It’s okay, it’s him.” She had recognized me from the brief welcoming video that the Penn Alumni Travel department had sent to the members of our group, which had introduced me—and immediately the trip became real. This couple had flown in one day from Los Angeles –more than six thousand miles—to Moscow, and others in the group had performed similar feats. Nearly all the flights that day were late arriving at Domodedovo, a somewhat upgraded but still Soviet vintage airport. Nevertheless we had people to meet all of them, and transport to the Marriot Avrora Hotel, a few blocks behind the Kremlin, which would be our headquarters for the two nights of an optional pre-cruise visit to Moscow for which many had signed up.

By breakfast the next day, our first formal meeting, we had met many of the fifteen Penn group members, who were almost alarmingly rested and energetic, ready to give everything to what was on offer.

The object of the trip was to cruise from Moscow, Russia’s present capital, to St. Petersburg, capital from 1712-1918. We would travel by boat, the efficient and very comfortable Volga Dream.  Embarking at the North River Terminal, built in 1937 on the Moscow River, some 393 feet above sea level, our voyage would arc from northeast and then to northwest over some 820 miles on the way to its final stopping point at the recent (1970) River Station of St. Petersburg on the Neva River, where the water is perhaps three feet above sea level. En route we would pass through eighteen locks and thirteen distinct but now connected rivers, reservoirs, or lakes.

On the ship’s prow, traveling along the Russian waterways.

On the ship’s prow, traveling along the Russian waterways.

This voyage would take us far from the urban Russia familiar to most tourists, to what might be called “deep Russia.” This is the rural Russia of seemingly perfect villages, each up a grassy bank from the river, each with its onion-domed church, now beautifully restored, its one story wooden houses with their immaculate white curtains and often fussy fretwork decoration, its surrounding fields and sometimes muddy roads–all cradled in the seemingly primeval evergreen and birch forests—in all the sort of scene that in the Russians imagination must evoke “home,” even if it is never quite reached. It is also the land of remote but magnificent churches, monasteries, and other monuments, again best reached by water.

Here I should add as a caution that ours was a tourist route, albeit somewhat unusual, but in the business of entertaining foreigners, and that had we visited other places in Russia, particularly former Soviet industrial sites, such as the ore-mining centers of Magadan on the Sea of Okhotsk, worked by in the Stalinist period and after by slave labor, or Norilsk in the far north and even today closed to foreigners, our impressions might have been very different, though I doubt our cautiously upbeat tone would have been reversed.

But first there were the two pre-embarkation days in Moscow. The first morning took us to the Tretyakov Gallery, the greatest treasure house of Russian art, assembled by a nineteenth century merchant.  It contains too many masterpieces to mention, but among the most memorable were huge canvases by the radical turn of the last century realist Ilya Repin,  portraits of the writers Chekhov, Dostoyevsky, and Tolstoy, as well as the great composer Mussorgsky. On the way out we passed through the Ikon gallery, which contained a precious mosaic from ancient Kiev, as well as several works of the celebrated Andrei Rublev.

The Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow.

The Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow.

Somehow, in Moscow and elsewhere, we seemed to get the very best guides. I have been to Russia more than a few times, but never have I encountered such deeply knowledgeable experts.

We then had an afternoon “at leisure” which for some of our passengers meant visits to the other great art museums of Moscow, some crammed with masterpieces of early twentieth-century modern art.  Others wandered in Red Square, where owing to the north latitude the evenings are almost endless—the so-called “white nights,” when the Russians come out in force for pure enjoyment—or explored the side streets with their restaurants, antique shops, and one historic site after another.

The following day we visited the Novodevichy Convent, perhaps the classic of Russian baroque, brick red, with beautiful towers, gardens, and a lake.  Since its founding in the mid-sixteenth century, it has served political as well as religious purposes. It was a place of comfortable imprisonment for noble women, for example, the sister of Peter the Great, who had plotted against him. The Novodevichy cemetery contains the graves of many important Russians, ranging from Prokofiev and Shostakovich to the haunting memorial, with her young face beautifully sculpted, of Stalin’s tragic second wife, Nadezhda Alliluyeva, who shot herself, in despair, at the age of 31, to Khrushchev and Boris Yeltsin.

The very striking and beautiful Novodevichy Convent.

The very striking and beautiful Novodevichy Convent.

After this the “pre-tour” ended, we were transported directly by highway and then through an extensive park, to the somewhat distant, but remarkable, North River Terminal (a masterpiece of the Stalinist style, an oblong building decorated with a tracery of thin pillars and delicate balconies, all leading to a tower with a ruby-red star—now swathed with scaffolding for restoration), to embark on the Volga Dream. We were met by our Russian hosts with iced tea, and found our luggage already waiting for us in our well-appointed cabins. Our fifteen Penn alumni joined the rest of the tour, altogether ninety-six passengers, including groups from Columbia University, Johns Hopkins University, Mills College, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The passengers were uniformly impressive, resourceful, and (important on a cruise) faultlessly courteous to all.  Some were seasoned world travelers, others less experienced, and one was a lady who, because of her husband’s health condition, had never before held a passport or left home in her life. All were full of real interest in the trip, not to mention asked tough and perceptive questions.

The first evening began with the Captain’s Reception in the large and comfortable Neva Lounge, which was followed by a fine dinner at which we were seated by group, although later most of the time people sat where they wanted.  This first night on board, we slept in great comfort knowing that no fewer than fifty-five staff were there to look after us.

The next day was perhaps the busiest of the entire cruise: the Moscow city tour. It filled the full day and quite literally not a second was wasted. We started with Red Square (an old name: “Red” can mean “beautiful” in Russian). For decades it was chiefly known for the Lenin Mausoleum and burials around and in the Kremlin wall that forms its western boundary. Now we were told that Lenin, who was embalmed and displayed against his will (and over the protests of his wife whom Stalin menacingly dismissed saying “we can easily find some else to play the role of Lenin’s widow”), is to be buried, as was his wish, next to his mother in St. Petersburg, while the others—including Stalin—now buried nearby, and those in the Kremlin wall, will go to another cemetery, now under construction. Evergreens, already planted, will eventually mature to screen both the wall and the tomb from the square. The attention of the visitor will shift to St. Basil’s cathedral, with its multicolored, twisting onion domes—in front of which the Penn Alumni Banner was unfurled and a group photograph taken—and to the former GUM department store on the east side, now a collection of shops, boutiques, and restaurants.  Perhaps the best of these is “Stolovaya 57” up an escalator, a clean and affordable cafeteria offering every sort of Russian comfort food. Many group members ended up there. It is rated seventh out of more than five thousand places to eat in the capital.

Proud Penn Alumni in Moscow.

Proud Penn Alumni in Moscow.

Moscow- The Red Square

Moscow- The Red Square

After lunch, we were off to the Kremlin where lines were long but whose treasures are well worth it. There we visited the Uspensky (Dormition) Cathedral, where all tsars were crowned as well as the armory museum.  We made our way through a huge gallery containing the wasp-waisted wedding dresses of Tsarinas, and the formal attire of Nicholas II, the last Romanov Tsar. The high spot for me was found in the lower right corner of a case of precious crowns, including that of Ivan the Dread. This crown consisted of a circle of rich fur, surmounted by a small precious metal cap and cross obviously of great antiquity. “The shapka (cap) of Monomakh ?” I wondered to myself. I had heard of it in sophomore year at Harvard and lectured on it. It is a Central Asian crown, dating perhaps to the eleventh century, that demonstrates the continuity in ruling style, court etiquette, etc. from the Mongols and their nomadic forebears to the early years of the Muscovite Russian dynasty that emerged several centuries later. Other group members took real interest. This made my day more than worth it. I even sent an email to my old professor saying that I had finally seen the cap and that in my memory I could still hear him lecturing passionately about its significance.

The Uspensky (Dormition) Cathedral.

The Uspensky (Dormition) Cathedral.

Moscow- The Kremlin.

Moscow- The Kremlin.

After cruising nearly all of the following day, which filled with a lecture (this one given by me on rivers, trade and the origins of the Russian state), group gatherings, briefing from the cruise director and the all-important lifeboat drill, we arrived at the ancient city of Uglich, famous as the place where the last son of Ivan the Terrible (or more accurately, “Dread”), Dmitry, had his throat cut–to this day no one can agree exactly how. This left Russia without a legitimate ruler, precipitating a general crisis known as “the time of troubles” which ended only in 1613, when Michael Romanov was elected by an assembly of nobles. He founded a dynasty that fell only with the disaster of World War I, three hundred years later. A church (one of at least two with this name) “on the spilled blood” was built where Dmitry was killed (it is said that the ambitious Boris Godunov, who sought to be Tsar, was the black hand, but this is not proven).  It probably has not looked better since 1917. Then we stumbled on an actual liturgy in another church, with an amateur choir of five or so women, one with a toddler clinging to her knees. This small ensemble, singing like angels, confirmed my opinion that of all the liturgical music in the world, that of Russia is the most sublime.

Uglich from the river.

Uglich from the river.

The scenery, as well as our guides, reminded us that the continuous waterway over which we were cruising was the product of a vast and destructive project to create the “Moscow-Baltic” canal, undertaken by Stalin in 1932-1937, and costing the lives of perhaps tens of thousands of forced laborers—as well as destroying much of great cultural importance. Thus, at Uglich, the oldest settlement on our route, the Intercession monastery and other buildings were dynamited to make way for what even the official map calls the “huge and ugly structure” of a hydroelectric station today. Nearby, in the midst of the navigation channel at Kalyazin, a neoclassical campanile from the destroyed Monastery of St. Nicholas rises some 244 feet over the Uglich reservoir. Other medieval buildings were submerged. Times have changed, however, and today Divine Liturgy is celebrated several times a year in this isolated and melancholy-seeming belfry.

We were under way again by 7:30 PM and arrived at Yaroslavl in the middle of the following morning. This is a medium-sized city, having a population of nearly 600,000 and a provincial capital—of the province, our outspoken and amusing guide (she is a professor of ancient history) told us, it gave President Putin the fewest votes in the last election, and is thus very much out of favor (they elected a mayor and he was put in jail).  Yaroslavl is home to many churches, including the impressive Cathedral of the Transfiguration, but perhaps most notably of that of Elijah the Prophet, in the city square, which many consider to be the most perfect example of Russian ecclesiastical architecture. In a nearby hall a group of five young men sang to us, unaccompanied, their sound beginning softly but then swelling to the full power, complete with the deep bass, that is so characteristic of Russian music, an expression we felt of the proverbial “Russian soul.”

Cathedral of the Transfiguration in Yaroslavl.

Cathedral of the Transfiguration in Yaroslavl.

St. Elijah’s Church on the Central Square of Yaroslavl.

St. Elijah’s Church on the Central Square of Yaroslavl.

An afternoon and night of cruising brought us to Goritsy, the highest elevation, after Moscow, on our water route. The area is famous for its cluster of monasteries. The most impressive of these is the extensive and beautiful Kirillo-Belozersky, which the group visited.

Kirillo-Belozerski Convent in Goritsy.

Kirillo-Belozerski Convent in Goritsy.

After Goritsy, the character of the cruise changes. Yaroslavl was on solid land, with some elevation though no real hills, beautiful, and even cozy–a great favorite of the group. Beyond, however, the landscape to my eye turned bleak, the same word another passenger chose to describe it. From Uglich to Goritsy, the towns stood above the rivers, on solid ground. Reeds, shrubs, and evergreen trees lined the shore.

A few miles beyond Goritsy, however, a series of six locks took the ship steeply downward toward sea level. Thereafter, we entered an uncongenial and barren landscape, flooded with water, dotted with numerous clusters of reeds, then hummocks on which shrubbery eked out an existence, followed by scrawny evergreens as far as the eye can see. One passed few traces of human habitation. Ecologically, the evergreen-birch-reed-mud-water system is very poor. Even if you can find soil, it is not fertile. It was a jolt to recall that it was in such a forbidding landscape that St. Petersburg itself was built, on mud and pilings, by diktat of Peter the Great in 1703, at a cost of serf laborers estimated at 100,000 or more dead.

Traveling past Goritsy and down towards sea-level.

Traveling past Goritsy and down towards sea-level.

Following the canal we came to Lake Onega, the third largest body of fresh water in the world. In the lake is Kizhi island, a museum of Russian wooden architecture, all built without nails, including the Transfiguration Cathedral and the Church of the Intercession, both capped with rank upon rank of partial domes. There is also a small wooden chapel so perfect it could be in a picture book, a windmill, and a peasant house. The latter is rather ample in size. The “izba” which we were told meant sleeping, sitting, and living room, seemed very cozy and comfortable, with a big block-like heater about half the height of the room. On the top were furs, so that the oldest and youngest can sleep with its warmth. It is also used for cooking and heating the room.

The Transfiguration Cathedral and the Church of the Intercession on Kizhi Island.

The Transfiguration Cathedral and the Church of the Intercession on Kizhi Island.

Close-up of the domes.

Close-up of the domes.

For all the seeming coziness of this dwelling, however, one must remember that the serfs, who comprised more than ninety percent of the Russian population until they were liberated in 1861, were tied to the land, and deeply impoverished. It is thought that famines struck about once every seven or eight years. From the agricultural labor of the serfs derived all the opulence and wealth of the nobility and royal house. But massive starvation–tens of millions dead in the countryside–came only with the Soviets and the confiscation of food from the rural people to feed the new and growing populations of industrial towns.

We walked through Kizhi at about eight in the evening. In the summer, the sun at that latitude does not really set. So at that hour the island was enchanting– fragrant pasture, the wooden buildings loosely grouped at one end, water all around. A fireboat sits just at the shore of the island at all times–I hope and expect they have elaborate detection and extinguishing systems. Word was that today Kizhi is on the international itinerary, and that huge ships, for example from the Norwegian line, dock there, with thousands of passengers at a time. By arriving late (fog had kept us immobile on the river for many hours over the night) we avoided such a nightmare.

Kizhi glowing in the eight o’clock light.

Kizhi glowing in the eight o’clock light.

Not only that. Our late return drew many passengers to the top deck, where colored champagne was provided, and music. Soon passengers were dancing. The ship slowly and gently pulled away. The party continued, against the incomparable background of the ancient wooden buildings glowing in the rays of the slowly setting sun, as their images were reflected with great clarity on the still waters of the vast lake. It was a magical moment.

The crew offers passengers colored champagne as they depart Kizhi.

The crew offers passengers colored champagne as they depart Kizhi.

On the Svir river, which connects Lake Onega to the even larger Lake Ladoga is a low-quality “old Russian” theme park called Mandrogi, constructed by a friend of Mr. Putin. It promises blacksmiths and weavers demonstrating their ancient crafts (they were not at their posts when we visited), but in fact consists mostly of food stalls and souvenir shops, as well as an array of luxury villas, one of which is reportedly the favorite of the Russian president. No one was fooled by this “man made tourist trap” as one reviewer describes it. The passengers were back on the ship in a flash. They had paid good money for a first class tour, and this did not belong. But we learned that Mandrogi was, by government fiat, a legally obligatory stop for all Volga cruises, so nothing could be done.

Mandrogi was followed by a vodka tasting and a farewell dinner at which the peerless Kira, the ship’s cruise director, introduced many of the ship’s key personnel, from captain and chief chef to housekeepers and the kitchen staff, all to thunderous applause from the passengers. I am proud to say also that in the Matryoshka doll painting competition our Penn experts took first and third of the three prizes. Indeed, as I observed the groups, I found ours perhaps the most active (they attended all the lectures) and certainly most deeply engrossed in serious conversation at mealtime. We reached St. Petersburg the following morning.

Penn alumni win first and third prizes in the Matryoshka doll painting competition.

Penn alumni win first and third prizes in the Matryoshka doll painting competition.

The city is of an indefinable and elusive beauty: a network of rivers and canals that catch and transform in their seemingly fathomless waters every fugitive shift of color and mood of the northern sky. Its largely nineteenth-century buildings have mostly been repainted in characteristic bright, sometimes pastel, colors. But to see it all would take weeks.

We spent our first morning visiting the Catherine Palace at Tsarskoye Selo (“The tsar’s village” also called “Pushkin”), a clear attempt to overshadow even Versailles, with gold and gilding laid on thickly everywhere, parquet floors, and great high windows that fill the interior with the pure northern light. The palace was long celebrated for its room lined entirely with semi-precious Baltic amber. Hitler’s forces had packed up the whole room, which was then never seen again, before setting the palace ablaze as they retreated in 1944. Over the following decades roughly fifty of the original one hundred fifty rooms of the palace were restored, As for the most famous of them, in 2003 a meticulous restoration was completed and the fabled Amber Room was reopened.

The Catherine Palace at Tsarskoye Selo, St. Petersburg.

The Catherine Palace at Tsarskoye Selo, St. Petersburg.

The visit concluded with a lunch overlooking the garden, where we enjoyed an energetic display of Russian song and dance, with clackers, accordion, soaring female voices and one classic Russian bass—all from just four people.

In the afternoon we visited St. Isaac’s Cathedral, which one imagines was designed to rival St. Peter’s in Rome. Its huge dome, on a tall cylindrical base, dominates the city skyline. When we visited, the Cathedral was ringed with dozens and dozens of tourist buses—more than I have ever seen in one place except the Great Wall of China. But once inside one scarcely felt crowded: the building can accommodate 14,000 worshippers.

We also explored the Fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul, one of the earliest structures built in St. Petersburg, and, in a rather western looking cathedral having a golden spire, the burial place of all the tsars since Peter the Great. The entire imperial family was murdered in 1918 in Yekaterinburg, in the south, as they fled, and their bodies thrown down a dry well and covered with acid and then cement. In the last days of communism the house where the murders took place was demolished, lest it become a shrine of sorts (irony of ironies, an Orthodox memorial chapel now stands on the site). All the remains have now been recovered and their identities confirmed using DNA. Today the entire group—Tsar, Tsarina, five children (including Anastasia) and four attendants (one a doctor) who refused offers to be allowed to leave them–rests in special chapel in this cathedral, with fresh flowers. Both Nicholas and Alexandra are now martyrs and saints of the official Russian post-Soviet Orthodox Church.

The Fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul with its tall spire.

The Fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul with its tall spire.

Also in St. Petersburg, the shrine church of “The Savior on the Spilled Blood,” is beautifully restored and full of visitors. This marks the spot where Alexander II, the “tsar liberator” who freed the serfs and was well along in planning more constitutional reforms, including the more liberal Loris-Melikov constitution he had signed that very morning, was murdered in 1881 by the terrorist “People’s Will” organization—perhaps the single most important setback contributing to the throwing of Russia off the constitutional democratic track. (The Tsar’s son Alexander III was a narrow-minded disciplinarian who promptly rescinded the new constitution). Fresh flowers mark the place on the sidewalk, now enclosed by the church, where the Tsar collapsed after he had survived a first bomb in his armored coach, gotten out to see if he could help, was hit again, and then fallen to the ground. Returned to the palace, he died a few hours later.

The shrine church of “The Savior on the Spilled Blood.”

The shrine church of “The Savior on the Spilled Blood.”

That evening in St. Petersburg many passengers stayed in town for dinner and entertainment. A rollicking Russian folk show was available, along with the Swan Lake ballet. Our guides showed us some fine and inexpensive places to eat—a Belgian restaurant proved particularly good—but quite naturally some chose to splurge on caviar, champagne, and the works at the queen of St. Petersburg hotels, the legendary Evropeiskaya, or Grand Hotel Europe, built in 1875.

Even so, nearly all were on board early the next morning for special entrance into the Hermitage Museum before the public was admitted. This is of course one of the three or four most important museums in the world and the guides did a splendid job. My colleague from Columbia University Michael Stanislawski also found in the vast building several rooms of modern Jewish art—somewhat unexpected, but an indication, he said, of the status of Jews in Russia today, which is not perfect, but better than it has been in a very long time.

The Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg.

The Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg.

Return of the Prodigal Son by Rembrandt van Rijn (c. 1669). One of the many masterpieces held at the Hermitage Museum.

Return of the Prodigal Son by Rembrandt van Rijn (c. 1669). One of the many masterpieces held at the Hermitage Museum.

The finale was a hydrofoil trip across the Gulf of Finland to Peterhof, the palace started by Peter the Great. It has extensive grounds, with great water cascades and statues, as well as “tricks” put in place long ago—points where a footstep will earn the incautious visitor a squirt of water in the eye, or something similar.

All in all it is difficult to imagine a Russian trip in which better use was made of time. Or one with a more congenial, enthusiastic, and well-educated group of passengers. Although we saw far from everything, we were guided unerringly to the most important attractions. Our six lectures ranged from the doctrines of Orthodoxy to Chinese-Russian relations, and were presented by Michael Stanislawski, John Meffert of the National Trust for Historical Preservation, and myself. Our local guides were superb, as was the travel agency staff, who seemed omnipresent and all-competent. The ship is a gem and the itinerary endlessly interesting.

The superb Penn group aboard the M.S. Volga Dream.

The superb Penn group aboard the M.S. Volga Dream.

Every member of our group will have his or her unique and valuable memories of the trip, and insights and reflections drawn from them. Permit me to conclude with some of my own.

For those who, like this writer, remember Soviet times vividly, the experience was an astonishing revelation of how much Russia has changed, mostly but not entirely for the better, since the end of Communism in 1991. It was a reminder as well that history is full of real surprises, in this case one on a scale such as to overturn almost all of the accepted wisdom (and copious writings) with respect to Russia of most of the twentieth century.  If I had told my college professor of Soviet History back in 1970 that in the year 2000 Tsar Nicholas and his wife Alexandra would have been proclaimed martyrs and saints of the Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church, he would have thought me simply mad. The thought was beyond inconceivable. It is all a salutary lesson too for historians and others a little too sure of themselves and of what they believe, as well as a memento mori for aspiring social engineers.

On the other hand the changes are understandable and in retrospect (always retrospect!) seem to have been essential. The economy, though riddled with corruption, inefficiency, and personal dealing, particularly at the top, is now fundamentally free and dynamic, and like nearly all the others of the former Soviet bloc (Belarus is a clear exception) comparable to the leading economies in the world.  The Soviet Union had been, in the words of its own leaders, “stagnant”—which is why Gorbachev was summoned in an attempt to re-instill vigor.

The changes in Russia remind us of something else important too. This is that progress need not be a headlong leap into an unknown future that seeks only the new and novel. Restoration of that which has been lost or destroyed is also progress. In communist days life was hard; food, housing, and consumer goods were scarce; all sorts of freedom, intellectual and religious not least, were lacking, while information was impossible to obtain. At the same time, though the standards at the great Russian universities, conservatories, orchestras, ballet companies, and research laboratories—the level of non-political culture in general—was maintained among the highest in the world.

Swan Lake advertised in St. Petersburg.

Swan Lake advertised in St. Petersburg.

It is scarcely surprising that after seventy years of the attempted imposition of the originally German doctrines of Marxism without success (they have failed wherever they have been tried) coupled with decades of sustained attack on the culture Russians had always cherished (and for which it became clear nothing could be substituted, despite grandiose efforts and abundant coercion), the Russians should return to their past—which includes the Orthodoxy (with state patronage of course, but that is not the whole story, for the state seeks legitimacy and popularity through its largesse), whose revival I found perhaps the most striking revelation of the trip, but not that alone. The list of changes is very long. Several of us concluded that Russia was not yet out of the wood, but was steadily moving closer to its edge.

In forty years, as a professor and before, I have traveled a great deal, including five visits to Russia, one for a semester as a student in the vanished Leningrad. I knew from the start that “Waterways of Russia” would be something new and memorable. I had expected the fellowship and intellectual sharpness of the Penn group would be an endless source of pleasure, which it was. What I did not suspect, however, was how deeply what we saw would stir and move me. Russia is an ancient country and one I had known, in its Soviet form, and through émigré teachers and friends, since high school. Yet here it presented itself, clearly the same place it had been forty years ago, yet changed completely—bright with the splendor and beauty of its ancient culture restored, the streets alive with people and commerce, guides and colleagues speaking freely as never before. Russia had shed the incubus of nearly seventy years and was herself again. For a historian this provided much to ponder, and for a confessed Russophile, a sort of joy of which I had never dreamed.

I suspect that other passengers may have had similarly deep, or for that matter quite different, reactions. Whatever the case, I know that for me, and I hope for our group, “Waterways of Russia” was a high point of my life.

Food aboard the M.S. Volga Dream.

Food aboard the M.S. Volga Dream.

[Interested in traveling with Penn Alumni Travel? Visit our 2014 schedule here. Professor Arthur Waldron will be joining our 2014 Black Sea Cruise.]

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Lunch-Time Learning

Author: Emilie C. K. LaRosa

This fall, use your lunch break (or your coffee break) to learn something new and interesting. Penn Alumni Office Hours is offering six great webinars on topics as varied as Burma, self control, and the benefits of pet ownership from renowned Penn faculty members. The best part? They’re all free! The second best part? They’re easy to access; it’s as simple as clicking on a web link. No special software, hardware, or downloads required.

Learn more about our Office Hours online webinar series here or check out our six sessions below. Registration for all webinars is required.

Penn Professor Carol Muller

Penn Professor Carol Muller

Teaching World Music Using New Technology (October 22, 2013 at 3 p.m. EST) With Penn Professor Carol Muller. This webinar will discuss the advantages and limitations of using new technologies–specifically online learning platform for teaching about music of the worlds peoples. This will include classes for conventional Penn students and those in MOOC (massively open online courses) style. You will hear a sampling of the music that students hear in Muller’s classes, from pygmy “hoots” to Australian aboriginal chanting, and think about how new technologies are reshaping the way we access knowledge from around the world.

Lisa and George travel through Burma.

Lisa and George travel through Burma.

Explore Exotic Burma (October 23, 2013 at 3 p.m. EST)  With Lisa Ellen Niver (C’89) and her husband George Rajna, founders of We Said Go Travel. Myanmar holds a special place in the hearts of Lisa and George. They met online because Lisa told George, “The Shwedagon Pagoda is my favorite place on the planet.”  Join them for a webinar on the highlights of this unique and unspoiled land. [Penn Alumni Travel will be visiting Myanmar in November 2014. Click here for more information.]

Amazing Machu Picchu in Peru.

Amazing Machu Picchu in Peru.

The Art and Culture of Peru (October 30, 2013 at 12 p.m. EST) With Larry Silver, the Farquhar Professor of Art History. Professor Silver will discuss the arts and culture of Peru and its extraordinary monument Machu Picchu. [Penn Alumni Travel will be visiting Peru and the Amazon in 2014. Click here for more information.]

Wharton Professor Katherine Milkman

Wharton Professor Katherine Milkman

The Science of Self Control (November 6, 2013 at 12 p.m. EST) With Wharton Professor Katherine Milkman. The obesity epidemic is just one example of a major societal problem that is driven in large part by self-control failures.  Other examples include under-saving for retirement, under-utilization of preventive medical care, and under-investing in education.  This talk will provide a short overview of past research on self-control as well as findings from a new branch of psychology and economics that are being used to help policy makers and individuals reduce the incidence of self-control failures.

Could these little pups increase your life expectancy?

Could these little pups increase your life expectancy?

The Effects of Pet Ownership (Is owning a pet healthy?) (December 3, 2013 at 12:00 p.m.) With Penn Vet Professor James Serpell. More than 30 years ago, the results of a single landmark study appeared to indicate that pet owners were more likely to survive for one year following a heart attack than non-owners. In the ensuing years, continued research has elaborated and expanded upon those original findings, as well as shedding light on some possible mechanisms that could account for the salutary effects of pet ownership on people. This presentation will provide an overview of this developing field and its implications.

Vintage cars in Cuba.

Vintage cars in Cuba.

The Art and Culture of Cuba (December 4, 2013 at 12:00 p.m.) With Penn Professor Ezekiel Dixon-Roman. Professor Dixon-Roman will discuss the history, culture, and economics of the Communist-run island nation of Cuba.

To register for any of these great webinars, simply click on the webinar’s title to be directed to the free registration page.

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Penn Alumni Travel: Alaska 2013

Author: Dr. Jonathan Moreno, Department of Bioethics

When I was asked to serve as the faculty host for Penn Alumni Travel’s “Discover Southeast Alaska” I said “Yes!”

Then I said, “Now that we have a deal, you should know that I don’t know anything about Alaska.” It turns out that I now not only know a good bit about Southeast Alaska, I have also come to appreciate how the knowledge gained on the cruise fits with my own work.

But first, the trip.

On day one, we were welcomed with a native Alaskan dance by a troupe that ranged in age from one toddler to a few seniors.  The excitement of the Tlingit people about the opportunity to exhibit their culture and to rediscover it after decades of suppression and misunderstanding was palpable. Cultural interpreters were also on hand throughout the week to share and explain their native culture to us.

Then to the vessel.  The cozy surroundings of the Admiralty Dream contrasted with the magnificent scale of the natural sites we visited.  Monday’s highlight was a tour of a salmon hatchery, where we learned how to distinguish between farmed and ranched salmon – a lesson I will not forget when I make my next visit to Whole Foods – and how the rearing of ranched salmon is coordinated with the natural cycle.

Native arts in Alaska.

Native arts in Alaska.

Our trusty ship, the Admiralty Dream.

Our trusty ship, the Admiralty Dream.

At Hidden Falls, we were joined for the day by a remarkable young Park Service ranger who was positively poetic in her narrative about the significance of the region.  So were the two naturalists and the cultural guide who stayed with us for the entire week.  I now realize that they brought us along carefully as we explored one setting after another in the inland waterways.

Kayaking in Gambier Bay brought us close to the vegetation and views that could not be achieved aboard the boat  (speaking of which, a few hours in Juneau under the shadow of massive cruise ships made us all very happy that we were on the Admiralty Dream, which was vastly more suitable to the surroundings and took us places that are inaccessible to the behemoths).

Kayaking tour in the bay.

Kayaking tour in the bay.

The whale watching on day five was astonishing.  At one point, we were surrounded in the hours before dusk by half a dozen whales, including two who were swimming, surfacing, and diving in harmony.  The consensus favorite site of the week was Glacier Bay, where groups of us went out on inflatable boats to observe the sea lions, one of whom also seemed to take great pleasure in observing us in return.  The naturalists and cultural interpreters emphasized that we are visitors in their territory, so a tradition of respect is cultivated among the traditional peoples.  The point was driven home the last day on a hike where the naturalists hoped very much to run across some bears, while I suspect many of the rest of us were perfectly happy not to have done so.  I am, however, now an expert in recognizing bear droppings, which seem to be used to inform humans that they are in the neighborhood.  Fair enough.

Spectacular whale-watching.

Spectacular whale-watching.

Glaciar Bay.

Glacier Bay.

I haven’t said anything about the food, which was excellent and abundant, or in particular the positively sadistic desserts that kept coming out of the kitchen.  Nor have I acknowledged that presence of non-Fighting Quakers on board, though the friendships that developed transcended institutional loyalties.

And my personal takeaway?  I should have appreciated more than I did how important the region was to the history of geology, as the concept of glaciation is owed to John Muir’s travels in Southeast Alaska.  He and another naturalist of the era, one named Charles Darwin, transformed our understanding of the natural world, all within a couple of decades of each other in the middle of the 19th century.

But I bet our desserts were better.

Penn alumni on board the ship.

Penn alumni on board the ship.

[Penn Alumni Travel will be returning to Alaska next year. Click here to learn more about our July 5-12, 2014 tour with Professor Larry Silver].

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Sea Lions and Whales and Bears…Oh My!

Author: Janell Wiseley

About two weeks ago, I had the pleasure of traveling with Penn alumni, and Penn professor Jonathan Moreno, to South East Alaska.  Our boat, The Admiralty Dream, was a 66 passenger 104 foot ship that was designed to go where the larger cruise ships cannot. Cruising on this small ship gave us the best views possible while still having an intimate atmosphere where Penn passengers and those from the other schools were able to get to know one another on a first name basis and form friendships that hopefully last a lifetime.

I have lived outside of Philadelphia for all of my 34 years. Up until this point, my knowledge of wildlife has been Sea World and the Philadelphia Zoo. I have never seen wild animals in their natural habitat until this trip.  Every night (and the days not spent kayaking, hiking, or going for rides in the DIB), I would stand at the bow of the ship with my camera and binoculars and wait with my whale-watching friend Alan, for the sound of a humpback as it surfaced for a breath. Then, we would scan the water furiously hoping to get glimpse of these mammals.  I was never once disappointed.

Besides whales, we saw sea otters, seals, sea lions, bears, moose, bald eagles and tons more wildlife and landscapes; too many to capture here.

This trip surpassed all of my expectations and if you ever get the chance to visit Alaska, this breathtakingly beautiful part of the United States, you should jump at the chance.  You won’t be disappointed.

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Penn Alumni Travel: Discover Switzerland

Author- Professor André Dombrowski, Penn Art History Department

A few weeks have passed since my return from a spectacular stay in the Alps, the 2013 Penn Alumni Travel trip “Discover Switzerland.” Serving as faculty host, I had the privilege to get to know over twenty guests, including nine Penn alumni. And what a wonderful trip it was, surrounded as we were by stunning scenery—awe-inspiring mountains, calm glacial lakes, gushing waterfalls, pretty Alpine flowers—that kept surprising us with its endless variety, sublimity and charm.

Breathtakingly beautiful Swiss Alps.

Breathtakingly beautiful Swiss Alps.

Because of previous obligations, I could join the group only for week two of their two-week long stay, and I had to miss visits to Bern and Lucerne among other places the previous week. Once I arrived in Switzerland, and at our centrally located Alpin Sherpa Hotel in Meiringen, a small town smack in the middle of the Alps, I met the group for the first of several dinners. The guests struck me immediately as extremely friendly, relaxed, and casual. We had a wonderful time together as a group, and our Penn connections were toasted at the Penn reception the next evening. From then on many breakfasts and dinners were enjoyed together at the hotel restaurant that served delicious local cuisine and made sure we tasted many of the local specialties night after night. Our host, Anja Mortensen was superb, engaged and funny and charming, and she kept us all in line as well as entertained. Our local guide was Jessica Powers Rufibach—her name itself testimony to her interesting background (she is from California, but now lives in Meiringen)—who gave us fantastic introductions to the various towns and sites. The Penn guests came from all walks of life and had various connections to the university, which we enjoyed exchanging: some of them still lived nearby, in University City, others had arrived from Connecticut and Maryland.

Penn Alumni with Professor Dombrowski in Meiringen.

Penn Alumni with Professor Dombrowski in Meiringen.

From Meiringen, we took day-trips. My day one took us to the Alpine village of Kandersteg from where we took a cable car up to the Alpine Lake Oeschinen, then hiked to enjoy the spectacular views over this gorgeous, clear lake. The next day we visited the medieval town of Murten, beautifully preserved including parts of its medieval wall. There was a small antique market in town, which we happened upon as a surprise, before boarding a boat to go across Lake Murten to tour the winery “La Petite Chateau”. Once there, we were introduced to the local wine traditions and had a wine tasting of some ten delicious wines that were served with the local specialty, a savory home-made tarte flambée. The following day was off for everyone, and I decided to offer an ad-hoc tour of an interesting site in nearby Lucerne, the 19th-century Bourbaki Panorama, one of the last remaining such large-scale historical panoramas in the world. The next day we were off to Zermatt, at the bottom of the famous Matterhorn. The mountain that day was covered in low-hanging clouds, but we nonetheless enjoyed trying to snatch a peak when they happened to open up a bit. The final trip of the week took us to the medieval towns of Thun and Spiez, which we reached by a scenic boat ride across Lake Thun. That last evening, we had our final reception and dinner at the hotel, which made everyone wish that this amazing experience was not yet coming to an end.

The Alpine Lake Oeschinen.

The Alpine Lake Oeschinen.

Two evenings during this week I lectured to the group, which showed their enthusiasm through their many informed questions. One evening, I lectured on my current research project on Impressionism and techniques of time-keeping in the nineteenth century, which dovetailed nicely with what we were learning elsewhere about the local Swiss clock-making industry. The second evening, I lectured on modern Swiss art, stretching from the symbolist painter Arnold Böcklin to the modernist Paul Klee to the Dada movement founded in Zurich during World War I.

The trip was very memorable for me. I had not been to Switzerland in over ten years, and exploring this gorgeous country with other Penn guests made me appreciate its special beauty and charm anew. Hopefully, until another trip together.

[Professor André Dombrowski will be leading a summer 2014 tour for Penn Alumni Travel through the heart of Europe: Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and France. You can learn more about this trip, The Great Journey, here. To view more of Professor Dombrowski’s Switzerland pictures, click here.]

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Bus People

Author: Howard S. Freedlander, C’67

Ever drive into a fast-food restaurant or any other highway restaurant, see a tour bus, express disgust to yourself or a passenger and simply choose another place to eat quickly?

Ever visit a sightseeing spot, see a tour bus or buses and, again, shrug and express a word or two of pique and impatience and then endure the ensuing onslaught of camera-carrying, earnest and chattering masses?

My guess is that your answers to these mostly rhetorical questions are “yes” and “yes.”

Well, folks, for 10 days on a Penn-sponsored tour of the southwest national parks, my wife Liz and I, along with 22 other people, were “bus people.” Never thought I would claim that distinction. It was okay, and fitting.

On an incredibly fascinating tour of the parks, joined by alumni of Smith College, Case Western, Temple and the University of North Carolina, my wife and I became certified tourists, carrying cameras and intense desire to grasp the geological marvels facing us every day of our trip.

As we stopped for lunch and potty breaks (nearly all of us in our 60s and 70s) in places such as Mt. Carmel Junction, UT, St. George’s, UT and Richfield, UT, we crowded (sort of) fast-food emporiums and gift shops (also known as trading posts). In nearly all cases, the proprietors and their employees were very pleased, naturally, and other customers seemed mildly disinterested. I was particularly amused when we stopped at Mt. Carmel Junction on our way from Bryce National Park to Zion National Park, and three tour buses, including ours, arrived at the same time.

I recall on a visit to the Scottish Highlands in 1998 with our British friends, my friend Richard used an unfavorable expression when we saw a tour bus arrive at the same scenic location as we did. We laughed and derided these bus-borne tourists. In Utah and Arizona, my wife and I fit my friend’s description, happily so.

When we arrived at Arches National Park in southeast Utah, I must have seen three tour buses and heard voices representing France, China and perhaps others. Bus people. And so were we all as we crowded paths and walkways to see, touch and photograph the arches and then exclaim and chatter, incessantly.

Who were the otherwise faceless tourists in our group? Two were Penn grads, a medical doctor in Philadelphia and the other an attorney in Cleveland. One was a military psychiatrist. One was a public relations executive in Connecticut. One was a neurological radiologist in California. One was a longtime staffer to the late Sen. Ted Kennedy. One has run thrift shops in Philadelphia. One was a plumber in Philadelphia. One was a mentor to Penn students in the Graduate School of Education as they interned in area schools. One was a development director at a marine science lab in Maryland. One was a retired deputy treasurer in Maryland.

So, maybe, my tolerance for “bus people” has taken a turn for the better. Maybe, just maybe, they are like my wife and me. They chose a form of tourist travel that allows you to see many unbelievable and awesome sights in the comfort of a bus, allowing all decisions and logistical decisions made by others. I didn’t even have to carry my own luggage during the trip, except from my room to the front door of the room for a “bag pull”—that is, transfer of our luggage to the bus. On the morning we left Las Vegas to go to the airport to return home, I insisted, over the objections of the private car carrier’s driver, to carry my own luggage just to reenter the real world.

Ever heard of “scatter lunches?’

The phrase was new to me. Periodically, our group—smaller than most—would stop at a shopping center (yes, we had to travel between natural wonders), a man-made, utilitarian creation, for lunch. We could choose among several ubiquitous fast-food restaurants, spending an hour before reporting promptly to the bus. Remember we “bus people” had schedules—and dare you not to abide by instructions from a very competent, cheerful and well-meaning tour director. Our schedule of stops—Grand Canyon, Navajo Reservation, Glen Canyon Dam, Antelope Slot Canyon, Monument Valley, Arches National Park, Bryce National Park and Zion National Park—was full and fulfilling.

What did it feel like being a “bus person,” touring the southwest national parks in an organized, structured way?

It was an extraordinary experience. For many of us on the East Coast, we have looked to the east, to Europe, the Mediterranean and Africa for vacation and education. Perhaps we have overlooked our own natural wonders. That seemed to be the prevailing sentiment among our well-traveled group members. It was time to see our own country—by way of a bus.

We went from the awful (Las Vegas), our starting and ending point, to the awesome (Grand Canyon) in rather short order. Just like that, we transcended the glitter and gloss for geological formations that strained your imagination. We immersed ourselves in Navajo culture and history, paying due reverence to movie icon John Wayne, who starred in many John Ford-directed movies shot in the Navajo desert. We visited Monument Valley, finding it haunting and mystical; we visited Arches National Park, marveling at the geological creations formed over millions of years; we visited Bryce National Park with its beautiful, fractured cliffs, finding a different viewpoint every time you shot a digital photo; and then, finally we visited Zion National Park, serene and accessible to park visitors, who could touch wet cliffs with hanging plants and walk along the calm Virgin River.

So, we were certifiable “bus people” who ate “scatter lunches,” talked about children and grandchildren, discussed past and current jobs—and shared rather personal information. I found that people, away from familiar surroundings, shared intimate details about family matters. A close bond materialized, albeit briefly. What is said on the bus, stays on the bus, I guess.

Would my wife and I join another organized tour again, transforming ourselves into obedient “bus people,” for whom all decisions are made and rarely, if ever, do you carry your own luggage? Yes, we would do it again, gladly so, possibly in a foreign locale. We have experienced the joy of not worrying about logistical details, of not negotiating with hotels and car rental agencies, not having to figure out itineraries—and not carrying our own luggage, until we go home and return to reality.

We no longer will sneer at tour buses, as they pour lots of people into a local fast-foot restaurant. We will welcome visitors and tourists who may at time look unsure of their surroundings. We will appreciate the different voices and accents. After all, we “bus people” are brethren.

Ultimately, the view was worth the bus ride.

Ultimately, the view was worth the bus ride.

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Penn Alumni Travel: Paris to Normandy

Author: Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw, Penn Professor of Art History

Paris in June!  Does it get any better?  Only if you are cruising down the Seine River aboard the immaculate Avalon Creativity with a snifter of Calvados in hand en route to beautiful and historic Normandy for five days before returning to the City of Lights once more.

Despite having taken over a dozen ocean cruises, including hosting a Penn Alumni Travel cruise to the Lesser Antilles aboard the elegant Silversea Silver Whisper in 2011, I had never taken a river cruise before embarking on our Paris to Normandy trip from June 11-18, 2013.  I now know that river cruising is a more relaxed and quieter relative of ocean cruising.  It is definitely in the same family of travel, where you visit many places but only unpack once, but without the dreaded seasickness or the constant lure of the casino and other onboard activities that can play havoc with your travel budget.

The Avalon Creativity flying the Red and the Blue!

The Avalon Creativity flying the Red and the Blue!

With river cruising, the real star is the countryside through which you are traveling.   And boy was Normandy a stunner!  From its World War II landing beaches;  marvelous medieval cathedrals and castles; rich cheeses, such as camembert, livarot, and pont l’eveque; and tasty cidre, pommeau, and calvados brandy, it is one of the most historic and palate-pleasing regions in France. I found the itinerary to be both delightful and educational!

Calvados, French Apple Brandy, for sale in Honfleur.

Calvados, French Apple Brandy, for sale in Honfleur.

Our trip began with a stop in Giverny and a visit to the home of the great impressionist painter Claude Monet.  The gardens that Monet designed and developed during his forty-three years of living and painting in this tiny hamlet just outside of the town of Vernon are absolutely breath-taking.  As our group strolled the path around the water lily pond made famous by the artist one could hear the buzzing of bees flying from flower to flower and chirping of birds resting in the trees overhead.  Most striking for me (as an art historian) was the interior of Monet’s house, which is filled with his original collection of Japanese Ukiyo-e prints, many of them featuring images of westerners as seen through the eyes of Japanese artists.  Both the prints and the gardens provided an interesting window onto the visual influences of one of the last century’s greatest modern artists.  I was also pleased to see that one of Penn’s most altruistic alums, Walter H. Annenberg, had financed the building of the subterranean passage that takes viewers from one part of the garden to the other.

The Water Lily Pond at Monet’s Giverny.

The Water Lily Pond at Monet’s Giverny.

A view of Monet’s house at Giverny from the gardens.

A view of Monet’s house at Giverny from the gardens.

The plaque marking the subterranean passage sponsored by Wharton alum Walter H. Annenberg.

The plaque marking the subterranean passage sponsored by Wharton alum Walter H. Annenberg.

The following day we began a two-night stay in Rouen, the gateway to Normandy proper and a bustling city of about 100,000 people.  During the week of our visit, Rouen was hosting the Armada, a huge nautical festival held there every three years that brings dozens of tall ships to the city’s port area.  It was exciting to see the young sailors, many of them students in the process of learning the disappearing art of sailing such magnificent vessels, walking the streets in their picturesque uniforms.  I was pleasantly surprised one afternoon by a maritime marching band making its way through city.  Its music was infectious and I followed it for several blocks through town, all the way to the Church of St. Joan of Arc, built on the site where the saint was burned at the stake in 1431.

A Russian sailor in the square by the Church of St. Joan of Arc.

A Russian sailor in the square by the Church of St. Joan of Arc.

Le Bagad de Lann Bihoue maritime marching band performing in the streets of Rouen.

Le Bagad de Lann Bihoue maritime marching band performing in the streets of Rouen.

The second day in Rouen the majority of our travelers went to the D-Day landing beaches at Normandy.  Because the Avalon Creativity attracts British and Canadian travelers in almost equal numbers as it does Americans, two itineraries were offered allowing people to choose to visit the beaches that suited their particular interests.  The visit to the landing beaches was incredibly powerful and moving for those who went, and although there were no WWII veterans aboard the Creativity, talk of relatives who served in the war and the childhood impressions of those who were too young to do so filled the dining room that night.

In spring of 2014, to mark the 70th anniversary of  D-Day, Penn Alumni Travel is offering a very special trip, “Celtic Lands,” that will be hosted by former School of Arts and Sciences Dean, Professor of English Rebecca Bushnell, and David Eisenhower, grandson of the great general and American President Dwight D. Eisenhower and a Senior Fellow of the Foreign Policy Research Institute and a Professor and Public Policy Fellow at the Annenberg School of Communication and the School of Arts and Sciences.  If you have been considering visiting the landing beaches in Normandy, this upcoming trip will undoubtedly be a great way to do so!

The view of Chateau Gaillard from Petit Andely.

The view of Chateau Gaillard from Petit Andely.

On our way back up the Seine toward Paris, we stopped at Petit Andelys, a quaint village that is dominated by the Chateau Gaillard, a 12th-century keep built by the British King Richard the Lionheart to defend his continental lands.  On our way up the massive hill to the strategically located fortress we passed a delightful medieval garden and listened to the story of how Richard thwarted his enemies with tactical knowledge and architectural devices borrowed from the Islamic lands he encountered during the Crusades.  It was sad to hear how his less adept brother John lost the fort by adding vulnerable windows to the chateau’s chapel that ultimately allowed invaders to enter the otherwise impregnable edifice.

The undulating Moorish façade of Chateau Gaillard.

The undulating Moorish façade of Chateau Gaillard.

The next morning we docked in Conflans, where early risers were treated to a lovely river-front market just a few steps from the gangway.  I especially enjoyed perusing the vegetables, beautiful fishes, and the trussed meats that were offered for sale, lamenting the fact that I had no way to cook or eat any of it!  Not that I was the least bit hungry — the food onboard the ship was both plentiful and tasty.  But it was all so beautiful!  The French really know how to eat!

The elegant façade of the Chateau Malmaison, purchased against her husband’s wishes by Josephine Bonaparte.

The elegant façade of the Chateau Malmaison, purchased against her husband’s wishes by Josephine Bonaparte.

That same morning in Conflans, given the choice between touring Chateau Malmaison, the home of the Empress Josephine, and visiting Auvers-sur-Oise, where the artist Vincent Van Gogh spent his final days, I chose the un-art historian thing and went for the opulence of Josephine’s pleasure palace and its now-slightly-disheveled rose gardens.  The Chateau, acquired by Josephine without her husband Napoleon’s approval (a marital dispute that ultimately caused him to outlaw such unsanctioned spousal purchases in the Napoleonic Code), was gorgeous.  Filled to the rafters with gold-plated-everything and mementos of the (in)famous couple’s life together, it is truly a glimpse into one of the most opulent and tumultuous eras in European history.

SAMSUNG CSC

SAMSUNG CSC

(Gold-plated-everything in Chateau Malmaison, the home of Empress Josephine)

Later that day the ship docked in Paris, where those who had not done any pre-cruise excursions were treated to tours of the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre Museum.  The second night in Paris, and our last night on the trip, the truly adventurous among us went to the Moulin Rouge, where we were treated to dinner and their famous show “Faerie.”  I had seen the show before, back in 2008, but it seemed just as fresh and featured a few new numbers and costumes.  However, nothing beats the part where the almost-naked girl swims with the giant snakes in the glass-walled aquarium that rises up from the floor. (Sorry, no pictures allowed.)  Does it get any better, or more, uh, educational, than that?  Ah, Paris in June!

[Penn Alumni Travel will be heading back to France in 2014 with Director of the Arthur Ross Gallery Lynn Marsden-Atlass. Click here for more information. Or, if you’re interested in traveling with Art History Professor Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw—author of this blog—check out this Spanish coast itinerary. Professor Shaw will be hosting this tour in October 2014.]

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