Tuesday, December 1, 2020
Greek Yogurt
Sunday, November 1, 2020
Mycenae
In the second millennium BC, Mycenae was one of the major centers of Greek civilisation. It dominated much of southern Greece, the Cycladitic islands, Crete and the western Anatolia. At its peak in 1350 BC, the Citadel and the lower town had a population of 30,000. Francesco Grimani in 1700 identified the ruins of Mycenae based on Pausanias' description. Mycenae's Acropolis and surrounding countryside. The German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann (1822-1890) excavated Mycenae and nearby Tiryns. Schliemann is considered as the modern discoverer of prehistoric or Bronze Age Greece. Agamemnon, the king of Mycenae, conducted the 10 year war against Troy, to get beautiful Helen back to his brother Menelaus. Legend tells us that the long and arduous war divided mortals and gods alike, and contributed to curses and vengeance that followed many of the Greek heroes. After the war Agamemnon returned to Mycenae and although he was greeted warmly by his subjects, he was slayed by his wife Clytemnestra and her lover Aegistheus. The heroes of the Trojan war inspired many writers in antiquity, Homer being the pre-eminent of all, as well as many poets in recent times among whom the American poet Louise Gluck who won the 2020 Nobel price for Literature. Her emblematic poem on Achilles and her work according to Anders Olsson, Chairman of Nobel Committee, is "deceptively natural, candid and uncompromising, with no trace of a poetic ornament". The Triumph of Achilles In the story of Patroclus no one survives, not even Achilles who was near god. Patroclus resembled him; the wore the same armor. Always in these friendships one serves the other, one less than the other; the hierarchy is always apparent, though the legends cannot be trusted their source is the survivor, the one who has been abandoned. What were the Greek ships on fire compared to this loss? In his tent, Achilles grieved with his whole being and the gods saw he was a man already dead, a victim of the part that loved, the part that was mortal. Achilles tending Patroclus, identified in inscriptions on a vase. Attic red-figure kylix, ca 500 BC |
Thursday, October 1, 2020
Sunset
A happy cow enjoying the green grass of Ireland at sunset (photo by Enya Woods)
Tuesday, September 1, 2020
Dawn
In Greek mythology Dawn or Eos (Ηως in Greek) is a Goddess that rises each morning from her home the Ocean (Οκεανος). In the Homeric Hymn to Helios, we are told that Hyperion married Eryphaesa, and begot tireless Helios (the Sun), rosy Eos (the Dawn) and fair tressed Selene (the Moon). Dawn appears as many as twenty times in The Odyssey, and the poem repeats similar descriptions of her such as “But when early-born rosy-fingered Dawn appeared…” Book Eight first lines read When young Dawn with her red-rose fingers shone once more, the royal Alcinous, hallowed island king, rose from bed and great Odysseus, raider of cities, rose too. A There are many similar expressions in Homeric verse, which suggest that different things will happen every day, but Dawn always appears early and always with her rosy fingers.
The Greek Goddess Eos in her Chariot ready for another day of travel. Edifice found in Herculaneum |
Sunrise in our little paradise on earth Porto Rafti: the Homeric expression “when newborn Dawn appeared with rosy fingers…” describes our feelings when we see Eos. At dawn the hue of the sea becomes pink. The waves become placid and their phosphoresce reflects shades of a red carnation. Όλος ο γιαλός ροδίζει γύρω. Τα κύματα φρικιούν ήρεμα, και το φωσφόρισμά των ανταυγάζει αποχρώσεις ερυθρού γαροφάλλου..." Παπαδιαμαντης
Sunrise in Ukraine; the Homeric expression “when the early Dawn was born; her fingers bloomed” is most appropriate.
The golden throne of Dawn was riding up the sky… and brought a beautiful day… in frozen Lake Baikal.
Aurora, ceiling fresco by Guido Reni (1613) Picture from Encyclopedia Brittanica
Saturday, August 1, 2020
Ancient Messene
The charming village Mavromati is on the slope of Mount Ithome. Ancient Messene or Messini (Αρχαία Μεσσηνία) is a major archaeological site in Greece. It is the city the Theban general Epaminondas founded in 369 BC. The mountain village has a nice hotel Messana which among other amenities offers a perfect view of the ancient city, which is so well-preserved that you can easily envision how life in a city was 2,500 years ago.
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The geographer Pausanias has left us a description of the ancient city which still lies in a fertile valley. Ancient Messene has the fortune that was not destroyed or altered by later settlements thus its ruins remain untouched. When the visitor enters the archaeological site the first structure, he sees is a very well-preserved theatre (Odeon).
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The Agora of Ancient Messene was the site where the inhabitants conducted their transactions including sacrifices of animals for religious or commercial purposes.
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The Asclepeion was the most famous sanctuary of Ancient Messene. The Asclepeion was not used for healing purposes as those in Epidaurus and Kos but along with the Agora was the center of public life. There are more than 140 pedestals of statues of prominent citizens and five platforms that surrounded the Doric temple.
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The Stadium is among the most impressive structures of Ancient Messini. Visitors can still run in the field where athletes competed in antiquity.
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The restored Mausoleum is located at the far end of the stadium. The temple like structure according to Pausanias who visited the site (155-160 A.D.) was the funerary tomb, the city honored its chief priest as a hero, and it was in this building members of the Saithidas family were buried.
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Ancient Messene, was surrounded by a protective wall, the total length of which was 9 km. The wall which dates to the 3rd century B.C. is one of the most important achievements of ancient military architecture and protected the city from all directions, except for the Northeast, where Mount Ithome stood as a natural fortress. The wall had two gates, the Arcadian that led towards Megalopolis and the Laconian which has not survived. The wall was built by Epaminondas, who defeated the Spartans and liberated the Messenian people who for four centuries were Sparta’s helots. Strabo compares Ancient Messene that was also known as Ithome to Corinth regarding its strategic importance.
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Wednesday, July 1, 2020
Covid-19 Pandemic; observations thus far.
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On the cruise vessel Diamond Princess 3,618 tests were performed on 3,711 people (2,666 passengers and 1,045 crew). 712 of the tests or 19% were positive. Half of those tested had symptoms while half were asymptomatic. There were 14 deaths. The death rate of the entire cohort (crew + passengers) was 0.37% while the death rate among those who tested positive, who were likely elderly, it was 2%. In a brief report has been published in the Journal of Emerging Infectious Diseases, the interested reader, can find epidemiological information regarding Covid-19 in a group of people who were isolated in close proximity within the confines of a vessel. The passengers and crew were quarantined in Yokohama, Japan and the lockdown was total.
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We now know that locking down entire countries adversely impacts economies. McKinsey's researchers estimate that government deficits could reach $30 trillion by 2023. Stanford University's epidemiologist John Ioannidis believes that the infection fatality rate (IFR) of Covid-19 can vary from less than that of Influenza to ten times more. It all depends on case mix, how patients are treated and what age group is infected. It is known that almost 80% of the deaths are individuals over the age of 80 or those with poor health due to risk factors. Since several countries such as Taiwan, Singapore, S. Korea and Japan have dealt successfully with the viral epidemic, hopefully the rest of the countries can decrease their fatality rate if a second or more waves take place. (In the picture the US daily fatality rate as depicted in a NYT article)
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Monday, June 1, 2020
Taiwan, Japan, Sweden and Greece; a tale of four countries.
On Jan 20, Taiwan activated its Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC), which rolled out more than 124 measures such as banning all exports of surgical masks and providing all its citizens with two free masks. On Jan 26 it banned travel to and from Wuhan. According to a March 3 article published in JAMA, the CECC rolled out measures that included border control, case identification, quarantine for all travelers from regions hard hit by the disease, and postponing the reopening of schools following the winter break. The center also served as the source of information for the public, with daily press conferences that provided the population with reliable and easy to understand information about the outbreak. It was thanks to these measures that Taiwan experienced one of the smallest fatality rates in the world of only 0.3 deaths per million.
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Japan went its own way, limiting tests to only the most severe cases.
Japan — the grayest country in the world and a popular tourist destination with large, crowded cities — has one of the lowest mortality rates from Covid-19. Τhe government never forced businesses to close and the medical system did not get overwhelmed.
Japan focused on quickly containing small outbreaks through contact tracing. It has focused on lessening people’s anxiety and stressing the basic science of prevention: wash your hands, wear a mask, keep your distance from others.
A public education campaign urged people to avoid the “Three C’s” which are closed spaces with poor ventilation, crowded places and close contact.
Last week, Prime Minister Abe declared Japan’s battle against the outbreak a success, taking the country off its “lockdown lite” that lasted only a month and a half. Japan experienced one of the smallest fatality rates in the world of only 7 deaths per million.
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As the virus spread across Europe, many Greeks feared that Greece would be hit as bad asItaly and Spain. On Feb. 27, a day after the country’s first Covid-19 case was diagnosed the government canceled the annual carnival and all sporting events and on March 11, it closed down schools and universities. Two days later all travelers from abroad had to go through a two-week mandatory quarantine. It also closed down cafes, restaurants, libraries and museums. Attendance of mass in churches was also forbidden even during Holy week and Easter.
Everyone in the country during the 2 ½ months lockdown had to request permission by sending an SMS each time we were to leave our homes, to go to supermarkets, doctors’ offices, pharmacies to visit and help our elderly relatives, to go for a walk or risk a fine.
(Picture of an empty Monastiraki square in Athens with view of the Acropolis in the background.)
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The government established a council of experts who issued information and advice on a daily basis. It was the willingness of most Greeks to comply with experts’ suggestions that brought about an outstanding result of only 2,915 confirmed cases and 175 deaths as of today. Greece similarly to Japan tested for the virus less than 1 percent of the population. As of today, 15,903 tests per million were performed mostly on people admitted to hospitals with symptoms and those who have been in contact with confirmed cases. Spot tests on travelers coming into the country from abroad were performed as well. For comparison purposes Germany and Austria countries that also had very good results performed 47,194 and 47,477 tests per million of inhabitants respectively.
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As of this week, the number of cases and more important the number of deaths per million comparing to other European countries point to a Greek success story. So, what was Greece’s good result due to? First, as Taiwan, Greece enacted its plan, a strict lockdown, earlier than most European countries. Second, the population of 11 million Greeks lives in a mainland which is mountainous, the size of which is 50,000 square miles, and which is surrounded by two seas the Aegean (82,000 square miles) and the Ionian sea (65,000 square miles) with more than a thousand islands, thus the country is sparsely populated as its physical characteristics make contact between villages and small towns difficult, which after all was forbidden during the lockdown. Third, most of the Greeks accepted the enacted recommendations of social distancing and adhered to its principles. Greece experienced one of the smallest fatality rates in Europe of only 18 deaths per million.
(Picture of a deserted beach in Porto Rafti, Greece)
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Sweden's controversial plan to deal with the coronavirus allowed for people to go outside, visit restaurants, bars and shops as long as they kept distant from each other. Sweden closed high schools and universities and did not allow gatherings of more than 50 people. Although not everyone in Sweden is happy with this approach, the majority of the people were satisfied.
Anders Tegnell, who advocated this approach, estimated that 40% of the people in Stockholm will be immune by the end of June which will give the country a big advantage, as most of the countries will experience a “big second wave” later this year. As of May 20th, only 7.3% of Stockholm’s inhabitants have antibodies to Covid-19. He also said the “lockdown strategy” has not scientific basis especially when it comes to the young and children as they do not transmit the disease. Sweden has reported zero coronavirus deaths in the last 24 hours, for the first time since March 13. Sweden experienced fatality rate was average in Europe with 440 deaths per million.
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So, which approach should countries follow in the future when an infectious disease appears to be spreading and the danger of an epidemic is real? Extensive testing such as performed in Singapore allows authorities to quickly determine who is infected and isolate them. More than 90% of cases in Singapore were mostly young, healthy men. Of those who died, 95% were more than 60 years old, while the vast majority of those infected were between the ages of 20 and 59.
Taiwan’s and Greece’s success stories suggest that an early detection of a pandemic and enactment of measures for its control minimize the number of cases, flattens the curve and deaths.
The “lockdown light’ approach of Japan also ensured a low death fatality rate.
The open society approach with social distancing as it was practiced in Sweden has higher death toll but left the economy minimally affected.
All four countries followed their experts’ advice and their policies did not become a source of political discord. Unfortunately, fear and politicization of crises stigmatize governments or groups of people without helping to solve the challenge at hand therefore are ultimately unproductive. Hopefully, in 2021 an effective vaccine will become available that will limit the prevalence of the disease. Past pandemics such as the 1918-1919 Spanish flu, still have lessons we all can learn and benefit from as most viral pandemics have similarities therefore similar measures such social distancing, wearing masks when in crowded places, washing our hands often, use of hand sanitiser, sneezing and coughing etiquette, often help in their control.
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Finally, going out for a walk and spending time in nearby park or nature reserve reduces stress and help us feel healthier and happier. Looking at greenery and listening at nature’s sounds including total silence afforded to us in remote areas can boost our sense of well-being.
Well, my friends this is the last post on pandemics and Covid-19. In my opinion the pandemic will die down on its own as most epidemics do and all of us those infected or not will remember the Covid-19 epoch for the rest of our lives.
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