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Greece is a fascinating combination of ancient and modern. Modern-day Greece is actually younger than the United States (officially becoming a country in 1832), but the Greek language has had minimal changes since ancient times. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

As we looked around, we saw ruins of one of the great civilizations that built Western knowledge in one direction and a massive chain restaurant block in another. It is similar to Italy – a relatively small space where one could spend months and still not see it all. And, I know I could live on filo dough pastries and Greek coffee without complaint for quite a while. We spent about 3 weeks relaxing, eating good food, and enjoying the sites. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

Athens<\/h2>\n\n\n\n

To grossly oversimplify history, after the fall of the Ancient Greeks, Athens was basically abandoned until it was made capital of modern day Greece in 1834. It is technically<\/em> one of the longest continually occupied cities in the world (~5000 years), but very few people lived in Athens after the fall of the Greek Empire. As a result, modern day Athens is predominately a bunch of skyscrapers built over the awe-inspiring ruins of a great civilization. As we wandered around, we walked over clear sidewalks revealing the ruins underneath, some subway stations had ruins on display, and public parks have chairs from ancient temples set out as the standard park benches. <\/p>\n\n\n\n