Trip to Italy is a journey back in time

MILLBROOK — Ten students, one teacher and two parents from the Dutchess Day School (DDS) took an eight-day trip to Italy where they immersed in Roman and Italian culture and history. The students, in sixth, seventh and eighth grade, experienced as much as they possibly could in the time allotted, informed by a travel guide as well as Russell Day, who teaches Latin and writing at DDS. 

Emily Page, a parent who accompanied the group, said, “The Dutchess Day trip to Rome and Pompeii was a journey back in time, a lesson in ancient history, art and architecture.” 

On the first leg of their trip, they visited Emperor Tiberius’s seaside villa in Sperlonga, climbed Mt. Vesuvius in the snow, toured Herculaneum, saw the frescoes in the villas at Oplontis, toured Pompeii and visited Hadrian’s villa. 

In Rome, they saw the Colosseum and the Roman Forum, visited the ancient seaport of Ostia Antica, had a guided tour of the Vatican museums, the Sistine Chapel and St. Peter’s Basilica. They also managed to fit in the Borghese Museum, the Spanish steps, the Pantheon, the Baths of Caracalla and the Via Appia. 

They were struck again and again, said Day, by the “grandeur of Roman architecture” and the vast array of art. On their last day, they attended the Gruppo Stoico Romano Gladiator School where they were instructed in combat and tried their hand at it (with wooden swords). 

Day is “so glad these students had the opportunity to take this trip.

“I could see they all had a wonderful time, despite the rain and the cold and the seemingly endless walking. Standing on actual Roman roads and exploring Roman homes, shops, temples, courthouses, theaters and stadiums imparts a powerful physical sense of the grandeur of Rome and a deep understanding of ancient history and culture.”

 Vanessa Park is director of development, alumni affairs and communications at Dutchess Day School.

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