CLICK HERE TO SEE THE FIRST NINE YEARS
CLICK HERE TO SEE GREEKS WON
The first nine years of the war consisted of both war in Troy and war against the neighboring regions. The Greeks realized that Troy was being supplied by its neighboring kingdoms, so Greeks were sent to defeat these areas.
As well as destroying Trojan economy, these battles let the Greeks gather a large amount of resources and other spoils of war, including women (e.g., Briseis, Tecmessa and Chryseis).
ATHENS, with a population of more than 3 million, has increased sixfold since 1945 and now has 30% of total population and 60% of manufacturing capacity. Island account for 20% of total laand area. Only 10% of the population lives on Ilands in Aegean and Ionian Seas are inhabited. No place is more than 10km (45 mls) form th sea.Athen has climate typical of the easter Mediterranean basin. A single maximum of rainfall occurs in winter and summers are dry, with no rainfalling.THE ANCIENT CITY OF ATHENS is a photographic archive of the archaeological and architectural remains of ancient Athens (Greece). It is intended primarily as a resource for students of classical art & archaeology, civilization, languages, and history at Indiana University as a supplement to their class lectures and reading assignments and as a source of images for use in term papers, projects, and presentations. We also hope that this site will be useful to all who have an interest in archaeological exploration and the recovery, interpretation, and preservation of the past. I frequently receive email from teachers & students who have used the images from the Ancient City of Athens in their classes. The wonderful message I received from Mr. Fischer in Rochester, New York, has inspired this new section, and I invite all teachers who have created websites or other paedagogical materials using our images to send me their URLs (and maybe a brief paragraph or two about their students, projects, goals, results, etc.) so that we teachers (of all levels) can share with each other. (But please note: I am leaving for Athens on January 17, 2000, and will be there all semester, at least until the middle of June. I will be able to check my email, but I don't know how easy it will be for me to make changes to the website until I return. I will do what I can. KTG.). The Greek islands are not an easy place to sail. As a result of the small tricky harbors, with stern to 'Med. Mooring', we do not recommend casual sailors 'bareboat' as a first time experience sailing Greece. Hours of uncertainty and tension each day takes away from quality holiday time. There is very little Caribbean style mooring (at anchor or on moorings in bays). Most nights in the Greek islands, expect to be beam to beam with a gangplank ashore or rafted upseveral boats deep inside a harbor.If you enjoy learning about the monuments of ancient Athens, and if you believe in the importance of studying ancient civilizations, there are several things you can do RIGHT NOW to help support archaeological research. We would especially like to recommend two: FIRST, please write to your congressional representatives and urge them to continue funding the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Science Foundation. SECOND, please consider joining your local chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America or subscribing to ARCHAEOLOGY Magazine or the brand new children's magazine, Archaeology's DIG. Your dues will help fund exciting lectures, colloquia, publications, television specials, and other educational activities designed to increase our understanding of all human cultures. Share the knowledge!!The Athens Access Management system providesusers with single sign-on to numerous web-based services throughout the UK and overseas. Athenswas initially deployed in the higher education sector in 1996 and has firmly established itself as the de facto standard for secure access management to web-based services for the UK education and health sectors.In August 2000, Athens were awarded the JISC (Joint Information Systems Committee) contract for the Provision of Authentication Services to the UK higher and further education community. This contract has now been extended to the end of July 2006.Visitors taking a ferry from Athens's ancient port of Piraeus this August should not be surprised to see bubbles rippling the surface, oxygen tanks protruding here and there, and dark figures in wetsuits carrying guns swimming below. Frogmen armed with M-16 rifles and grenade launchers are the most dramatic symbol yet of Athens's desperate desire to convince a sceptical world it can ensure that al-Qaeda or similar groups do not turn the Olympic Games into another 11 September, Madrid or Bali. The divers of the Greek navy are intended to protect the VIPs and corporate bosses staying on luxury yachts moored in Piraeus Harbour, such as South Africa's President Thabo Mbeki. The skies will be guarded by helicopters and spy planes and an airship, the sea by submarines and US battleships. Around the host city some 1,600 close-circuit cameras will monitor the movement of people and vehicles. Rigorous searches will produce long queues at venues. In all, 70,000 security personnel will be involved - four times more than were used at the 2000 Sydney Olympics - and the whole operation will cost around �675 million, five times as much as Sydney. But with less than three months to go before the opening ceremony on 13 August, serious questions persist about Greece's ability to keep 10,500 athletes and two million spectators safe at the biggest sporting event on earth. Despite Greece insisting that the event 'will not be 100 per cent safe but 120 per cent safe', Britain, America, Australia and Israel betray a mixture of anxiety and fear. 'An Islamic terrorist attack on the Olympics is what everyone is planning against. That's why all this money is being spent, equipment brought in and training done,' said an official from one of the nervous nations. 'If you wanted to capture the world's attention, the Olympics, which are watched by four billion people, would be a good way to get it.' The official reels off a list of weaknesses in Greece's anti-terrorist strategy - the most hi-tech in sporting history - before adding pointedly: 'Their security plans are still a work in progress. They aren't ready yet. There's a lot of things still to be done before the security arrangement can be put fully into place, like finishing building all the venues so that cameras and scanners can finally be installed'. The sense of dread is strongest in America. Robert Mueller, director of the FBI, has singled out Athens as a likely al-Qaeda target. Any judgment of whether security would be adequate by August would be 'premature', he said - hardly a vote of confidence in the Greeks. Others speak more plainly. Mark Spitz, the swimmer who won seven gold medals at the 1972 Olympics, last month aired the fears of many athletes when he predicted a pullout by the entire 700-strong US team over security fears. 'We know there is a high degree of probability that something could happen in Athens', he said. 'Would it be political suicide to send a team there if you were the Bush administration?' Tennis champion Serena Williams added to the debate in the US, where 52 per cent of people believe a strike in Athens is likely. She admitted that she and her sister Venus might not defend their Olympic doubles title because 'I think my security and my safety and my life is a little bit more important than tennis, and so if it became a real concern to where I personally wouldn't feel comfortable, then I wouldn't go to Athens'. Others share Robert Mueller's apprehensions. Although Tony Blair expressed 'every faith' in Greek preparations on 6 May, the day a left-wing Greek terror group exploded three small devices outside an Athens police station, some of his most senior ministers do not agree. At least one cabinet minister has privately expressed concern for the safety of the UK's 350 athletes. The 24-hour armed guards Greece promised for athletes from 'high-risk' countries like Britain and Israel, have not ended such disquiet. Australia has asked to bring its own armed officers - America and Israel want the same - and they will have two jets on standby during the Games to remove their athletes if there is any incident. The 6 May bombs prompted South Korea's gymnasts to rethink plans to hold their pre-Olympic training in Athens. They now hope to use Ukraine or Romania instead. However, Craig Reedie, a British member of the IOC, is more relaxed. 'No Olympic organising committee has ever taken security as seriously as Athens. Perhaps that's inevitable because we live in a very dangerous world. You can't be anything but impressed by the effort that has gone into security. The British Olympic Association's view is that everything that could be done is being done. We're comfortable with the arrangements that have been put in place, and there's no apprehension, anxiety or fear among our athletes.' Greece demonstrated lethargy in its approach to building the Olympic facilities, wasting the first three years of construction time and earning worldwide criticism as a result. But it has been much more purposeful on security. Officials believe concern overseas is a combination of paranoia, arrogance, exaggeration - and a naive, impossible dream of foolproof security. Fanni Palli-Petralia, the minister in charge of the Olympics, last week tempted fate by declaring: 'I strongly believe, with our security operation, Athens will be the safest place in the world this August.' Colonel Lefteris Ikonomou, spokesman for the Ministry of Public Order, points out that, even before 11 September, Athens agreed to the creation of a seven-nation Olympic Advisory Group (OAG) of experts in security - a bold move for a proud, small nation. The OAG includes representatives from the US, Australia, Spain, France, Germany and Israel, as well as Britain. David Veness, a Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner and veteran of counter-terrorist operations, is chairman. In a drab building resembling a 1960s polytechnic, Ikonomou exudes confidence. 'We can guarantee absolute security, not only in the Olympic venues but in the city as well. We have spent lots of money, the first time such huge sums have been spent in Olympic Games history. And we will also have the greatest number of personnel in the history of the Games. Greece has done everything it can to prevent any attack, including a biological attack.' He highlights the unprecedented involvement of organisations such as Nato, the EU, Interpol, and the array of sophisticated technology to be deployed. 'All of the 202 participating nations will have intense security. If there was a threat to any delegation, we have foreseen it and made plans to deal with it', he adds. George Voulgarakis, Greece's Public Order Minister, gave similar assurances in Washington last week, as will Greece's Prime Minister, Costas Karamanlis, when he meets George Bush at the White House on Thursday. Privately, diplomats from the ad hoc coalition of the concerned - mostly members of the 'coalition of the willing' in Iraq - accuse the Greeks of being 'unwisely bullish' about Greece's capabilities and of 'underestimating the threat'. The Americans believe that Greece has not paid enough attention to the possibility of snipers in the hills around Athens and of a 'dirty bomb' being exploded. Greece faces difficulties delivering on Ikonomou's promised 'absolute security': it has one of the longest borders in Europe, anti-Americanism is widespread and it is next door to Turkey, where the British Embassy was bombed in November. A javelin's throw from the US Embassy, someone has spray-painted on a wall 'USA Killers', with the 'S' of USA turned into a swastika, and 'terrorist' above Bush's head.
The Greeks won many important battles and the Trojan hero Hector fell, as did the Trojan ally Penthesilea. However, the Greeks could not break down the walls of Troy.Patroclus was killed and, soonafter, Achilles was felled by Paris.Helenus, son of Priam, had been captured by Odysseus. A prophet, Helenus told the Greeks that Troy would not fall unless:
a) Pyrrhus, Achilles' son, fought in the war,
b) The bow and arrows of Hercules were used by the Greeks against the Trojans,
c) The remains of Pelops, the famous Eleian hero, were brought to Troy, and
d) The Palladium, a statue of Athena, was stolen from Troy (Tripp, 587).
Phoenix persuaded Pyrrhus to join the war. Philoctetes had the bow and arrows of Hercules, but had been left by the Greek fleet in Lemnos because he had been bitten by a snake and his wound had a horrendous smell. Philoctetes was bitter, but was finally persuaded to join the Greeks. The remains of Pelops were gotten, and Odysseus infiltrated Trojan defenses and stole the Palladium.
HELLAS is the native name greece, the aknowledged cradle of democracy and birthplace of philosophy. The human values taught by Socrates and Aristotle brought Europe out of the dark age and into the modern times. Hellas is locate at the most eastern and most souther part of Europe. Covering a mere 131,990sp km (50,961 sq mls) and with a population of 11 million it is hardly considerd a religion power.Still, a national revolution in 1821 brought an end to the turkish oppression, under which the Hellenes suffered for four centuries since the collapse of the Byzantine Empire and its capital, Constantinople in 1453. During that war for indepedence, blue and white became the national colours and the design represents the battle cry " Freedom or Death " against turkish domination.Because of its famous port, after the declaration of independence (1830) Nafplion became the first capital. A while later, due to its ancient fame, Athens became and still is the capital.Hesiod was a Boeotian farmer until the day he met the muses (nine daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne [Memory] who inspired poets, speakers, and artists) while tending sheep. They inspired him to write the "Works and Days," wherein Hesiod tells a creation story, tracing the lineage of mankind through five successive "ages" or "races" from the "Golden Age" to the present "Iron Age."Greece, is the southernmost country on the European mainland. With an area of 131.940 square kilometres, Greece is about the same size as England or New York state. Greece's longest border is with the sea. Over 2,000 Greek islands are scattered about the eastern Mediterranean, roughly 200 of them inhabited. The Greek mainland shares land borders with Albania, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Bulgaria and Turkey. The climate is mostly dry and temperate, though it snows in the mountains and in the north. The mild weather and sheltered valleys of the region, along with the early development of seafaring, contributed to the rise of Ancient Greek Civilisation. Athens, most powerful of the ancient Greek city-states, was the world's first democracy. Nearly 40% of the country's population resides in the capital, the country's largest city and most important commercial centre. Golden Age The Golden Age was a mythical first period of man when everything was happy and easy, and mortals lived like gods, although they died, but only as if falling asleep. No one worked or grew unhappy. Spring never ended. It is even described as a period in which people aged backwards. When they died, they became daimones and roamed the earth. The people of the Golden Age were formed by or for the titan Cronus who is known by the Romans as Saturn. When Zeus overcame the titans the Golden Age ended. (ll. 109-120) First of all the deathless gods who dwell on Olympus made a golden race of mortal men who lived in the time of Cronos when he was reigning in heaven. And they lived like gods without sorrow of heart, remote and free from toil and grief: miserable age rested not on them; but with legs and arms never failing they made merry with feasting beyond the reach of all evils. When they died, it was as though they were overcome with sleep, and they had all good things; for the fruitful earth unforced bare them fruit abundantly and without stint. They dwelt in ease and peace upon their lands with many good things, rich in flocks and loved by the blessed gods. (ll. 121-139) But after earth had covered this generation -- they are called pure spirits dwelling on the earth, and are kindly, delivering from harm, and guardians of mortal men; for they roam everywhere over the earth, clothed in mist and keep watch on judgements and cruel deeds, givers of wealth; for this royal right also they received; Hesiod Works and Days
ATHENS, with a population of more than 3 million, has increased sixfold since 1945 and now has 30% of total population and 60% of manufacturing capacity. Island account for 20% of total laand area. Only 10% of the population lives on Ilands in Aegean and Ionian Seas are inhabited. No place is more than 10km (45 mls) form th sea.Athen has climate typical of the easter Mediterranean basin. A single maximum of rainfall occurs in winter and summers are dry, with no rainfalling.THE ANCIENT CITY OF ATHENS is a photographic archive of the archaeological and architectural remains of ancient Athens (Greece). It is intended primarily as a resource for students of classical art & archaeology, civilization, languages, and history at Indiana University as a supplement to their class lectures and reading assignments and as a source of images for use in term papers, projects, and presentations. We also hope that this site will be useful to all who have an interest in archaeological exploration and the recovery, interpretation, and preservation of the past. I frequently receive email from teachers & students who have used the images from the Ancient City of Athens in their classes. The wonderful message I received from Mr. Fischer in Rochester, New York, has inspired this new section, and I invite all teachers who have created websites or other paedagogical materials using our images to send me their URLs (and maybe a brief paragraph or two about their students, projects, goals, results, etc.) so that we teachers (of all levels) can share with each other. (But please note: I am leaving for Athens on January 17, 2000, and will be there all semester, at least until the middle of June. I will be able to check my email, but I don't know how easy it will be for me to make changes to the website until I return. I will do what I can. KTG.). The Greek islands are not an easy place to sail. As a result of the small tricky harbors, with stern to 'Med. Mooring', we do not recommend casual sailors 'bareboat' as a first time experience sailing Greece. Hours of uncertainty and tension each day takes away from quality holiday time. There is very little Caribbean style mooring (at anchor or on moorings in bays). Most nights in the Greek islands, expect to be beam to beam with a gangplank ashore or rafted upseveral boats deep inside a harbor.If you enjoy learning about the monuments of ancient Athens, and if you believe in the importance of studying ancient civilizations, there are several things you can do RIGHT NOW to help support archaeological research. We would especially like to recommend two: FIRST, please write to your congressional representatives and urge them to continue funding the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Science Foundation. SECOND, please consider joining your local chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America or subscribing to ARCHAEOLOGY Magazine or the brand new children's magazine, Archaeology's DIG. Your dues will help fund exciting lectures, colloquia, publications, television specials, and other educational activities designed to increase our understanding of all human cultures. Share the knowledge!!The Athens Access Management system providesusers with single sign-on to numerous web-based services throughout the UK and overseas. Athenswas initially deployed in the higher education sector in 1996 and has firmly established itself as the de facto standard for secure access management to web-based services for the UK education and health sectors.In August 2000, Athens were awarded the JISC (Joint Information Systems Committee) contract for the Provision of Authentication Services to the UK higher and further education community. This contract has now been extended to the end of July 2006.Visitors taking a ferry from Athens's ancient port of Piraeus this August should not be surprised to see bubbles rippling the surface, oxygen tanks protruding here and there, and dark figures in wetsuits carrying guns swimming below. Frogmen armed with M-16 rifles and grenade launchers are the most dramatic symbol yet of Athens's desperate desire to convince a sceptical world it can ensure that al-Qaeda or similar groups do not turn the Olympic Games into another 11 September, Madrid or Bali. The divers of the Greek navy are intended to protect the VIPs and corporate bosses staying on luxury yachts moored in Piraeus Harbour, such as South Africa's President Thabo Mbeki. The skies will be guarded by helicopters and spy planes and an airship, the sea by submarines and US battleships. Around the host city some 1,600 close-circuit cameras will monitor the movement of people and vehicles. Rigorous searches will produce long queues at venues. In all, 70,000 security personnel will be involved - four times more than were used at the 2000 Sydney Olympics - and the whole operation will cost around �675 million, five times as much as Sydney. But with less than three months to go before the opening ceremony on 13 August, serious questions persist about Greece's ability to keep 10,500 athletes and two million spectators safe at the biggest sporting event on earth. Despite Greece insisting that the event 'will not be 100 per cent safe but 120 per cent safe', Britain, America, Australia and Israel betray a mixture of anxiety and fear. 'An Islamic terrorist attack on the Olympics is what everyone is planning against. That's why all this money is being spent, equipment brought in and training done,' said an official from one of the nervous nations. 'If you wanted to capture the world's attention, the Olympics, which are watched by four billion people, would be a good way to get it.' The official reels off a list of weaknesses in Greece's anti-terrorist strategy - the most hi-tech in sporting history - before adding pointedly: 'Their security plans are still a work in progress. They aren't ready yet. There's a lot of things still to be done before the security arrangement can be put fully into place, like finishing building all the venues so that cameras and scanners can finally be installed'. The sense of dread is strongest in America. Robert Mueller, director of the FBI, has singled out Athens as a likely al-Qaeda target. Any judgment of whether security would be adequate by August would be 'premature', he said - hardly a vote of confidence in the Greeks. Others speak more plainly. Mark Spitz, the swimmer who won seven gold medals at the 1972 Olympics, last month aired the fears of many athletes when he predicted a pullout by the entire 700-strong US team over security fears. 'We know there is a high degree of probability that something could happen in Athens', he said. 'Would it be political suicide to send a team there if you were the Bush administration?' Tennis champion Serena Williams added to the debate in the US, where 52 per cent of people believe a strike in Athens is likely. She admitted that she and her sister Venus might not defend their Olympic doubles title because 'I think my security and my safety and my life is a little bit more important than tennis, and so if it became a real concern to where I personally wouldn't feel comfortable, then I wouldn't go to Athens'. Others share Robert Mueller's apprehensions. Although Tony Blair expressed 'every faith' in Greek preparations on 6 May, the day a left-wing Greek terror group exploded three small devices outside an Athens police station, some of his most senior ministers do not agree. At least one cabinet minister has privately expressed concern for the safety of the UK's 350 athletes. The 24-hour armed guards Greece promised for athletes from 'high-risk' countries like Britain and Israel, have not ended such disquiet. Australia has asked to bring its own armed officers - America and Israel want the same - and they will have two jets on standby during the Games to remove their athletes if there is any incident. The 6 May bombs prompted South Korea's gymnasts to rethink plans to hold their pre-Olympic training in Athens. They now hope to use Ukraine or Romania instead. However, Craig Reedie, a British member of the IOC, is more relaxed. 'No Olympic organising committee has ever taken security as seriously as Athens. Perhaps that's inevitable because we live in a very dangerous world. You can't be anything but impressed by the effort that has gone into security. The British Olympic Association's view is that everything that could be done is being done. We're comfortable with the arrangements that have been put in place, and there's no apprehension, anxiety or fear among our athletes.' Greece demonstrated lethargy in its approach to building the Olympic facilities, wasting the first three years of construction time and earning worldwide criticism as a result. But it has been much more purposeful on security. Officials believe concern overseas is a combination of paranoia, arrogance, exaggeration - and a naive, impossible dream of foolproof security. Fanni Palli-Petralia, the minister in charge of the Olympics, last week tempted fate by declaring: 'I strongly believe, with our security operation, Athens will be the safest place in the world this August.' Colonel Lefteris Ikonomou, spokesman for the Ministry of Public Order, points out that, even before 11 September, Athens agreed to the creation of a seven-nation Olympic Advisory Group (OAG) of experts in security - a bold move for a proud, small nation. The OAG includes representatives from the US, Australia, Spain, France, Germany and Israel, as well as Britain. David Veness, a Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner and veteran of counter-terrorist operations, is chairman. In a drab building resembling a 1960s polytechnic, Ikonomou exudes confidence. 'We can guarantee absolute security, not only in the Olympic venues but in the city as well. We have spent lots of money, the first time such huge sums have been spent in Olympic Games history. And we will also have the greatest number of personnel in the history of the Games. Greece has done everything it can to prevent any attack, including a biological attack.' He highlights the unprecedented involvement of organisations such as Nato, the EU, Interpol, and the array of sophisticated technology to be deployed. 'All of the 202 participating nations will have intense security. If there was a threat to any delegation, we have foreseen it and made plans to deal with it', he adds. George Voulgarakis, Greece's Public Order Minister, gave similar assurances in Washington last week, as will Greece's Prime Minister, Costas Karamanlis, when he meets George Bush at the White House on Thursday. Privately, diplomats from the ad hoc coalition of the concerned - mostly members of the 'coalition of the willing' in Iraq - accuse the Greeks of being 'unwisely bullish' about Greece's capabilities and of 'underestimating the threat'. The Americans believe that Greece has not paid enough attention to the possibility of snipers in the hills around Athens and of a 'dirty bomb' being exploded. Greece faces difficulties delivering on Ikonomou's promised 'absolute security': it has one of the longest borders in Europe, anti-Americanism is widespread and it is next door to Turkey, where the British Embassy was bombed in November. A javelin's throw from the US Embassy, someone has spray-painted on a wall 'USA Killers', with the 'S' of USA turned into a swastika, and 'terrorist' above Bush's head.
POSEIDON is also the god of the earthquakes, and earthquakes are alsovery common in greece. He stmpa his foot, or he hits the earth with his tridente(like a pitchfork)to make an eaqrthquake. And, maybe for the same reason, Poseidon is the Horse-God. Horse, i Suppse, are alsobig and unpreedictable and dangerous, though not on the same scale as earthquaks and oceans. If he came with the Indo-Europeans to Greece, then he might have originally been a horse-god, who only later came to be associated with the ocean and earthquakes. OCEANOR was awarded the contract to deliver an environmental and monitoring surveillance system to Greece. The system is delivered to the National Marine Research Centre (NMRC) and consists of 20 buoys with automatic sensors, two large data processing and computing systems, in addition to software and numerical models. OCEANOR will also collaborate in the training of the NMRC personnel. Data from POSEIDON will be used in the field of weather forecasting, fisheries, aquaculture, tourism and pollution surveillance. The approach to Poseidon's Temple... a 1.5 hour busride from Athens through a very mountainous region, on a very twisty road with no guard rails...with a very, very steep drop down a rocky slope to the ocean. But we made it in one piece and forgot the bus ride when we saw this beautiful area. Our group claimed this piece of beach. There weren't too many other people here, mostly middle-aged Europeans and then us young Americans. Water was really shallow and clear, sandy bottom with a few flounders hiding here and there. Dr. Pickus had a very nice flounder swimming technique that we all enjoyed too. The temple is just up the hill on the left... how cool to swim beneath it! The weather is also something that charterers must consider on a first time visit. Strong winds 6 - 8 Beaufort (28-40 mile per hour) are not uncommon throughout the season with Meltemi north and Sirocco south winds. There are also local wind phenomena (venturi & funnels) and a lack of both navigational aids (international system) and mooring buoys. There are some very long crossings as well as a whole different set of customs and protocols at each island. For these reason our flotillas have become the most popular way to sail privately through the Aegean with the security of having inside knowledge of the region - as well as a little race each day! Flotilla guests benefit from our Skippers' and Program Directors' local knowledge of the harbors, weather conditions and forecasts, historic sites and excellent restaurants, yet they are on their own private charter yacht!Archaeological Adventure Cruise Program Directors and Skippers guide flotilla yachts aboard lead boats. Flotilla yachts can be any size, 31-60 feet. It is recommended to charter at least a 36-foot for the longer crossings and bigger seas of the scheduled '2-week' Archaeological Adventure Cruise circuit. There can be as many as 4 yachts per lead boat. There must be two certified or experienced sailors on every flotilla yacht and it must be chartered as a bareboat from our fleet of new Beneteau, Jeanneau and Hunter yachts with the standard contract and insurance requirements. See Bareboat page for details and to choose your yacht!