Time Travel - Europe
#21
Joined: Jan 2003
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<i>I would go to approx 15,000,000,000 to watch the beginning of the universe</i>
Sounds good, but where would you sit?
If Socrates and Plato were giving seminars, I'd try to find a seat somewhere. Possibly with day trips to Viking Scandinavia and Tudor England. I'm sure I'd end up burned at the stake somewhere before the week was up.
#24
Joined: Jul 2004
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I'd go pester Leonardo da Vinci with a lot of stupid questions ("What are you drawing?", How come you write backwards with your left hand?." "Is the Mona Lisa really you?" "What's all this hullaballoo about some code?" "Just how did you paint that one picture...the one with no discernible brush strokes?" "How many hours a night do you sleep?" "Do you sleep?" "Did you ever get in trouble with you mom for drawing on the walls with crayons?"
#26



Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 19,871
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<i>Why not go back to 1889 and drown the SOB?</i>
Actually akin to the plot of an interesting book by Stephen Fry (aka Jeeves) - <i>Making History</i>. Sort of in the "alternate history" genre (one of my favorite niches of literature). 20th C birth control pills slipped into AH's mum's tea.
Actually akin to the plot of an interesting book by Stephen Fry (aka Jeeves) - <i>Making History</i>. Sort of in the "alternate history" genre (one of my favorite niches of literature). 20th C birth control pills slipped into AH's mum's tea.
#27
Original Poster
Joined: Nov 2003
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I understand the sentiments...but errr..um.... my "game" was not to enable anyone to CHANGE history (my sci-fi reading has assured me the repercussions might be catastrophic.)
I just wanted my time machine to let us Observe and learn ...
Ask Michaelangelo silly questions...
hehehehe...
I just wanted my time machine to let us Observe and learn ...
Ask Michaelangelo silly questions...
hehehehe...
#28

Joined: Jul 2004
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I think my screen name reveals where I'd want to go. Anselm Adorne (1424-1483) was a burgomaster and merchant trader in Bruges. I'd be living in the Hotel Jerusalem, the family home, and praying in the Jerusalemkirk, the family church.
It was a fascinating era, beautifully described in Dorothy Dunnett's House of Niccolo series. The Jerusalmkirk still stands and is open to the public. For those who love Dame Dunnett's books, it's a pilgrimage site.
Anselm
It was a fascinating era, beautifully described in Dorothy Dunnett's House of Niccolo series. The Jerusalmkirk still stands and is open to the public. For those who love Dame Dunnett's books, it's a pilgrimage site.
Anselm
#29
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 682
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Oh, I love this question, SuzieC! Time travel has always been a fantasy of mine. Sometimes I wish I could leap into some old photographs or pictures and experience life in that time and place for even just a day.
I would go along with Robespierre, that Jerusalem in about 33 AD would be at the top of my list, too, for it would probably prove a life transforming experience.
Other than that, I've always wanted to visit Restoration Era England and meet some of the great minds that spawned the modern era: Newton (though he wasn't very nice), Chr. Wren, Boyle, Hooke, Locke and others. And I'd even get to dress up in very fancy clothes - providing I have a good amount of money with which to do it, of course.
I'm a classical music buff so Vienna in the 1780s would be another choice with all that wonderful music everywhere. And what wouldn't I give to be a fly on the wall when Mozart welcomed a teenage Beethoven to his home one day in 1787?
A Paris salon in the 1830s to hear Chopin play his sublime compositions would be pretty amazing too!
Delft or Amsterdam of the 1660s would be worth the visit, too. Maybe Rembrandt and Vermeer could use another model for a little while? And I'd have the rare privilege of becoming a masterpiece!
I could go on and on, but I'd probably put some of you to sleep-
Happy fantasizing!
I would go along with Robespierre, that Jerusalem in about 33 AD would be at the top of my list, too, for it would probably prove a life transforming experience.
Other than that, I've always wanted to visit Restoration Era England and meet some of the great minds that spawned the modern era: Newton (though he wasn't very nice), Chr. Wren, Boyle, Hooke, Locke and others. And I'd even get to dress up in very fancy clothes - providing I have a good amount of money with which to do it, of course.
I'm a classical music buff so Vienna in the 1780s would be another choice with all that wonderful music everywhere. And what wouldn't I give to be a fly on the wall when Mozart welcomed a teenage Beethoven to his home one day in 1787?
A Paris salon in the 1830s to hear Chopin play his sublime compositions would be pretty amazing too!
Delft or Amsterdam of the 1660s would be worth the visit, too. Maybe Rembrandt and Vermeer could use another model for a little while? And I'd have the rare privilege of becoming a masterpiece!

I could go on and on, but I'd probably put some of you to sleep-
Happy fantasizing!
#31
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 5,112
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Here's a different thought. I would like to spend a week with my great great great grandparents, to see what their lives were really like. Or I would like to be with either of my grandfathers for the first week they arrived in the US.
#32


Joined: Feb 2004
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This thread reminds me of one of my favorite movies, "Somewhere in Time," with Jane Seymour and Christopher Reeves.
There are so many fine ideas here, but if I could travel through time, I would opt for the future, not the past. I'm not sure where I would go, but it would be fascinating to know what's ahead for this world.
There are so many fine ideas here, but if I could travel through time, I would opt for the future, not the past. I'm not sure where I would go, but it would be fascinating to know what's ahead for this world.
#33
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,018
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I would have loved to be on that voyage in 1492. Do you think Queen Isabella and Christopher C had a "special" relationship? I asked this question while at the Alcazar in Segovia where Isabel was crowned. The very young museum guide was not amused...
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