It's about 11+ hours, if not a little more.
Louis Cruise Lines travel to many different locations in the Mediterranean including Santorini, Athens, Dikili and Instanbul. Departures are from Greece, Turkey or Cyprus.
Yes, you can definitely travel to Greece on a cruise. However, you would be starting most likely from a port in Europe.
Lean to use this website, it estimates 6h hours assuming an aircraft cruising at 850km/h (550mph)You can also get the same result be taking the distance between the places, and dividing it be the cruise speed of your chosen aircraft
Take a sunset cruise from Chania Harbour.
Well, you can't take a cruise to Ancient Greece. Greece is a place that you can get to from California, but, Ancient Greece no longer exists in its original form. Ancient Greece is a time period that took place in Greece long long ago, before the common era. Unless you have a time machine (which you probably don't, since the technology to build one, if it exists yet, isn't accessible to the public), you can't go to Ancient Greece, from California or anywhere else.
People go to Greece for many reasons, including:visit familygo to schoolconduct businessvisit the ancient sitesconduct archaeologylearn the languagevacation in a mediterrenean climatetake a cruise
Is a cruse through the Mediteranean Sea stopping in Greece, Itali, an sometimes other places too
Splendour of the Seas is a cruise ship owned and operated by Royal Caribbean Cruise line. The ship operates in both Brazil and Europe, with ports of call in Greece, Turkey, France, Italy, Croatia and Spain.
It's roughly 785 kilometers. I have driven it with onestop along the Highway 401 and it took me roughly 7.5 hours with the cruise set @ 115 km/h.
Mediterranean cruises stop at popular ports of call along the shorelines of countries like Spain, Italy and Greece, but don't forget that many of those countries' most popular destinations are inland cities. If you're planning to spend time during your cruise vacation exploring Rome or Athens, be sure to choose an itinerary which allows sufficient time at port to travel to your desired destination and back again.
Athens, Greece is mostly dry and dusty. It is a sprawling city, essentially without skyscrapers. Its beauty lies in the climbs and the views from its two main hills; the Acropolis (on which the Parthenon and other ancient temples sit), and Likabettos, on top of which there is a monastery. The Athens Museum contains many famous artifacts and statues (especially Agamemnon's golden death mask). Some good eateries are in the Plaka district, near the Parthenon. Shopping for trinkets, clothing and various other souvenirs can be a bit of fun in the Monasteraki district. The general rule of thumb is to start out touring Athens, and end up on a cruise to the islands of the Dodecanese.
One can take a cruise to several places on the ship Poesia. Poesia is owned and operated by a company called MSC Poesia which cruises from Venice to Italy, Greece and Turkey.