"Redirect","dc-creator","Icon","UserLevel","Id","Type","dc-date","Collection","Chronology","Name","dc-publisher","dc-subject","dc-title","dc-description" "","Davidson, Gladys R.","","","Corinth:Publication:Davidson, American Journal of Archaeolog39:3... 1935","Publication","July","Corinth","","Davidson, American Journal of Archaeolog39:3... 1935","","","The Inscription on a Byzantine Kettle from Corinth","American Journal of Archaeology" "","Davidson, Gladys R.","","","Corinth:Publication:Davidson, American Journal of Archaeolog44:3... 1940","Publication","July","Corinth","","Davidson, American Journal of Archaeolog44:3... 1940","","","A Mediaeval Glass-Factory at Corinth","American Journal of Archaeology" "","Davidson, Gladys R.","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 11160::/Corinth/Icons/PublicationCovers/HesperiaTan.jpg::300::404","","Corinth:Publication:Davidson, Hesperia 11:2, 1942","Publication","June","Corinth","","Davidson, Hesperia 11:2, 1942","","","A Hellenistic Deposit at Corinth","Hesperia" "","Davies, Sarah Helen","","","Corinth:Publication:Davies, Rome, international power relations, ... 2012","Publication","2012","Corinth","","Davies, Rome, international power relations, ... 2012","","","Rome, international power relations, and 146 BCE","Within a single year - - 146 BCE - - Roman generals had entered the cities of Carthage and Corinth and forever changed the course of Mediterranean history . Although involved in separate conflicts with Rome , these cities and their tragedies became uniquely linked , not only to each other , but also to a perceived trajectory of Rome as an imperial power . Subsequent generations have looked to 146 BCE as an important turning point , and in doing so have attached value -laden interpretations to it as a gauge on Roman imperialism . This dissertation looks at 146 BCE from a different angle , seeking to understand its significance in terms of its contemporary international context , asking how it first became viewed as a turning point . The analysis utilizes international relations theory of normative systems , focusing on collective perceptions and evolving political conceptions within an interstate cultural environment . Exploring contemporary texts and archaeological clues , it sees the second -century BCE as a period in which the Mediterranean was becoming increasingly globalized , drawn together by universalizing ideals." "","Davis, Jack L.","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 11160::/Corinth/Icons/PublicationCovers/HesperiaTan.jpg::300::404","","Corinth:Publication:Davis, Hesperia 48:3, 1979","Publication","September","Corinth","","Davis, Hesperia 48:3, 1979","","","Late Helladic I Pottery from Korakou","Hesperia" "","de Grazia, C. & Williams, Charles K.","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 11160::/Corinth/Icons/PublicationCovers/HesperiaTan.jpg::300::404","","Corinth:Publication:de Grazia amp Williams, Hesperia 46:1, 1977","Publication","March","Corinth","","de Grazia & Williams, Hesperia 46:1, 1977","","","Corinth 1976: Forum Southwest","Hesperia" "","De Grazia, Catherine E.","","","Corinth:Publication:De Grazia, Excavations of the American school ... 1980","Publication","1980","Corinth","","De Grazia, Excavations of the American school ... 1980","","","Excavations of the American school of classical studies at Corinth : the Roman portrait sculpture","" "","De Grazia, Catherine E.","","","Corinth:Publication:De Grazia, , Dissertation","Publication","","Corinth","","De Grazia, , Dissertation","","","Dissertation",""