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[Corinth Monument] Temple of Apollo

The seven standing columns of the Archaic temple are one of the most prominent landmarks of Corinth. The dedication of the temple to Apollo is deduced from Pausanias’ description of Corinth combined with ... Temple of Apollo

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[Corinth Monument] Peribolos of Apollo

The court to the north of Peirene was identified by Pausanias as the “Peribolos of Apollo” in which was an image of the god and a painting depicting Odysseus on his return from Troy expelling his wife, ... “Peribolos of Apollo” in which was an image of the god and a ... of Peirene was identified

[Corinth Monument] Old_Peribolos of Apollo ?

of Apollo | Old_Peribolos of Apollo ?

[Corinth Monument] North of Peribolos of Apollo Baths of Eurykles

Lechaion Road Area | North of Peribolos of Apollo Baths of

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[Corinth Monument] Temple Hill

Once a ridge of limestone upon which sat the Temple of Apollo, the Romans quarried to the east and particularly to the west, leaving the temple and it immediate vicinity ... Temple Hill

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[Corinth Monument] Quarries

Roman quarries opened within the city during the early Colony to the east and west of the Temple of Apollo ... west of the Temple of Apollo.

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[Corinth Monument] Athena Trench

An early trial trench between the Theater and the Temple of Apollo that sought to find the Sanctuary of Athena Chalinitis ... Temple of Apollo that sought to find the Sanctuary of

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[Corinth Monument] Temple E

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone ... the Forum, Temple E

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[Corinth Monument] Temple E south

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone ... the Forum, Temple E

[Corinth Monument] Temple E, Southwest

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... Temple E, Southwest

[Corinth Monument] Temple E northwest

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Temple E, Temenos | Temple E

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[Corinth Monument] Temple E, Temenos

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Temple E, Temenos

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[Corinth Monument] Temple A

Temple A is a Classical and Hellenistic structure which lay partly under the shops along the east side of the Lechaion Road and partly under the Peribolos of Apollo. Preserved are the foundations of a ... Temple A

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[Corinth Monument] Fountain of Poseidon

This fountain is one of several structures of the West Terrace Temples bounding the west side of the Forum ... Fountain of Poseidon

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[Corinth Monument] Temple C

This tetrastyle prostyle Roman temple is flanked by a pi-shaped colonnade within a closed precinct on the road leading from the forum to the theater. Unfortunately Pausanias makes no mention of the building ... Temple C

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[Corinth Monument] Apsidal Temple (Temple B)

A single course of foundation blocks are all that remain of this building with its west facing apse and facade opening toward the road to Lechaion and Peirene. A round base is located within the walls ... Spring | Apsidal Temple (Temple B)

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[Corinth Monument] Temple Hill, Basilica

A small church on the northeast corner of Temple Hill ... Temple Hill, Basilica

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[Corinth Monument] Temple E, Southeast

The central focus of the Frankish area consists of a large open court with a colonnade of reused Roman columns. It is on a scale similar to what had once been considered the “Market Place” of the medieval ... The central focus of the Frankish area consists of a ... colonnade of reused Roman

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[Corinth Monument] Temple E Decumanus

A major Roman east-west road immediately to the south of the Forum ... A major Roman east-west road immediately to the south of the Forum.

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[Corinth Monument] Acrocorinth Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore

Excavations on the north slopes of Acrocorinth in the 1960’s and 70’s revealed a mass of small dining rooms both above and below and ancient road leading to Acrocorinth. They were arranged in parallel ... Acrocorinth Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore

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[Corinth Monument] Asklepieion

The sanctuary of Asklepios is located in what was probably considered a healthy location on the north side of the city close to a supply of fresh spring water. It incorporated hospital facilities. The ... Keramidaki, Hill of Zeus

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[Corinth Monument] West Terrace

The buildings in the west end of the Roman Forum date from the 1st and 2nd century A.D. In contrast to most temples of both the Greek and Roman periods in Greece, the temples each stood on a high podium ... Genetrix. Temple G: Apollo of ... most temples of both the ... west end of the Roman Forum

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[Corinth Monument] Forum

The Forum, lying at the heart of the Roman City was the commercial and administrative center of the city. Its orientation conforms to the surviving Classical and Hellenistic buildings, such as the South ... Building and the Temple of ... basilicas, rows of shops, temples ... heart of the Roman City was

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[Corinth Monument] Northwest Stoa

The Northwest Stoa was once thought to have been a Hellenistic building refurbished in the Roman period. It is now understood to be entirely a Roman monument, built in the time of the emperor Augustus, ... the Temple of Apollo. At ... monument, built in the time of ... closed off the north side of

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[Corinth Monument] Sacred Spring

The Sacred Spring was a sanctuary rather than a public water source. The Sacred Spring complex has a long history lasting from the early 8th century B.C into the Hellenistic period with several phases ... and the Temple of Apollo ... Temple of Athena, was ... phases of extensive

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[Corinth Monument] Amphitheater

A large oval depression (79 meters long x 52 meters wide) in the fields 1.2 kilometers east-north-east of the Temple of Apollo is a remnant of the Roman amphitheater. A broad gap probably marks the Porta ... kilometers east-north-east of the Temple of Apollo is a remnant of the Roman amphitheater.

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[Corinth Monument] Oakley south

In the early 1960's J. Anderson led a Berkely team to excavated the northwest corner of the Temenos of Temple E ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Theater District | Temple E

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[Corinth Monument] Aghioi Theodoroi

A village to the east of the Isthmus. Northwest of the city of Ag. Theodoroi, in 1961, archaeologists unearthed the ruins of ancient Krommyona. Important discoveries were made like a statue of Apollo, ... A village to the east of the Isthmus. Northwest of the city of Ag. Theodoroi,

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[Corinth Monument] North Market

The southern half of a Roman market square surrounded by a colonnade was excavated on the North side of Temple Hill. Parts of the marble paving of the square and the gutter surrounding it were preserved ... excavated on the North side of Temple Hill. Parts of the ... The southern half of a

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[Corinth Monument] Kosmopoulos Trenches

Between 1911 and 1935, Leslie Walker Kosmopoulos excavated a total of 23 trenches in Ancient Corinth in the Forum, on Temple Hill, on the West Terrace, and around Temple E. Some of the material was stored ... Temple E. Some of the material ... excavated a total of 23 trenches ... Forum, on Temple Hill, on the

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[Corinth Monument] Gymnasium

The Gymnasium mentioned by Pausanias was thought to lie at the northern edge of the city where several inscriptions dealing with athletes and athletics have been found. Excavations during the 1960s and ... edge of the city where ... the south of the Asklepieion revealed part of an

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[Corinth Monument] West Shops

The West Shops define the west end of the Roman forum. Twelve Shops, six either side of a broad staircase ascending to the entrance of Temple E’s precinct, had vaulted chambers parts of which still survive ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Temple E, Temenos | West Shops

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[Corinth Monument] Lechaion Road

The main north-south artery (cardo maximus) of the Roman city ultimately linked the Agora of Corinth with the harbor of Lechaion on the Corinthian gulf 3 kilometers to the north. In the time of Augustus, ... foundations of Temple A (Classical ... Peribolos of Apollo (1st century ... artery (cardo maximus) of the

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[Corinth Monument] Babbius Monument

The Babbius Monument is a circular monopteros on a podium dating to the early 1st century A.D. It consisted of eight Corinthian columns arranged in a circle supporting an epistyle and a conical roof. It ... consisted of eight Corinthian ... was a rich freedman of ... built the Fountain of

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[Corinth Monument] Glauke

The fountain of Glauke, a large cubic mass of limestone, was formed when the surrounding bedrock was quarried away. Originally, the fountain was contained within a long limestone ridge running west from ... The fountain of Glauke, a large cubic mass of ... west from Temple Hill.