"Redirect","dc-date","Type","dc-title","Collection","UserLevel","dc-creator","Id","dc-subject","dc-description","Name","dc-publisher","Chronology","Icon" "","","Monument","","Corinth","","","Corinth:Monument:Ancient Corinth, West","Ancient Corinth, West","","Ancient Corinth, West","","","" "","","Monument","","Corinth","","","Corinth:Monument:Apsidal Temple (Temple B)","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Sacred Spring | 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 and an underground tunnel connects it to the Sacred Spring. Pfaff reconstructs the facade with three square piers in-antis.","Apsidal Temple (Temple B)","","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0878::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0878.jpg::0::0" "","","Monument","","Corinth","","","Corinth:Monument:Argive Heraion","Argolid | Argive Heraion","The Heraion of Argos is an ancient sanctuary in Argos, Greece. It was part of the greatest sanctuary in the Argolid, dedicated to Hera, whose epithet ""Argive Hera"" appears in Homer's works. The memory was preserved at Argos of an archaic, aniconic pillar representation of the Great Goddess. The site, which might mark the introduction of the cult of Hera in mainland Greece, lies northeast of Argos between the archaeological sites of Mycenae and Midea. The traveller Pausanias, visiting the site in the 2nd century CE, referred to the area as Prosymna.","Argive Heraion","","","" "","","Monument","","Corinth","","","Corinth:Monument:Argolid","Argolid","A county in the Peloponnese.","Argolid","","","Corinth:Image:bw 1995 032 18::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1995_032/1995_st_032_018.jpg::1214::1800" "","","Monument","","Corinth","","","Corinth:Monument:Asklepieion","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | 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 temple is represented only by foundation trenches cut in the limestone bedrock. The earliest remains, perhaps of the 5th century B.C., are represented by shallow cuttings within, and to the northeast of, the later temple. The 4th century B.C. temple stood in the middle of a rectangular enclosure and can be reconstructed as a rectangular cella faced with four Doric columns accessed by a short ramp up from the east. On the north side there is a stoa and, on the north and east sides, shallow colonnades that may have been used to display the life-sized terracotta body parts found during excavation. Doors on the west side entered into the abaton, where those in hope of a cure stayed, and to a space with steps descending to a plunge bath. A staircase at the north end of the abaton descends to the Lerna Court. After the foundation of the Roman colony, the temple was refurbished by Milesius, the son of a freed slave called Glaucus.The main approach to the Lerna court was by a steep ramp down from a springhouse to the southeast of the sanctuary. The court consists of a central rectangular space surrounded by colonnades on four sides. To the east of the court there was a suite of three dining rooms beneath the abaton of the Asklepieion. Each room originally contained 7 tables set before 11 stone couches. To accommodate the couches properly, three along each wall and two either side of the door, the entrance to each room was offset towards the south. On the south side of the court are a springhouse and four long reservoirs fed by water channels leading from the south. The court fell into disuse during the Roman period and it gradually filled with earth. In the 6th and 7th centuries Α.D. the court and reservoirs were used for Christian burials. The springhouse was converted into a small chapel and, later, a church was built at the bottom of the ramp.","Asklepieion","","","Corinth:Image:slide 1206::/Corinth/Photos/slides/1000-1999/sl1206.jpg::1800::1166" "","","Monument","","Corinth","","","Corinth:Monument:AsklepieionLerna","Asklepieion/Lerna","","Asklepieion/Lerna","","","" "","","Monument","","Corinth","","","Corinth:Monument:Athena Trench","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Theater District | East of Theater | Athena Trench","An early trial trench between the Theater and the Temple of Apollo that sought to find the Sanctuary of Athena Chalinitis.","Athena Trench","","","Corinth:Drawing:165 000::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/165_Athena_Chalinitis/165_000.jpg::1800::1388" "","","Monument","","Corinth","","","Corinth:Monument:Athenian Agora","Attika | Athens | Athenian Agora","The ancient market place of Athens.","Athenian Agora","","","Corinth:Image:slide 4014::/Corinth/Photos/slides/4000-4999/sl4014.jpg::1190::1800"