"Redirect","UserLevel","dc-title","Id","dc-publisher","Type","Collection","Name","Chronology","Icon","dc-subject","dc-description","dc-date","dc-creator" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Acrocorinth","","Monument","Corinth","Acrocorinth","","Corinth:Image:color 0150::/Corinth/Photos/colorpositives/0150_sh.jpg::1764::1800","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Acrocorinth","Acrocorinth (575 meters high) was described by the Roman historian Polybius as one of the “fetters of Greece” because it controlled not only the route across the Isthmus, but also the pass between the Isthmus and Mount Oneion leading south towards Cleonai and Argos, and the coastal road west to Sikyon. The earliest fortifications now extant date to the later 4th century B.C. These were breached by Demetrius Poliorcetes from the location of the Sysipheum and later reduced and rendered indefensible by Mummius in 146 B.C. The present fortifications largely represent work and rework of the Byzantine, Ottoman, Venetian and Early Modern periods. Within the walls are the remains of the Ottoman period described by various travelers including Evliya Çelebi in 1668 and Wheler and Spon in 1676. They include the remains of mosques, fountains and houses. Next to the Upper Peirene fountain are the barracks of King Otto’s Bavarian garrison.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Acrocorinth Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore","","Monument","Corinth","Acrocorinth Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore","","Corinth:Image:slide 1981::/Corinth/Photos/slides/1000-1999/sl1981.jpg::1800::1183","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Acrocorinth, North Slope | 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 rows either side of a road and staircase ascending to a propylon which gave access to the area associated with the worship of Demeter and Kore. In the Classical period there was no temple, simply rooms and a large stone lined pit containing ash, pig bones and pottery. The area also contained large quantities of votives including large scale terracotta statues. The identity of the goddesses is attested by graffiti on ceramics, the kinds of terracotta figurines, models of food on offering trays and a reference to it in Pausanias. A small theater, seating no more than 100 people, was cut into bedrock on the south side. The earliest dining rooms were built in the late 6th century B.C. and the latest belonged to the Hellenistic period. ; In the Roman period refurbishment of the sanctuary was refurbished and the three small temples above the disused theater date soon after the middle of the 1st century A.D. The middle temple has a mosaic floor with a geometric pattern and a panel depicting two baskets flanked by snakes either side of a depiction of a pair of feet. A mosaic text identifies the benefactor as the neokoros Octavius Agathopous whose gift was made when “Chara was priestess of Neotera (Kore)” ; Worship at the sanctuary towards the end of the 4th century; in the 6th century the area was used as a cemetery.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Acrocorinth, North Slope","","Monument","Corinth","Acrocorinth, North Slope","","Corinth:Image:slide 2058::/Corinth/Photos/slides/2000-2999/sl2058.jpg::1800::1184","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Acrocorinth, North Slope","In 1960, several Late Roman graves were excavated adjacent to the road to Acrocorinth by Henry Robinson.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Aetopetra","","Monument","Corinth","Aetopetra","","Corinth:Image:bw 1999 044 16a::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1999_044/1999_st_044_016A.jpg::1800::1180","Corinthia | Penteshouphia | Ancient Corinth, East of | Aetopetra","Aetopetra is a hill (225x100m) located 3km west of Ancient Corinth, 1.6km east of Longopotamos, on the 92nd km mark of the Athens-Patras highway. Blegen observed pottery (EH, MH, and LH) and house walls on the surface at the southern part of the flat top there. He also believed that the continuation of a Mycenaean road recorded by Steffen (Karten von Mykenai 1884) leading south to Kleonai came down the ravine at the mouth of which the site is situated. ; Chatzipouliou-Kalliri (1984) noted surface pottery of N to LH IIIC Early date. Excavations lasting a few days in the summers of 1978 and 1979 produced evidence for EH and MH habitation on the site. EH pottery comes from two bothroi. EH II and III pottery (Dark-on-Light) was excavated. MH house walls and a child burial in a pithos was in the floor of a house. Early and late MH pottery, an assemblage very similar to Korakou (Incised, Grey Minyan, Aiginetan MP, Dark Burnished, MP bichrome slipped and burnished) was excavated.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Aghioi Theodoroi","","Monument","Corinth","Aghioi Theodoroi","","Corinth:Image:bw 1995 046 14::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1995_046/1995_st_046_014.jpg::1800::1189","Megara | 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, many black-figured vases, geometric and lakoeideis graves. According to Stravona, the entire coastal region of the Saronic and the Eleusinian Gulf was named Krommyona. Krommyona until the 6th century. BC belonged to Megara and then to Corinth.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Agios Basilios","","Monument","Corinth","Agios Basilios","","Corinth:Image:bw 1998 067 17::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1998_067/1998_st_067_017.jpg::1800::1211","Corinthia | Agios Basilios","A village located 25 km south of Corinth. Archaeological excavations prove that the area around Ayios Vasilios has been settled since pre-historical times. Zygouries, west of Ayios Vasilios, was excavated by the American archaeologist Carl Blegen in the 1920s. He found a Bronze Age settlement dating from approximately 1300 BC to 1320 BC.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Agora south central","","Monument","Corinth","Agora south central","","Corinth:Image:bw 4404::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/4000-4999/4404_sh.jpg::1800::1426","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Agora south central","Excavations in this area of the forum were conducted in 1936-38. Charles Morgan, M. Folse, and M. Campbell supervised the work on the Central Shops, Bema, and the Underground Shrine.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Agora Southeast","","Monument","Corinth","Agora Southeast","","Corinth:Image:bw 4239::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/4000-4999/4239_sh.jpg::1800::1333","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Agora Southeast","Oscar Broneer and R. H. Howland excavated in this area of the forum in 1933-35. Key monuments that they uncovered include the Central Shops and the South Stoa.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Agora southwest","","Monument","Corinth","Agora southwest","","Corinth:Image:digital 2019 1674::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2019 season photos/2019_1674.jpg::2000::1428","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Agora southwest","In this portion of the forum a major campaign of excavation was undertaken from 1933 to 1938. Later Henry Robinson renuwed investigations here in the late 1950's. In 1963 and 1965 C. K. Williams, II also excavated in the area.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Amphitheater","","Monument","Corinth","Amphitheater","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0901::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0901.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, East | Kraneion | 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 Triumphalis on the south side. Traces of a massive masonry and concrete wall which originally supported the superstructure are visible in the olive grove on the southeast and southwest sides. These suggest exterior dimensions of approximately 100 x 70 meters. Early last century four steps were visible, quarried from the oolitic limestone dune capping the marl deposits. These were either the seats themselves or cuttings for the placement of separately carved seats since robbed out. An early 19th century plan marks traces of seven staircases. The spacing suggests that these divided lower seating on each side into six kerkides, wedge-shaped seating areas. A diazoma, or horizontal walkway, may have divided the upper seating from the lower. The lowest part of the seating was cut into the marl and both this and the superstructure above ground were presumably built of stone quarried on site.; Katherine Welch who studied the superficial remains of the amphitheater has suggested that it was built in the late 1st century B.C. and thus belongs to the early years of the colony. It is possible that this is the amphitheater in which Lucius, the hero of The Golden Ass (written by the Roman author Apuleius), was to perform in public but was saved from embarrassment when he was transformed from a donkey back into a man.; The Amphitheater was later used by the Venetians as a place of quarantine (lazaretto). The remains were mapped by Francesco Grimani in 1700 and Abel Blouet, a surveyor with the French Morea expedition, in the 1830’s.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Anaploga","","Monument","Corinth","Anaploga","","Corinth:Image:bw 1976 078 16a::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1976_078/1976_st_078_016A.jpg::1800::1210","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | Anaploga","Anaploga was the old name of the hamlet one kilometer southwest of the main archaeological site. The place is known today as Agioi Anargyroi. ASCSA director Henry Robinson undertook several small-scale excavations in the vicinity during the early 1960’s.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Anaploga Sanctuary","","Monument","Corinth","Anaploga Sanctuary","","Corinth:Drawing:270 021::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/270_Anaploga_Sanctuary/270_021.jpg::1800::1247","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | Anaploga | Anaploga Sanctuary","ASCSA director Henry Robinson undertook several small-scale excavations in the vicinity of Anaploga during the early 1960’s. One of these exposed a Roman house with ornate later 1st or 2nd century A.D. mosaic floors now on display in the museum at Corinth. Another excavation revealed a small cemetery and an inspection hole that opened onto over 700 meters of underground water channels. One of the wells excavated contained a large quantity of Early, Middle and Late Corinthian pottery (early 7th to mid-6th century B.C.), much of it restorable.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Ancient Corinth","","Monument","Corinth","Ancient Corinth","","Corinth:Image:slide 1762::/Corinth/Photos/slides/1000-1999/sl1762.jpg::1800::1197","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth","Corinth was a city-state on the Isthmus of Corinth, the narrow stretch of land that joins the Peloponnesus to the mainland of Greece, roughly halfway between Athens and Sparta. ASCSA excavations began in 1896 and continue to present.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Ancient Corinth, East","","Monument","Corinth","Ancient Corinth, East","","","Ancient Corinth, East","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Ancient Corinth, East of","","Monument","Corinth","Ancient Corinth, East of","","","Ancient Corinth, East of","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Ancient Corinth, North","","Monument","Corinth","Ancient Corinth, North","","","Ancient Corinth, North","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Ancient Corinth, West","","Monument","Corinth","Ancient Corinth, West","","","Ancient Corinth, West","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Apsidal Temple (Temple B)","","Monument","Corinth","Apsidal Temple (Temple B)","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0878::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0878.jpg::0::0","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.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Argive Heraion","","Monument","Corinth","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.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Argolid","","Monument","Corinth","Argolid","","Corinth:Image:bw 1995 032 18::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1995_032/1995_st_032_018.jpg::1214::1800","Argolid","A county in the Peloponnese.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Asklepieion","","Monument","Corinth","Asklepieion","","Corinth:Image:slide 1206::/Corinth/Photos/slides/1000-1999/sl1206.jpg::1800::1166","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.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:AsklepieionLerna","","Monument","Corinth","Asklepieion/Lerna","","","Asklepieion/Lerna","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Athena Trench","","Monument","Corinth","Athena Trench","","Corinth:Drawing:165 000::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/165_Athena_Chalinitis/165_000.jpg::1800::1388","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.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Athenian Agora","","Monument","Corinth","Athenian Agora","","Corinth:Image:slide 4014::/Corinth/Photos/slides/4000-4999/sl4014.jpg::1190::1800","Attika | Athens | Athenian Agora","The ancient market place of Athens.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Athikia","","Monument","Corinth","Athikia","","Corinth:Image:bw 1971 034 31::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1971_034/1971_st_034_031.jpg::1800::1207","Corinthia | Athikia","A village in the Corinthia 15 km south of New Corinth.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Babbius Monument","","Monument","Corinth","Babbius Monument","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0859::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0859.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | West Terrace | 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 was erected on a high concrete podium originally clad with marble revetment. The epistyle bears an inscription in Latin which reads “Cnaeus Babbius Philinus, aedile, pontifex, undertook the construction at his own expense, and the same, as duovir, approved it.” Babbius Philinus was a rich freedman of Greek descent who served as a local official in the region. The same individual also built the Fountain of Poseidon. The fountain was replaced by Temple J, perhaps also dedicated to Poseidon, during the reign of Commodus.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Baths of Aphrodite","","Monument","Corinth","Baths of Aphrodite","","Corinth:Drawing:223 001::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/223_Bath_of_Aphrodite/223_001b.jpg::1414::1800","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Baths of Aphrodite","This was the name given, from the 19th century on, to a spring and cave in the former pleasure garden of the Ottoman Beys’ palace. It is located due north of the Forum on the line of the Lechaion Road and is at the head of a deep indentation of the high natural terrace. The garden embraced the entire indentation and was connected with the terrace above by a surviving monumental staircase. The torus molding of the stair’s outer wall suggests it was built during the period Venetian rule from 1687-1715 when the Governor’s residence stood site later occupied by the Beys’ palace.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Baths of Eurykles","","Monument","Corinth","Baths of Eurykles","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0877::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0877.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Lechaion Road Area | Baths of Eurykles","Pausanias calls a bath beyond Peirene on the Lechaion Road the most famous of the many baths in Corinth. Near the entrance stood statues of Poseidon, Leucothea, Palaimon on a dolphin and Artemis hunting. It was built by a member of the rich Laconian Euryclid clan. The walls were covered with revetment of different colored stones including Lapis Lacedaimonius from the family quarries at Croceae in Laconia. These baths were built in the Early Imperial period with extensive remodeling in the third quarter of the 1st century A.D. and, probably, in the 2nd century A.D. They went out of use in the second half of the 2nd century A.D.; The Euryclids rose to prominence after the battle of Actium and the last of the line seems to have died in the early 2nd century. The remains of a large bath structure excavated on the east side of the Lechaion road have been identified with this building.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Baths of Hadrian","","Monument","Corinth","Baths of Hadrian","","Corinth:Drawing:166 001::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/166_Baths_of_Hadrian/166_001.jpg::1800::1384","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Theater District | Baths of Hadrian","The masonary ruins of this bath stand several meters above ground to the north of the theater.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Bema","","Monument","Corinth","Bema","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0867::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0867.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Central Shops | Bema","The Bema was a complex marble structure dating from the middle of the 1st century A.D. which dominated the face of the terrace of the Upper Forum at Corinth. It took the form of an open propylon with a Π-shaped ground plan, which stood on a rectangular pedestal measuring 15.6 x 7.2 m. This pedestal had a crepis with two steps and on the north projected 3.00 m. above the level of the Lower Forum. Its superstructure consisted of eight pillars, the three central intervals between which were open while the two pairs at each end were blocked with walls and benches. The pedestal was flanked by two unroofed rooms (exedras) that had benches on two of their three sides. In addition to these rooms, there were marble staircases communicating between the Lower and Upper Forum. ; The Bema was the venue for public ceremonies, from which the assembled citizens were addressed by the proconsul of Corinth. It is thought to have corresponded to the Bema mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles: the Apostle Paul was brought to the Bema by the elders of Corinth’s synagogue, who accused him of subversive teaching against the Mosaic law. The proconsul Gallio, however, judged that the teaching did not constitute an offence against Roman law. ; In the Byzantine period, a Christian church with at least two phases was built on the site and ruins of the Bema. The second phase was a three-aisled basilica (11th-12th century). On both sides of the Bema were the main shops of the Forum, the remains of which can still be seen by modern visitors.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Bema, Schola","","Monument","Corinth","Bema, Schola","","","Bema, Schola","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Building II","","Monument","Corinth","Building II","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0864::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0864.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Building II","One of four classical buildings south of the race course.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Byzantine Ephoreia","","Monument","Corinth","Byzantine Ephoreia","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Byzantine Ephoreia","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Captives' Facade","","Monument","Corinth","Captives' Facade","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0876::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0876.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Captives' Facade","An ornate two story facade located in front of the early basilica flanks the Lechaion Road between the North Shops and the Monumental Gate. The upper story consisted of a row of six larger-than-life-size figures standing against Corinthian piers. The two best preserved pillars represent men in eastern dress wearing Phrygian caps. Two heads of women from the same monument indicate that the males were accompanied by female figures. They may have been personifications of geographical places. The monument has been thought to commemorate the victories of the Emperor Septimius Severus over the Parthians in A.D. 197.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Captives' Façade","","Monument","Corinth","Captives' Façade","","Corinth:Image:bw 0440::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/0001-0999/0440_gp.jpg::1800::1336","Captives' Façade","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Centaur Bath","","Monument","Corinth","Centaur Bath","","Corinth:Image:slide 0059::/Corinth/Photos/slides/0001-0999/sl0059.jpg::1212::1800","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum Southwest | Centaur Bath","The Centaur Bath was built in late 5th century B.C. and; abandoned in the late 4th century B.C. The preserved; remains of this bath include a furnace room, a network of; waterpipes, a central room with a mosaic floor, and,; unusually for a bath, a dining room. The pebble; mosaic of the central room includes a central panel with a; black and white wheel framed at its corners, two of which; survive, one including a centaur, for which the bath is; named.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Central Area","","Monument","Corinth","Central Area","","Corinth:Image:bw 0388::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/0001-0999/0388_sh.jpg::1800::1335","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area","The area of the main archaeological site at Ancient Corinth.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Central area and theater district","","Monument","Corinth","Central area and theater district","","","Central area and theater district","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Central Shops","","Monument","Corinth","Central Shops","","Corinth:Drawing:025 001::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/025_Central_shops_and_Bema/025_001.jpg::1800::942","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Central Shops","The central shops run from the Circular Monument to the Bema and from the Bema to the Doric colonnade extending from the West end of the South Stoa. The shops separated the Forum proper from the upper Forum in front of the South Stoa. The eastern series is of fifteen shops of which the central structure is larger than the others and had a tetrastyle portico. The interior was furnished with a marble floor and two bases against the rear wall probably supported statues. It may have been a cult room or office. The western series consists of fourteen shops culminating at a structure perhaps used for cult of Dionysus. The building has rectangular rooms flanking an semi-circular room and portico in front.; In the 5th century the shops were demolished and replaced by a staircase uniting the upper and lower levels of the Forum. This stair is the widest known in the ancient world.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Central shops and Bema","","Monument","Corinth","Central shops and Bema","","","Central shops and Bema","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Cheliotomylos","","Monument","Corinth","Cheliotomylos","","Corinth:Image:bw 9512::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/5000-9999/9512_gp.jpg::1800::1365","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Cheliotomylos","A hill named for the Mill of Tselios. It sits just outside the Classical city walls. Sherds mark the prehistoric inhabitation of the immediate area.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Chiliomodi","","Monument","Corinth","Chiliomodi","","Corinth:Image:bw 7973::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/5000-9999/7973_sh.jpg::1700::1800","Corinthia | Chiliomodi","A village 15 km southwest of New Corinth.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Church of St. Paul","","Monument","Corinth","Church of St. Paul","","Corinth:Drawing:024 004::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/024_Church_of_St_Paul/024_004.jpg::1800::1418","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Bema | Church of St. Paul","A byzantine church which was built directly upon the Bema.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Circular Building by Broneer House","","Monument","Corinth","Circular Building by Broneer House","","Corinth:Drawing:010 004::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/010_Minor_Projects/010_004.jpg::1800::1542","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Theater District | Odeion | Circular Building by Broneer House","A Roman monument 50 m west of the Odeium","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Circular Monument","","Monument","Corinth","Circular Monument","","Corinth:Image:slide 4145::/Corinth/Photos/slides/4000-4999/sl4145.jpg::1800::1219","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Central Shops | Circular Monument","At the east end of the Central Shops, immediately to the south of the apheteria (starting lines) of the Classical and Hellenistic stadia (running tracks), the original Circular Monument may date to the Classical period. The preserved structure is Roman. In its earliest Roman phase it consisted of a raised circular platform, 2 meters high and 9 meters in diameter, supporting a limestone column drum 2.15 meters in diameter. The platform was subsequently trimmed back on its north and west sides for the application of marble revetment. When the Central Shops were constructed, the west side was also cut back to accommodate the easternmost shop. Oscar Broneer, who believed the original column was much taller, suggested this monument was the one depicted on Corinthian coins of the Antonine and Severan periods. ; ; The Circular monument was excavated in 1892 and 1896 but is actually one of the earliest monuments at Corinth to have been recorded. A second, upper, member of the column was drawn by Sebastian Ittar, architect to Lord Elgin, on a visit to Corinth in 1802. On the basis of this evidence, William Dinsmoor restored a much shorter column and dissociated the monument from that shown on the coins.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:City Wall","","Monument","Corinth","City Wall","","Corinth:Image:slide 3499::/Corinth/Photos/slides/3000-3999/sl3499.jpg::1800::1169","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | City Wall","The oldest portions of the City wall date from the late Geometric period. This early section was found at the edge of the terrace at the Potters’ Quarter about 1.5 kilometers west of the museum at Corinth. It is not known if this early wall belonged to a locally fortified part of Corinth or was part of a much more extensive early wall.; The Classical walls incorporated the acropolis, Acrocorinth. From the east side of the acropolis, the wall followed the summits of three low hills descending towards the Xerias River valley. It then traced the line of the river terrace northwards to a point east of the amphitheater. There is evidence that it here turned west at least for a short distance before descending to the lower terrace. It followed the edge of this terrace westwards for a distance of about 2.7 kilometers. From the west side of the acropolis the wall descends a rocky ridge northwards past the Potters’ Quarter to the lower terrace. In all, the wall is about 10 kilometers long.; Traces of the long walls connecting the city wall to the sea have been followed and, in places, excavated. These walls contained and protected the ancient harbor at Lechaion and cut the east-west traffic across the plain. The eastern line extended from the northeast corner of the city enceinte 1.8 kilometers to a point west of the Prehistoric site of Korakou. The western line ran from the area of the Baths of Aphrodite 2.4 kilometers to a point west of the Lechaion Basilica church.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:City Wall east","","Monument","Corinth","City Wall east","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, East | City Wall east","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:City Wall north","","Monument","Corinth","City Wall north","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | City Wall | City Wall north","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:City Wall west","","Monument","Corinth","City Wall west","","Corinth:Image:bw 3243::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/3000-3999/3243_gp.jpg::1800::1339","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | City Wall | City Wall west","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Corinth","","Monument","Corinth","Corinth","","Corinth:Image:bw 1834::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/1000-1999/1834_gp.jpg::1800::1319","Corinthia | Corinth","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Corinth XI N","","Monument","Corinth","Corinth XI N","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Corinth XI N","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Corinthia","","Monument","Corinth","Corinthia","","Corinth:Drawing:000 002::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/000_Corinthia/000_002c.jpg::0::0","Corinthia","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Decumanus","","Monument","Corinth","Decumanus","","Corinth:Image:bw 1987 024 14::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1987_024/1987_sh_024_014.jpg::1800::1432","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Decumanus","The main east-west road of the Roman city of Corinth.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Delphi","","Monument","Corinth","Delphi","","Corinth:Image:bw 1960 058 16::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1960_058/1960_st_058_016.jpg::1800::1194","Sterea Ellada | Delphi","Delphi is both an archaeological site and a modern town in Greece on the south-western spur of Mount Parnassus in the valley of Phocis. In myths dating to the classical period of Ancient Greece (510-323 BC), the site of Delphi was believed to be determined by Zeus when he sought to find the centre of his ""Grandmother Earth"". He sent two eagles flying from the eastern and western extremities, and the path of the eagles crossed over Delphi where the omphalos, or navel of Gaia was found.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Diolkos","","Monument","Corinth","Diolkos","","Corinth:Image:slide 3964::/Corinth/Photos/slides/3000-3999/sl3964.jpg::1800::1138","Corinthia | Isthmia | Diolkos","The Diolkos was a paved trackway near Corinth in Ancient Greece which enabled boats to be moved overland across the Isthmus of Corinth. The shortcut allowed ancient vessels to avoid the long and dangerous circumnavigation of the Peloponnese peninsula.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Dionysion Temple of Hermes","","Monument","Corinth","Dionysion/ Temple of Hermes","","Corinth:Drawing:028 001::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/028_Dionysion_Temple_of_Hermes/028_001.jpg::1800::1193","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Central Shops | Dionysion/ Temple of Hermes","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Dump of excavation","","Monument","Corinth","Dump of excavation","","Corinth:Image:bw 0401::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/0001-0999/0401_gp.jpg::1800::1324","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Theater District | Dump of excavation","The site procured by the ASCSA in the early 1900s to place the soil removed from the excavations. Agios Athanasios used to stand on the spot which is north of the Central Area and east of the Theater.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Dye works","","Monument","Corinth","Dye works","","","Dye works","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Early Excavations","","Monument","Corinth","Early Excavations","","Corinth:Drawing:002 011::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/002_1896_Excavation/002_011.jpg::1289::1800","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Trial Trenches | Early Excavations","Early excavators sunk dozens of strip trenches around Ancient Corinth in the first years of the excavation in an attempt to understand the topography of the ancient city.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:East City Wall","","Monument","Corinth","East City Wall","","Corinth:Image:bw 3250::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/3000-3999/3250_gp.jpg::1337::1800","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, East | East City Wall","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:East of Theater","","Monument","Corinth","East of Theater","","Corinth:Image:slide 3795::/Corinth/Photos/slides/3000-3999/sl3795.jpg::1800::1179","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Theater District | East of Theater","A series of buildings flanking the street descending the terrace immediately to the east of the theater was excavated in the 1980’s by C. K. Williams II. Two of the buildings (Buildings 1 and 3) were food shops catering to the theater goers. The north room of both buildings contained domed ovens and large quantities of animal bone were found in the south room of Building 3. They were built in the 1st century A.D. and were destroyed by an earthquake sometime between A.D. 125 and A.D. 150. Buildings 5 and 7, higher up to the south, were supported by a buttressed wall separating them from the caterers. These buildings were related to religious activity including worship of the gods Aphrodite, Isis, Serapis and Cybele. The walls of Building 7 Room 2 were decorated with wall painting. This was of white panels framed by tall Corinthian columns, each containing a small figure of a deity including Hercules, Juno, Jupiter, Minerva and Venus.; Built in 1st century, Buildings 5 and 7 suffered the same fate as Buildings 1 and 3 but were refurbished and continued in use until they were destroyed by earthquake in the later 4th century. The debris from this quake was cleared from the street, and it was open to traffic through the 5th century.; East Theater Street and a broad decumanus (an east-west street) terminated at an open paved court east of the theater scene building. The courtyard has an inscription reused in the floor. The letter cuttings were designed to receive cast bronze letters. It reads ""ERASTUS PRO AEDILITATE S P STRAVIT"" or ""Paved by Erastus at his own expense in return for his aedileship.” A chamberlain (oikonomos) of Corinth called Erastus was mentioned by the Apostle Paul in Romans 16.23. Many believe the inscription and Paul’s letter refer to the same person.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:East of Theater Athena Trench","","Monument","Corinth","East of Theater Athena Trench","","Corinth:Image:bw 1993 044 03::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1993_044/1993_st_044_003.jpg::1185::1800","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Theater District | East of Theater | East of Theater Athena Trench","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:East Side of Corinth","","Monument","Corinth","East Side of Corinth","","Corinth:Image:bw 2000 041 01a::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/2000_041/2000_st_041_001A.jpg::1800::1195","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, East | East Side of Corinth","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:East Stoa, west of Lechaion Road","","Monument","Corinth","East Stoa, west of Lechaion Road","","Corinth:Drawing:066 011::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/066_East_Stoa_west_of_Lechaion_Road/066_011.jpg::968::1800","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Lechaion Road Area | North Building | East Stoa, west of Lechaion Road","The East Stoa is the name early excavators gave to the Lechaion Road Basilica.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum","","Monument","Corinth","Forum","","Corinth:Image:slide 0950::/Corinth/Photos/slides/0001-0999/sl0950.jpg::1800::1196","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | 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 Stoa, the Southeast Building and the Temple of Apollo, which were refurbished for use in the Roman Period. The entire area, almost 200 m. long and 100 m. wide, was paved with slabs made of hard Jurassic limestone. It was divided into upper (south) and lower (north) levels by the Central Shops which flanked the “Rostra” or “Bema”. In Late Antiquity the two levels were united by a broad series of steps which replaced the shops.; The buildings around the Forum were largely administrative and religious. They include three large civil basilicas, rows of shops, temples and offices.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum central","","Monument","Corinth","Forum central","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0872::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0872.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum central","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum east","","Monument","Corinth","Forum east","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum east","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum north","","Monument","Corinth","Forum north","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum north","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum north central","","Monument","Corinth","Forum north central","","Corinth:Image:digital 2018 0271::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2018 season photos/2018_0271.jpg::2000::1428","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum north central","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum northeast","","Monument","Corinth","Forum northeast","","Corinth:Image:bw 1975 005 13a::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1975_005/1975_st_005_013A.jpg::1800::1204","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum northeast","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum northwest","","Monument","Corinth","Forum northwest","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum northwest","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum south","","Monument","Corinth","Forum south","","Corinth:Image:digital 2021 0972::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2021 season photos/2021_0972.jpg::2048::1463","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum south","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum south central","","Monument","Corinth","Forum south central","","Corinth:Image:digital 2018 0286::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2018 season photos/2018_0286.jpg::2000::1428","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum south central","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum southeast","","Monument","Corinth","Forum southeast","","Corinth:Image:bw 1975 005 05a::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1975_005/1975_st_005_005A.jpg::1800::1196","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum southeast","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum southeast South Stoa","","Monument","Corinth","Forum southeast South Stoa","","Corinth:Image:digital 2022 0342::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2022 season photos/2022_0342.jpg::1463::2048","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | South Stoa | Forum southeast South Stoa","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum southwest","","Monument","Corinth","Forum southwest","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0862::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0862.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum Southwest | Forum southwest","In the 1970's Charles Williams conducted excavations in this corner of the forum in which several Roman buildings were uncovered. Excavation continued to reveal a large portion of the pre-Roman city. Structures in the area include a long rectagular building, an arch, the Punic Amphora Building, a pentagonal building, the Roman Cellar Building, a collumned hall and Stele Shrine, and the Centaur Bath.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum southwest Area E","","Monument","Corinth","Forum southwest Area E","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0862::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0862.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum Southwest | Forum southwest Area E","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum southwest South Stoa","","Monument","Corinth","Forum southwest South Stoa","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0862::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0862.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | South Stoa | Forum Southwest | Forum southwest South Stoa","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum southwest West Shops","","Monument","Corinth","Forum southwest West Shops","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | West Shops | Forum Southwest | Forum southwest West Shops","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum west","","Monument","Corinth","Forum west","","Corinth:Image:digital 2018 0256::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2018 season photos/2018_0256.jpg::2000::1428","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | West Terrace | Forum west","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum, North","","Monument","Corinth","Forum, North","","Corinth:Drawing:020 001::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/020_Forum_North/020_001.jpg::1800::979","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum, North","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum, South","","Monument","Corinth","Forum, South","","Corinth:Drawing:100 002::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/100_Forum_South/100_002b.jpg::1800::1293","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum, South","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Forum, Southwest","","Monument","Corinth","Forum, Southwest","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0862::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0862.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum, Southwest","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Fountain of Poseidon","","Monument","Corinth","Fountain of Poseidon","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0860::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0860.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | West Terrace | Fountain of Poseidon","This fountain is one of several structures of the West Terrace Temples bounding the west side of the Forum.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Fountain of the Lamps","","Monument","Corinth","Fountain of the Lamps","","Corinth:Drawing:221 001::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/221_Fountain_of_the_Lamps/221_001.jpg::1800::1153","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Gymnaisium | Fountain of the Lamps","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Glauke","","Monument","Corinth","Glauke","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0849::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0849.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | 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 Temple Hill. Pausanias, who described his visit to Corinth ca. A.D. 150, reports that the fountain received its name from Glauke, daughter of Creon, the King of Corinth, and the second wife of the hero Jason. Medea, Jason’s first wife, in a fit of jealousy presented Glauke with a cloak infused with poison. After putting on the cloak, Glauke threw herself into the fountain in an unsuccessful attempt to stop the poison from burning her.; Similar to the Fountain of Peirene, Glauke consists of four large reservoirs fronted by three draw basins and an architectural facade. Although this facade is now largely gone, still visible are the cuttings into which was inserted the parapet which formed the front of the draw basins. The deep cut through the center of the steps provided a means of removing the stone from digging the reservoirs and would have been filled in when the fountain became operational. Directly to the north of Glauke at the foot of the steps was a small courtyard paved with tiles in the Roman period. Unlike all other fountains in Corinth, Glauke does not exploit a natural spring but instead is fed by water piped in from a source somewhere to the south. This fact, along with several other considerations, suggests that the fountain may not date to the Archaic period as was originally thought but perhaps belongs to the Hellenistic period.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Glauke East","","Monument","Corinth","Glauke East","","","Glauke East","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Glauke West","","Monument","Corinth","Glauke West","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Glauke West","West of Glauke in 2009 trenches were opened on the site of a proposed souvenir shop. The shop was never built.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Gonia","","Monument","Corinth","Gonia","","Corinth:Image:bw 1316::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/1000-1999/1316_gp.jpg::1800::1328","Corinthia | New Corinth | Gonia","Plateau, 350x250m or 160x410m, 2km north of Examilia. Blegen excavated 23 trenches here for 18 days in August 1916. Houses of all periods of the BA were located. There were no Neolithic architectural remains, however. Numerous EH bothroi were excavated. Seven MH shaft and cist graves of children and adults were investigated underneath the floor of houses in the central part of the site. Pottery, LN, EH I-III, MH, and scanty Early Mycenaean compared to late Mycenaean. No pottery dated to LH IIIC was included in the materials from Blegen's investigations according to Jerry Rutter.; The Greek Archaeological Service excavated on the hill in 2003, at the Iakovou plot. The surface pottery was LH IIA to LH IIIB1.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Grava","","Monument","Corinth","Grava","","Corinth:Drawing:225 001::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/225_Grava/225_001.jpg::1800::1255","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | Grava","Roman Kiln located in the area of Kokkinovrysi. Excavated by Gladys Weinberg.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Greek Archaeological Service excavations","","Monument","Corinth","Greek Archaeological Service excavations","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Greek Archaeological Service excavations","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Gymnasium","","Monument","Corinth","Gymnasium","","Corinth:Drawing:210 026::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/210_Gymnasium/210_026.jpg::1800::1796","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | 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 1970s to the south of the Asklepieion revealed part of an early imperial L-shaped stoa which is believed by some to be part of the gymnasium. Another idea is that it was part of a colonnade surrounding a large Doric temple perhaps dedicated to Zeus.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Gymnasium Fountain of Lamps","","Monument","Corinth","Gymnasium Fountain of Lamps","","Corinth:Image:digital 2019 1658::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2019 season photos/2019_1658.jpg::2000::1428","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Gymnasium | Fountain of the Lamps | Gymnasium Fountain of Lamps","To the west of the Gymnasium a bath-and-fountain complex was built in a natural valley artificially enlarged in antiquity. In its earliest phase the supply of spring water was enhanced by tunneling horizontally into the plateau to trap other ground water to supply a Classical bath house. ; In the Roman period the area was reshaped to create a court resembling the Peirene fountain. The rectangular walled space, oriented northeast to southwest, has a broad apse on its northeast side. The enclosed area contains a large pool with a central plinth and steps down into it at two of the corners. On the southeast side are a series of chambers with watery associations. Several inscriptions were found which commemorate athletic the events of Corinth and the Isthmia during the reigns of Tiberius and Nero. The main chamber of the bath contained the thousands of terracotta lamps dating to the 5th and 6th century which gave the fountain its modern name.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Gymnasium southwest","","Monument","Corinth","Gymnasium southwest","","","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Gymnasium | Gymnasium southwest","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Hadji Mustafa","","Monument","Corinth","Hadji Mustafa","","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 0889::/Corinth/Photos/digital/2014 season photos/2014_0889.jpg::0::0","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Acrocorinth, North Slope | Hadji Mustafa","Hadji Mustafa is the popular name of a fountain at the base of Acrocorinth. The fountain consists of a cistern for collecting water from the nearby spring and an arched facade built of limestone and reused marble elements. A three line inscription records the benefaction: “Joseph the Tailor ordered the construction of this for flowing water entirely at his own expense, for the love of God, let him be exalted, and desiring to please the merciful Lord, in the nine hundred and twenty first year [of the Hejira (A. D. 1515)]” (translation by Pierre MacKay). The water comes from a small-yield spring nearby.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Hadji Mustapha","","Monument","Corinth","Hadji Mustapha","","Corinth:Image:bw 1587::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1985_106/1985_st_106_014a.jpg::0::0","Hadji Mustapha","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Haghia Paraskeue","","Monument","Corinth","Haghia Paraskeue","","Corinth:Image:bw 1967 106 23::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1967_106/1967_st_106_023.jpg::1800::1207","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Haghia Paraskeue","One of the burial chapels of Ancient Corinth. Rescue excavations were undertaken nearby.","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Hellenistic Villa","","Monument","Corinth","Hellenistic Villa","","Corinth:Image:bw 2000 005 06::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/2000_005/2000_st_005_006.jpg::1198::1800","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | Anaploga | Hellenistic Villa","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Hemicycle Building","","Monument","Corinth","Hemicycle Building","","Corinth:Image:slide 3571::/Corinth/Photos/slides/3000-3999/sl3571.jpg::1800::1160","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Lechaion Road Area | Hemicycle Building","","","" "","","","Corinth:Monument:Heroon of the Crossroads","","Monument","Corinth","Heroon of the Crossroads","","Corinth:Drawing:101 004::/Corinth/Architectural_Plans/101_Heroon_of_the_Crossroads/101_004.jpg::1523::1800","Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Heroon of the Crossroads","","",""