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Ancient Corinth Corinth was an ancient Greek city which was very important from early the earliest times. It was capital of the Achaean League but was severly defeated by the Romans in 146 BC. Corinth was officially founded by the Roman Empire by Julius Caesar. It became the most important city of the Roman province of Achaia. q.v.; Acts 18. 1-18; 1 Cor. 1. 2; 16. 5-6; 2 Cor. 1. 1; 1. 23; 12. 14; 13. 1; 2 Tim. 4. 20. From apostolic times Corinth was an important Christian community.
Acts 18:1-18 - After these things Paul departed from Athens, and came to Corinth; And found a certain Jew named Aquila, born in Pontus, lately come from Italy, with his wife Priscilla; (because that Claudius had commanded all Jews to depart from Rome:) and came unto them. And because he was of the same craft, he abode with them, and wrought: for by their occupation they were tentmakers. And he reasoned in the synagogue every sabbath, and persuaded the Jews and the Greeks. And when Silas and Timotheus were come from Macedonia, Paul was pressed in the spirit, and testified to the Jews [that] Jesus [was] Christ. from henceforth I will go unto the Gentiles. And he departed thence, and entered into a certain [man's] house, named Justus, [one] that worshipped God, whose house joined hard to the synagogue. And Crispus, the chief ruler of the synagogue, believed on the Lord with all his house; and many of the Corinthians hearing believed, and were baptized. Then spake the Lord to Paul in the night by a vision, Be not afraid, but speak, and hold not thy peace: For I am with thee, and no man shall set on thee to hurt thee: for I have much people in this city. And he continued [there] a year and six months, teaching the word of God among them. And when Gallio was the deputy of Achaia, the Jews made insurrection with one accord against Paul, and brought him to the judgment seat, Saying, This [fellow] persuadeth men to worship God contrary to the law. And when Paul was now about to open [his] mouth, Gallio said unto the Jews, If it were a matter of wrong or wicked lewdness, O [ye] Jews, reason would that I should bear with you: But if it be a question of words and names, and [of] your law, look ye [to it]; for I will be no judge of such [matters]. And he drave them from the judgment seat. Then all the Greeks took Sosthenes, the chief ruler of the synagogue, and beat [him] before the judgment seat. And Gallio cared for none of those things. And Paul [after this] tarried [there] yet a good while, and then took his leave of the brethren, and sailed thence into Syria, and with him Priscilla and Aquila; having shorn [his] head in Cenchrea: for he had a vow.
1 Cor. 1:2 - Unto the church of God which is at Corinth, to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus, called [to be] saints, with all that in every place call upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, both theirs and ours:
1 Cor. 16: 5-6 - Now I will come unto you, when I shall pass through Macedonia: for I do pass through Macedonia. And it may be that I will abide, yea, and winter with you, that ye may bring me on my journey whithersoever I go.
2 Cor. 1:1 - Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, and Timothy [our] brother, unto the church of God which is at Corinth, with all the saints which are in all Achaia:
2 Cor. 1:23 - Moreover I call God for a record upon my soul, that to spare you I came not as yet unto Corinth.
2 Cor. 12:14 - Behold, the third time I am ready to come to you; and I will not be burdensome to you: for I seek not yours, but you: for the children ought not to lay up for the parents, but the parents for the children.
2 Cor. 13:1 -This [is] the third [time] I am coming to you. In the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be established.
2 Tim. 4:20 - Erastus abode at Corinth: but Trophimus have I left at Miletum sick.
Corinth Corinthus (Κόρινθος). A famous city of Greece, situated on the isthmus of the same name. Commanding by its position the Ionian and the Aegean seas, and holding, as it were, the keys of the Peloponnesus, Corinth, from the pre-eminent advantages of its situation, was already the seat of opulence and the arts, while the rest of Greece was sunk in comparative obscurity and barbarism. Its origin is, of course, obscure; but we are assured that it already existed under the name of Ἐφύρη before the siege of Troy. According to the assertions of the Corinthians themselves, their city received its name from Corinthus, the son of Zeus; but Pausanias does not credit this popular tradition, and cites the poet Eumelus to show that the appellation was really derived from Corinthus, the son of Marathon (ii. 1). Homer certainly employs both names indiscriminately ( Il. ii. 570; xiii. 663). Pausanias reports that the descendants of Sisyphus reigned at Corinth until the invasion of their territory by the Dorians and the Heraclidae, when Doridas and Hyanthidas, the last princes of this race, abdicated the crown in favour of Aletes, a descendant of Heracles, whose lineal successors remained in possession of the throne of Corinth during five generations, when the crown passed into the family of the Bacchiadae, so named from Bacchis, the son of Prumnis, who retained it for five other generations. After this the sovereign power was transferred to annual magistrates, still chosen, however, from the line of the Bacchiadae, with the title of πρυτάνεις.The oligarchy so long established by this rich and powerful family was at length overthrown, about B.C. 629, by Cypselus, who banished many of the Corinthians, depriving others of their possessions, and putting others to death (Herod.v. 92). Among those who fled from his persecution was Demaratus, of the family of the Bacchiadae, who settled at Tarquinii in Etruria, and whose descendants became sovereigns of Rome. The reign of Cypselus was prosperous, and the system of colonization, which had previously succeeded so well in the settlements of Corcyra and Syracuse, was actively pursued by that prince, who added Ambracia, Anactorium, and Leucas to the maritime dependencies of the Corinthians.
Cypselus was succeeded by his son Periander. On the death of this latter (B.C. 585), after a reign of forty-four years, according to Aristotle, his nephew Psammetichus came to the throne, but lived only three years. At his decease Corinth regained its independence, when a moderate aristocracy was established, under which the Republic enjoyed a state of tranquillity and prosperity unequalled by any other city of Greece. We are told by Thucydides that the Corinthians were the first to build war-galleys or triremes; and the earliest naval engagement, according to the same historian, was fought by their fleet and that of the Corcyreans, who had been alienated from their mother-State by the cruelty and impolicy of Periander. The city is believed to have had at this time a population of 300,000 souls.
When the Achaean League (q.v.) became involved in a destructive war with the Romans, Corinth was the last hold of their tottering Republic; and had its citizens wisely submitted to the offers proposed by the victorious Metellus, it might have been preserved; but the deputation of that general having been treated with scorn and even insult, the city became exposed to all the vengeance of the Romans (Polyb. xl. 4.1). L. Mummius, the consul, appeared before its walls with a numerous army, and after defeating the Achaeans in a general engagement, entered the town, now left without defence and deserted by the greater part of the inhabitants. It was then given up to plunder and finally set on fire; the walls also were razed to the ground, so that scarcely a vestige of this once great and noble city remained (B.C. 146). Polybius, who saw its destruction, affirmed that he had seen the finest paintings strewed on the ground, and the Roman soldiers using them as boards for dice or draughts. Pausanias reports (vii. 16) that all the men were put to the sword, the women and children sold, and the most valuable statues and paintings removed to Rome. (See Mummius.) Strabo observes that the finest works of art which adorned that capital in his time had come from Corinth. He likewise states that Corinth remained for many years deserted and in ruins. Iulius Caesar, however, not long before his death, sent a numerous colony thither, by means of which Corinth was once more raised from its state of ruin, and renamed Colonia Iulia Corinthus. It was already a large and populous city and the capital of Achaia, when St. Paul preached the Gospel there for a year and six months (Acts, xviii. 11). It is also evident that when visited by Pausanias it was thickly adorned by public buildings and enriched with numerous works of art, and as late as the time of Hierocles we find it styled the metropolis of Greece. In a later age the Venetians received the place from a Greek emperor; Mohammed II. took it from them in 1458; the Venetians recovered it in 1699, and fortified the Acrocorinthus again; but the Turks took it anew in 1715, and retained it until driven from the Peloponnesus in 1822. In 1858, it was wholly destroyed by an earthquake, since which time it has been rebuilt upon a site three miles to the northeast.
An important feature of the scenery around Corinth was the Acrocorinthus, a mention of which has been made in a previous article. (See Acrocorinthus.) On the summit of this hill was erected a temple of Aphrodit?, to whom the whole of the Acrocorinthus, in fact, was sacred. In the times of Corinthian opulence and prosperity, it is said that the shrine of the goddess was attended by no less than one thousand female slaves, dedicated to her service as courtesans. These priestesses of Aphrodit? contributed not a little to the wealth and luxury of the city, whence arose the well-known expression, οὐ παντὸς ἀνδρὸς εἰς Κόρινθον ἐστ̓ ὁ πλοῦς, or, as Horace expresses it (Epist. i. 17, 36), ?Non cuivis homini contingit adire Corinthum,? in allusion to its expensive pleasures.
Corinth was famed for its three harbours?Lechaeum, on the Corinthian Gulf, and Cenchreae and Schoenus, on the Saronic. Near this last was the Δίολκος, where vessels were transported over the isthmus by machinery. The city was the birthplace of the painters Ardices, Cleophantus, and Cleanthes; of the statesmen Periander, Phidon, Philola?s, and Timoleon; and of Arion , who invented the dithyramb. - Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. New York. Harper and Brothers.
Corinth CORINTHUS (Κόρινθος: Eth. Κορίνθιος: Gortho), one of the most
important cities of Greece.
I. SITUATION.
Corinth stood upon the Isthmus, which connected the northern division of Greece,
or Hellas Proper, with the Peloponnesus. On either side of the Isthmus, which is
a rocky and sterile plain, rise the mountains of Northern Greece and
Peloponnesus respectively. The mountains to the north of the Isthmus, which bore
the name of Geraneia, extend across the Isthmus from sea to sea. There are only
three passes through them, of which the most celebrated, being the shortest road
between Corinth and Megara, is upon the shore of the Saronic Gulf, and bore the
name of the Scironian rocks. A more particular account of the Geraneian
mountains is given under Megara, to which they more properly belong. [MEGARA]
The mountains to the south of the Isthmus were called the Oneian ridge, from
their resemblance to an ass's back (τὸ Ὄνειον, Thuc. 4.44; Xen. Hell. 6.5. 51;
τὰ Ὄνεια, Strab. viii. p.380.)1 They did not, however, occupy the whole breadth
of the Isthmus. The lofty rock, which formed the citadel of Corinth, and which
was hence called the Acrocorinthus, is properly an offshoot of the Oneian ridge,
but is separated from the latter by a ravine, and seen from the north appears to
be an isolated mountain. The Oneian ridge extends eastwards as far as the
Saronic Gulf. Westward, the Acrocorinthus does not reach the sea; but there is a
narrow level space between the foot of the mountain and the sea. This level
space was protected by the two long walls connecting the city with its port town
Lechaeum; while eastward of the city there were only two passes, through which
an invading force could penetrate, one through the ravine, which separated the
Acrocorinthus and the Oneian mountains (Pol. 2.52), and the other along the
shore at Cenchreae. (Xen. Hell. 6.5. 51) Thus Corinth completely commanded the
three passes,which alone led from the Isthmus to the Peloponnesus, the one upon
the shore of the Corinthian Gulf being occupied by the Long Walls, the one
through the ravine between the Acrocorinthus and the Oneian mountains being
under the very fortifications of the citadel, and the third upon the Saronic
Gulf, being under the walls of Cenchreae. From its position, Corinth was called
by the last Philip of Macedon one of the fetters of Greece; the other two being
Chalcis in Euboea, and Demetrias in Thessaly. (Pol. 17.11; Liv. 32.37.)
The Corinthia (Η῾ Κορινθία), or territory of Corinth, was not fertile (χώραν δ᾽
ἔσχεν οὐκ εὔγεων σφόδρα, ἀλλὰ σκολιάν τε καὶ τραχεῖαν, Strab. viii. p.382).
Neither the rocky sides of the Geraneian and Oneian mountains, nor the stony and
sandy plain of the Isthmus, were suitable for corn. The only arable land in the
territory of any extent is the plain upon the coast, lying between Corinth and
Sicyon, and belonging to these two cities. The fertility of this plain is
praised in the highest terms by the ancient writers (ager nobilissimae
fertilitatis, Liv. 27.31): and such was its value, that to possess ?what lies
between Corinth and Sicyon? became a proverbial expression for great wealth. (Athen.
5.219a.) It must not, however, be inferred from these and similar expressions,
that this plain surpassed in fertility every other district in Peloponnesus; but
its proximity to the wealthy and populous city of Corinth greatly enhanced its
value; and hence an estate in this plain produced a much larger revenue than one
of a similar size in the most fertile parts of Peloponnesus. It was watered by
the mountain torrents coming from Nemea and Cleonae; and it furnished Corinth
and its port towns with fruit and vegetables, but could not have yielded any
large supply of corn. Of the other products of the Corinthia scarcely any
mention is made; its wine was very bad (ὁ Κορίνθιος οἶνος βασανισμὸς ἐστι, Athen.
1.30f.).
Shut in within this narrow territory by the mountain barriers towards the north
and the south, and unable to obtain from the soil a sufficient supply of the
necessaries of life, the inhabitants were naturally led to try their fortune on
the sea, to which their situation invited them. Corinth was destined [1.675] by
nature to be a great maritime power. Standing upon a narrow isthmus between two
important seas, at a time when all navigation was performed by coasting vessels,
and it was difficult and dangerous to convey goods round the Peloponnesus,
Corinth became the highway of ancient commerce. In consequence of its position
it formed by far the most direct communication between the two principal Grecian
seas, uniting the Ionian and Sicilian seas on. the one hand, with the Aegaean,
the Hellespont, and the Pontus on the other. It thus became the emporium of the
trade between the East and the West. The position of Corinth is well described
by Cicero (de Leg. Agr. 2.32):--?Erat posita in angustiis atque in faucibus
Graeciae sic, ut terr? claustra locorum teneret, et duo maria, maxime navigation
diversa, paene conjungeret, quum pertenui discrimine separentur.? Hence also
Euripides (Eur. Tro. 1097) describes Corinth, as δίπορον κορυφὰν Ἴσθμιον, ἔνθα
πύλας πέλοπος ἔχουσιν ἕδραι; and Horace (Hor. Carm. 1.7) speaks of ?bimaris
Corinthi moenia.?
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II. HISTORY.
The favourable position of Corinth for commerce could not have escaped the
notice of the Phoenicians, who had settlements on other parts of the Grecian
coast. There can be little doubt that a Phoenician colony at an early period
took possession of the Acrocorinthus. If there were no other evidence for this
fact, it would have been sufficiently proved by the Oriental character of the
worship of Aphrodite in this city, of which a further account is given below.
But in addition to this, the recollection of the early Phoenician settlement was
perpetuated by the Corinthian mountain called Phoenicaeum (Φοινίκαιον, Ephor.
ap. Steph. B. sub voce and by the worship of the Phoenician Athena (Φοινίκη ἡ
Ἀθῆνα ἐν Κορίνθῳ, Tzetzes, ad Lycophr. 658.)
Thucydides mentions (4.42) Aeolians as the inhabitants of Corinth at the time of
the Dorian invasion; but there can be no doubt that Ionians also formed a
considerable part of the population in the earliest times, since Ionians were in
possession of the coasts on either side of the Isthmus, and on the Isthmus
itself was the most revered seat of Poseidon, the chief deity of the Ionic race.
Still the earliest rulers of Corinth are uniformly represented as Aeolians. The
founder of this dynasty was Sisyphus, whose cunning and love of gain may typify
the commercial enterprise of the early maritime population, who overreached the
simple inhabitants of the interior. Under the sway of Sisyphus and his
descendants Corinth became one of the richest and most powerful cities in
Greece. Sisyphus had two sons, Glaucus and Ornytion. From Glaucus sprang the
celebrated hero Bellerophon, who was worshipped with heroic honours at Corinth,
and whose exploits were a favoutite subject among the Corinthians down to the
latest times. Hence we constantly find upon the coins of Corinth and her
colonies the figure of the winged horse Pegasus, which Bellerophon caught at the
fountain of Peirene on the Acrocorinthus. Bellerophon, as is well known, settled
in Lycia; and the descendants of Ornytion continued to rule at Corinth till the
overthrow of the Sisyphid dynasty by the conquering Dorians.
The most ancient name of the city was Ephyra (Ἐφύρη). At what time it exchanged
this name for that of Corinth is unknown. M?ller, relying upon a passage of
Velleius Paterculus (1.3) supposes that it received the name of Corinth upon
occasion of the Dorian conquest; but Homer uses both names indiscriminately. (Ἐφύρη,
Il. 6.152, 210; Κόρινθος, 2.570, 13.664.) According to the Corinthians
themselves Corinthus, from whom the city derived its name, was a son of Zeus;
but the epic poet Eumelus, one of the Corinthian Bacchiadae, gave a less exalted
origin to the eponymous hero. This poet carried up the history of his native
place to a still earlier period than the rule of the Sisyphids. According to the
legend, related by him, the gods Poseidon and Helios (the Sun) contended for the
possession of the Corinthian land. By the award of Briareus Poseidon obtained
the Isthmus; and Helios the rock, afterwards called the Acrocorinthus, and then
Ephyra, from Ephyra, a daughter of Oceanus and Tethys, and the primitive
inhabitant of the country. Helios had two sons Ae?tes and Aloeus: to the; former
he gave Ephyra, to the latter Asopia (Sicyon). Ae?tes, going to Colchis, left
his country under the government of Bunus, a son of Hermes; upon whose death
Epopeus, the son of Aloeus, obtained Ephyra as well as Asopia. Marathon, the son
of Epopeus, who had left the country during his lifetime, returned at his death,
and divided his territory between his sons Corinthus and Sicyon, from whom the
two towns obtained their names. Corinthus dying without children, the
Corinthians invited Medea from Iolcos,as the daughter of Ae?tes; and thus her
husband Jason obtained the, sovereignty of Corinth. Medea afterwards returned to
Iolcos, leaving the throne to Sisyphus, with whom she is said to have been in
love. (Paus. 1.1.2, 1.3.10; Schol. ad Pind. Ol. 13.74.) Upon this legend Mr.
Grote justly remarks, that ?the incidents in it are imagined and arranged with a
view to the supremacy of Medea; the emigration of Ae?tes, and the conditions
under which he transferred his sceptre being so laid out as to confer upon Medea
an hereditary title to the throne. . . . . We may consider the legend of Medea
as having been originally quite independent of that of Sisyphus, but fitted on
to it, in seeming chronological sequence, so as to satisfy the feelings of those
Aeolids of Corinth who passed for his descendants.? : (Hist. of Greece, vol. i.
p. 165, seq.)
The first really historical fact in the history of Corinth is its conquest by
the Dorians. It is said that this conquest was not effected till the generation
after the return of the Heracleidae into Peloponnesus. When the Heracleidae were
on the point of crossing over from Naupactus, Hippotes, also a descendant of
Hercules, but not through Hyllus, slew the prophet Carnus, in consequence of
which he was banished for ten years, and not allowed to, take part in the
enterprise. His son Aletes, who derived his name from his long wanderings, was
afterwards the leader of the Dorian conquerors of Corinth, and the first Dorian
king of the city. (Paus. 2.4.3.) It appears from the account of Thucydides
(4.42) that the Dorian invaders took. possession of the hill called Solygeius,
near the Saronic gulf, from which they carried on war against the Aeolian
inhabitants of Corinth till they reduced; the city.
The Dorians, though the ruling class, appear, to have formed only a small
proportion of the population of Corinth. The non. Dorian inhabitants, must have
been admitted at an early period to the citizenship,; since we find mention of
eight Corinthian tribes (πάντα ὀκτὼ, Phot., Suidas), whereas [1.676] three was
the standard number in all purely Doric states. It was impossible to preserve in
a city like Corinth the regular Doric institutions; since the wealth acquired by
commerce greatly exceeded the value of landed property, and necessarily
conferred upon its possessors, even though not Dorians, great influence and
power. Aletes and his descendants held the royal power for 12 generations. Their
names and the length of their reign are thus given:
Years.
Aletes reigned 38
Ixion reigned 38
Agelas reigned 37
Prymnis reigned 35
Bacchis reigned 35
Agelas reigned 30
Eudemus reigned 25
Aristodemes reigned 35
Agemon reigned 16
Alexander reigned 25
Telestes reigned 12
Automenes reigned 1
327
Pausanias speaks as if Prymnis was the last descendant of Aletes, and Bacchis,
the founder of a new, though still an Heracleid dynasty; but Diodorus describes
all these kings as descendants of Aletes, but in consequence of the celebrity of
Bacchis, his successors took the name of Bacchidae in place of that of Aletiadae
or Heracleidae. After Automenes had reigned one year, the Bacchiad family,
amounting to about 200 persons, determined to abolish royalty, and to elect out
of their own number an annual Prytanis. The Bacchiad oligarchy had possession of
the government for 90 years, until it was overthrown by Cypselus, with the help
of the lower classes, in B.C. 657. (Diod. vi. fragm. 6, p. 635, Wess.; Paus.
2.4.4; Hdt. 5.92.) Strabo says (viii. p. 378) that the Bacchiad oligarchy lasted
nearly 200 years; but he probably included within this period a portion of the
time that the Bacchiads possessed the royal power. The Bacchiads, after their
deposition by Cypselus, were for the most part driven into exile, and are said
to have taken refuge in different parts of Greece, and even in Italy. (Plut.
Lys. 1; Liv. 1.34.)
According to the mythical chronology the return of the Heracleidae took place in
B.C. 1104. As the Dorian conquest of Corinth was placed one generation (30
years) after this event, the reign of Aletes commenced B.C. 1074. His family
therefore reigned from B.C. 1074 to 747; and the Bacchiad oligarchy lasted from
B.C. 747 to 657.
Under the Bacchiadae the Corinthians were distinguished by great commercial
enterprise. They traded chiefly with the western part of Greece; since the
eastern sea was the domain of the Aeginetans. The sea, formerly called the
Crissaean from the town of Crissa, was now named the Corinthian after them; and
in order to secure the strait which led into the western waters, they founded
Molycria opposite the promontory of Rhium (Thuc. 3.102.) It was under the sway
of the Bacchiadae that the important colonies of Syracuse and Corcyra were
founded by the Corinthians (B.C. 734), and that a navy of shpis of war was
created for the first time in Greece; for we have the express testimony of
Thucydides that triremes were first built at Corinth. (Thuc. 1.13.) The
prosperity of Corinth suffered no diminution from the revolution, which made
Cypselus despot or tyrant of Corinth. Both this prince and his son Periander,
who succeeded him, were distinguished by the vigour of their administration and
by their patronage of commerce and the fine arts. Following the plans of
colonization, which had been commenced by the Bacchiadae, they planted numerous
colonies upon the western shores of Greece, by means of which they exercised a
sovereign power in these seas. Ambracia, Anactorium, Leucas, Apollonia and other
important colonies, were founded by Cypselus or his son. Corcyra, which had
thrown off the supremacy of Corinth, and whose navy had defeated that of the
mother country in B.C. 665, was reduced to subjection again in the reign of
Periander. It has been noticed by Miller that all these colonies were sent out
from the harbour of Lechaeum on the Corinthian gulf; and that the only colony
despatched from the harbour of Cenchreae on the Saronic gulf was the one which
founded Potidaea, on the coast of Chalcidice in Macedonia. (M?ller, Dor. 1.6.7.)
Cypselus reigned 30 years (B.C. 657--627), and Periander 44 years (B.C.
627--583). For the history of these tyrants the reader is referred to the Dict.
of Biogr. s. vv. Periander was succeeded by his nephew Psammetichus, who reigned
only three years. He was without doubt overthrown by the Spartans, who put down
so many of the Grecian despots about this period. The government established at
Corinth, under the auspices of Sparta, was again aristocratical, but apparently
of a less exclusive character than that of the hereditary oligarchy of the
Bacchiadae. The gerusia was probably composed of certain noble families, such as
the Oligaethidae mentioned by Pindar, whom he describes as οἶκος ἅμερος ἀστοῖς.
(Pind. O. 13.2, 133.) From the time of the deposition of Psammetichus Corinth
became an ally of Sparta, and one of the most powerful and influential members
of the Peloponnesian confederacy. At an early period the Corinthians were on
friendly terms with the Athenians. They refused to assist Cleomenes, king of
Sparta, in restoring Hippias to Athens, and they lent the Athenians 20 ships to
carry on the war against Aegina (Hdt. 5.92; Thuc. 1.41); but the rapid growth of
the Athenian power after the Persian war excited the jealousy of Corinth; and
the accession of Megara to the Athenian alliance was speedily followed by open
hostilities between the two states. The Corinthians marched into the territory
of Megara, but were there defeated with great loss by the Athenian commander,
Myronides, B.C. 457. (Thuc. 1.103-106.) Peace was shortly afterwards concluded;
but the enmity which the Corinthians felt against the Athenians was still
further increased by the assistance which the latter afforded to the Corcyraeans
in their quarrel with Corinth. This step was the immediate cause of the
Peloponnesian war; for the Corinthians now exerted all their influence to
persuade Sparta and the other Peloponnesian states to declare war against
Athens.
In the Peloponnesian war the Corinthians at first furnished the greater part of
the Peloponnesian fleet. Throughout the whole war their enmity against the
Athenians continued unabated; and when the Spartans concluded with the latter in
B.C. 421 the peace, usually called the peace of Nicias, the Corinthians refused
to be parties to it, and were so indignant with Sparta, that they endeavoured to
form a new Peloponnesian league with Argos, Mantineia and [1.677] Elis. (Thuc.
5.17, seq.) But their anger against Sparta soon cooled down (Thuc. 5.48); and
shortly afterwards they returned to the Spartan alliance, to which they remained
faithful till the close of the war. When Athens was obliged to surrender to the
Spartans after the battle of Aegospotami, the Corinthians and Boeotians urged
them to raze the city to the ground. (Xen. Hell. 2.2. 19)
But after Athens had been effectually humbled, and Sparta began to exercise
sovereignty over the rest of Greece, the Corinthians and other Grecian states
came to be jealous of her increasing power. Tithraustes, the satrap of Lydia,
determined to avail himself of this jealousy, in order to stir up a war in
Greece against the Spartans, and thus compel them to recall Agesilaus from his
victorious career in Asia. Accordingly he sent over Timocrates, the Rhodian, to
Greece with the sum of 50 talents, which he was to distribute among the leading
men in the Grecian states, and thus excite a war against Sparta, B.C. 395. (Xen.
Hell. 3.5. 2) Timocrates had no difficulty in executing his commission; and
shortly afterwards the Corinthians united with their old enemies the Athenians
as well as with the Boeotians and Argives in declaring war against Persia.
Deputies from these states met at Corinth to take measures for the prosecution
of the war, which was hence called the Corinthian war. In the following year,
B.C. 394, a battle was fought near Corinth between the allied Greeks and the
Lacedaemonians, in which the latter gained the victory (Xen. Hell. 4.2. 9, seq.)
Later in the same year the Corinthians fought a second battle along with the
other allies at Coroneia in Boeotia, whither they had marched to oppose
Agesilaus, who had been recalled from Asia by the Persians, and was now on his
march homewards. The Spartans again gained the victory, but not without much
loss on their own side. (Xen. Hell. 3 ? 15, seq., Ages. 2.9. seq.)
In B.C. 393 and 392 the war was carried on in the Corinthian territory, the
Spartans being posted at Sicyon and the allies maintaining a line across the
Isthmus from Lechaeum to Cenchreae, with Corinth as the centre. A great part of
the fertile plain between Sicyon and Corinth belonged to the latter state; and
the Corinthian proprietors suffered so much from the devastation of their lands,
that many of them became anxious to renew their old alliance with Sparta. A
large number of the other Corinthians participated in these feelings, and the
leading men in the government, who were violently opposed to Sparta, became so
alarmed at the wide-spread disaffection among the citizens, that they introduced
a body of Argives into the city during the celebration of the festival of the
Eucleia, and massacred numbers of the opposite party in the market-place and in
the theatre. The government, being now dependent upon Argos, formed a close
union with this state, and is said to have even incorporated their Corinthian
territory with that of Argos, and to have given the name of Argos to their own
city. But the opposition party at Corinth, which was still numerous, contrived
to admit Praxitas, the Lacedaemonian commander at Sicyon, within the long walls
which connected Corinth with Lechaeum. In the space between the walls, which was
of considerable breadth, and about 1 1/2 mile in length, a battle took place
between the Lacedaemonians and the Corinthians, who had marched out of the city
to dislodge them. The Corinthians, however, were defeated, and this victory was
followed by the demolition of a considerable part of the long walls by Praxitas.
The Lacedaemonians now marched across the Isthmus, and captured Sidus and
Crommyon. These events happened in B.C. 392. (Xen. Hell. 4.4. 1, seq.)
The Athenians, feeling that their own city was no longer secure from an attack
of the Lacedaemonians, marched to Corinth in the following year (B.C. 391), and
repaired the long walls between Corinth and Lechaeum; but in the course of the
same summer Agesilaus and Teleutias not only retook the long walls, but also
captured Lechaeum, which was now garrisoned by Lacedaemonian troops. (Xen. Hell/
4.4. 18, 19; Diod. 14.86, who erroneously places the capture of Lechaeum in the
preceding year; see Grote, Hist. of Greece, vol. ix. p. 471, seq.) These
successes, however, of the Lacedaemonians were checked by the destruction in the
next year (B.C. 390) of one of their morae by Iphicrates, the Athenian general,
with his peltasts or light-armed troops. Shortly afterwards Agesilaus marched
back to Sparta; whereupon Iphicrates retook Crommyon, Sidus, Peiraeum and Oeno?,
which had been garrisoned by Lacedaemonian troops. (Xen. Hell. 4.5. 1, seq.) The
Corinthians appear to have suffered little from this time to the end of the war,
which was brought to a conclusion by the peace of Antalcidas in B.C. 387. The
effect of this peace was the restoration of Corinth to the Lacedaemonian
alliance: for as soon as it was concluded, Agesilaus compelled the Argives to
withdraw their troops from the city, and the Corinthians to restore the exiles
who had been in favour of the Lacedaemonians. Those Corinthians who had taken an
active part in the massacre of their fellow-citizens at the festival of the
Eucleia fled from Corinth, and took refuge, partly at Argos, and partly at
Athens. (Xen. Hell. 5.1. 34; Dem. c. Lept. p. 473.)
In the war between Thebes and Sparta, which soon afterwards broke out. the
Corinthians remained faithful to the latter; but having suffered much from the
war, they at length obtained permission from Sparta to conclude a separate peace
with the Thebans. (Xen. Hell. 7.4. 6, seq.) In the subsequent events of Grecian
history down to the Macedonian period, Corinth took little part. The government
continued to be oligarchical; and the attempt of Timophanes to make himself
tyrant of Corinth was frustrated by his murder by his own brother Timoleon, B.C.
344. (Diod. 16.65; Plut. Tim. 4; Cornel. Nep. Tim. 1; Aristot. Pol. 5.5.9.) From
the time of the battle of Chaeroneia, Corinth was held by the Macedonian kings,
who always kept a strong garrison in the important fortress of the Acrocorinthus.
In B.C. 243 it was surprised by Aratus, delivered from the garrison of Antigonus
Gonatas, and annexed to the Achaean league. (Pol. 2.43.) But in B.C. 223 Corinth
was surrendered by the Achaeans to Antigonus Doson, in order to secure his
support against the Aetolians and Cleomenes. (Pol. 2.52, 54.) It continued in
the hands of Philip, the successor of Antigonus Doson; but after the defeat of
this monarch at the battle of Cynoscephalae, B.C. 196, Corinth was declared free
by the Romans, and was again united to the Achaean league. The Acrocorinthus,
however, as well as Chalcis and Demetrias, which were regarded as the three
fortresses of Greece, were occupied by Roman garrisons. (Pol. 18.28, 29; Liv.
33.31.)
When the Achaeans were mad enough to enter into a contest with Rome, Corinth was
the seat of government of the Achaean league, and it was here that the Roman
ambassadors were maltreated, who [1.678] had been sent to the League with the
ultimatum of the senate. The Achaean troops were at once defeated, and L.
Mummius entered Corinth unopposed. The vengeance which he took upon the unhappy
city was fearful. All the males were put to the sword, and the women and
children sold as slaves. Corinth was the richest city in Greece, and abounded in
statues, paintings, and other works of art. The most valuable works of art were
carried to Rome; and after it had been pillaged by the Roman soldiers, it was at
a given signal set on fire; and thus was extinguished what Cicero calls the
lumen totius Graeciae (B.C. 146). (Strab. viii. p.381; Pol. 40.7; Paus. 2.1.2,
7.16.7; Liv. Epit. 52; Flor. 2.16; Oros. 5.3; Vell. 1.13: Cic. pro Leg. Man. 5)
Corinth remained in ruins for a century. The site on which it had stood was
devoted to the gods, and was not allowed to be inhabited (Macr. 3.9); a portion
of its territory was given to the Sicyonians, who undertook the superintendence
of the Isthmian games (Strab. viii. p.381); the remainder became part of the
ager publicus, and was consequently included in the vectigalia of the Roman
people. (Lex Thoria, 100.50; Cic. de Leg. Agr. 1.2, 2.19.) The greater part of
its commerce passed over to Delos. In B.C. 46 Julius Caesar determined to
rebuild Corinth, and sent a numerous colony thither, consisting of his veterans
and freedmen. (Strab. viii. p.381; Paus. 2.1.2; Plut. Caes. 57; D. C. 43.50;
Diod. Excerpt. p. 591, Wess.; Plin. Nat. 4.4. s. 5.) Henceforth it was called on
coins and inscriptions COLONIA IVLIA CORINTHVS, also LAYS IVLI CORINT., and C.
I. C. A., i. e., Colonia Julia Corinthus Augusta. The colonists were called
Corinthienses, and not Corinthii, as the ancient inhabitants had been named.
(Festus, p. 60, ed. M?ller.) It soon rose again to be a prosperous and populous
city; and when St. Paul visited it about 100 years after it had been rebuilt by
the colony of Julius Caesar, it was the residence of Junius Gallio, the
proconsul of Achaia. (Acta Apost. 18.12.) St. Paul founded here a flourishing
Christian church, to which he addressed two of his epistles. When it was visited
by Pausanias in the second century of the Christian era, it contained numerous
public buildings, of which he has given us an account; and at a still later
period it continued to be the capital of Achaia. (Hierocl. p. 646; B?ckh, Inscr.
Graec. no. 1086.)
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III. ART, LITERATURE, CHARACTER, &c.
It has been already noticed that Corinth was one of the earliest seats of
Grecian art. (Strab. viii. p.382.) It was in this city that painting was said to
have been invented by Ardicas, Cleophantus, and Cleanthes (Plin. Nat. 35.5), and
at the time of its capture by the Romans it possessed some of the finest
paintings in Greece. Among these was the celebrated picture of Dionysus by
Aristeides of Thebes, for which Attalus offered the sum of 600,000 sesterces,
and which was afterwards exhibited at Rome in the temple of Ceres. (Strab. viii.
p.381; Plin. Nat. 35.8.) The numerous splendid temples which the wealth of the
Corinthians enabled them to erect gave an impulse to architecture; and the most
elaborate order of architecture was, as is well known, named after them.
Statuary also flourished at Corinth, which was particularly celebrated for its
works in bronze; and the name of Aes Corinthiacum was given to the finest kind
of bronze. (See Dict. of Ant. p. 25, 2nd ed.) One of the earlier works of
Corinthian art, which retained its celebrity in later times, wag the celebrated
chest of Cypselus, made of cedar wood and adorned with figures. It was dedicated
at Olympia, where it was seen by Pausanias, who has given a minute description
of it (5.17, seq.). The Corinthian vases of terra cotta were among the finest in
Greece; and such was their beauty, that all the cemeteries of the city were
ransacked by the colonists of Julius Caesar, who sent them to Rome, where they
fetched enormous prices. (Strab. viii. p.381.)
In the time of Periander poetry likewise flourished at Corinth. It was here that
Arion introduced those improvements into the dithyramb, which caused him to be
regarded as its inventor, and which led Pindar to speak of Corinth as the city
in which Μοῖς᾿ ἁδύπνοος ἀνθεῖ. (Hdt. 1.23; Pind. O. 13.31.) Among the most
ancient Cyclic poets we also find the names of Aeson, Eumelus, and Eumolpus, all
of whom were natives of Corinth. (Schol. ad Pind. l.c.) But after the time of
Periander little attention was paid to literature at Corinth; and among the
illustrious writers of Greece not a single Corinthian appears. It is mentioned
by Cicero that Corinth did not produce an orator (Brut. 13); and Deinarchus, the
last and least important of the Attic orators, is no exception, since, though a
native of Corinth, he was brought up at Athens, and practised his art in the
latter city.
The wealth of the Corinthians gave rise to luxury and sensual indulgence. It was
the most licentious city in all Greece; and the number of merchants who
frequented it caused it to be the favourite resort of courtezans. The patron
goddess of the city was Aphrodite, who had a splendid temple on the
Acrocorinthus, where there were kept more than a thousand sacred female slaves (ἱερόδουλοι)
for the service of strangers. (Strab. viii. p.378.) Hence they are called by
Pindar (Fragm. p. 244, Bergk) πολύξεναι νεάνιδες, ἀμφίπολοι Πειθοῦς ἐν ἀφνειῷ
Κορίνθῳ. In no other city of Greece do we find this institution of Hieroduli as
a regular part of the worship of Aphrodite; and there can be no doubt that it
was introduced into Corinth by the Phoenicians. [See above, p. 675a.] Many of
the Corinthian courtezans, such as Lais, obtained such high sums as often to
ruin the merchants who visited the city; whence arose the proverb (Strab. viii.
p.378):-- οὐ παντὸς ἀνδρὸς ἐς Κόρινθον ἔσθ̓ ὁ πλοῦς:
which Horace renders (Ep. 1.17. 36):--?Non cuivis homini contingit adire
Corinthum.?
So celebrated were the Corinthian courtezans, that they gave rise to many other
proverbial expressions. Κορινθιάζεσθαι=μαστροπεύειν ἢ ἑταιρεῖν, Pollux, 9.6.75;
Κορινθία κόρη, i. e. a courtezan, Plat. Rep. iii. p. 404d.; so Κορινθία παῖς,
Poll. 10.7.25; Suidas, s. v. χοῖρος; M?ller, Dor. 4.4.6.)
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IV. TOPOGRAPHY OF THE CITY AND OF THE. PORT-TOWNS.
Of the topography of the ancient city before its destruction by Mummius we know
next to nothing; but of the new city which was built by the Roman colonists,
both Strabo (viii. p.379) and Pausanias (2.2, seq.) have left us an account. The
following is the description of Strabo:--?A lofty mountain, called Acrocorinthus,
being 3 1/2 stadia in perpendicular height and 30 stadia in the ascent by the
[1.679] road, ends in a sharp point. Its northern side is the steepest, under
which the city lies upon a level spot in the form of a trapezium, close to the
very roots of the Acrocorinthus. The city itself was 40 stadia in circumference,
and was surrounded with walls wherever it was not protected by the mountain. The
mountain of the Acrocorinthus also was included within the same inclosure, so
far as it was able to receive a wall; and as we ascended, the remains of the
line of fortifications were visible. The whole circuit of the walls amounted to
about 85 stadia; On the other sides the mountain is less steep, but it is here
spread out further, and presents a wide prospect. On the summit is a small
temple of Aphrodite; and under the summit is the small fountain of Peirene,
having no outlet, but always full of clear and drinkable water. They say that
from this fountain and from some other subterraneous veins the fountain bursts
forth, which is at the foot of the mountain, and which flows into the city,
supplying the latter with a sufficiency of water. There is also an abundance of
wells in the city; and, as it is said, in the Acrocorinthus likewise, but we did
not see any. Below the Peirene is the Sisypheium, preserving considerable
remains of a temple or palace built of white marble. From the summit towards the
north are seen the lofty mountains of Parnassus and Helicon, covered with snow.?
Strabo's account of the Acrocorinthus is very accurate; and his estimate of the
height agrees very nearly with that of the French surveyors, according to whom
the perpendicular height of the mountain above the sea is 575 metres, equal to
1886 English feet, which is equal to three stadia and a tenth at 607 feet to the
stadium. (Leake, Peloponnesiaca, p. 392.) All modern travellers agree that the
Acrocorinthus, rising abruptly and isolated from the plain, is one of the most
striking objects of its class that they had ever seen. Col. Mure observes that
?neither the Acropolis of Athens, nor the Larissa of Argos, nor any of the more
celebrated mountain fortresses of western Europe--not even Gibraltar--can enter
into the remotest competition with this gigantic citadel. It is one of those
objects more frequently, perhaps, to be met with in Greece than in any other
country of Europe, of which no drawing can convey other than a very faint
notion. The outline, indeed, of this colossal mass of rugged rock and green
sward, interspersed here and there, but scantily, with the customary fringe of
shrubs, although from a distance it enters into fine composition with the
surrounding landscape, can in itself hardly be called picturesque; and the
formal line of embattled Turkish or Venetian wall, which crowns the summit, does
not set it off to advantage. Its vast size and height produce the greatest
effect, as viewed from the seven Doric columns, standing nearly in the centre of
the wilderness of rubbish and hovels that now mark the site of the city which it
formerly protected.? The Acrocorinthus is well described by Livy (45.28) as,
?arx in immanem altitudinem edita;? and Statius is not guilty of much
exaggeration in the lines (Theb. 7.106):
qua summas caput Acrocorinthus in auras
Tollit, et alterna geminum mare protegit umbra.
The view from the Acrocorinthus comprehends ?a greater number of celebrated
objects than any other in Greece. Hymettus bounds the horizon to the eastward,
and the Parthenon is distinctly seen at a direct distance of not much less than
50 English miles. Beyond the isthmus and bay of Lechaeum are seen all the great
summits of Locris, Phocis, Boeotia, and Attica, and the two gulfs from the hill
of Koryf? (Gonoessa) on the Corinthiac, to Sunium at the entrance of the Saronic
gulf. To the westward the view is impeded by a great hill, which may be called
the λῆμμα, or eye-sore, of the Acrocorinthus, especially with regard to modern
war. Its summit is a truncated peak, which may be reached on horseback, by
turning to the right of the road which leads to the Acrocorinthus, at a small
distance short of the first gate.? (Leake.)
The city of Corinth lay at the northern foot of the Acrocorinthus. It did not
stand in the plain, but upon a broad, level rock, which is nearly 200 feet in
height above the plain, lying between it and the bay of Lechaeum. Across this
plain, as we have already mentioned, ran the long walls connecting Corinth and
its port-town Lechaeum.
Corinth was one of the largest cities in Greece, and was in size inferior only
to Athens. According to Strabo the walls of the city were 40 stadia, and those
of the city and Acrocorinthus together 85 stadia. Each of the two Long Walls
connecting Corinth and Lechaeum was 12 stadia in length; and adding to these the
fortification of Lechaeum, the whole circuit of the fortifications was about 120
stadia; but a considerable portion of the space thus included was probably not
covered with houses. The fortifications were very strong; and so lofty and thick
were the walls, that Agis, the son of Archidamus, is reported to have exclaimed
upon beholding them, ?What women are these that dwell in this city.? (Plut.
Apophth. Lac. p. 215.) Of the population of Corinth we have no trustworthy
accounts. Clinton computes the population of the whole state at about 100,000
persons, of whom he supposes 70,000 or 80,000 to have inhabited the city, and
the remaining 20,000 or 30,000 to have been distributed through the country.
According to a statement in Athenaeus (vi. p. 272) Corinth had 460,000 slaves;
but this number is quite incredible, and ought probably to be corrected to
60,000. In that case the free population
PLAN OF CORINTH.
?A. Acrocorinthus.
?B. Suburb Craneium.
?C. Lechaeum.
?1. Agora.
?2. Temple of Athena Chalinitis.
?3. Temple of Apollo.
?4. Gate of Cenchreae.
?5. Gate of Lechaeum.
?6. Gate of Sicyon.
?7. Gate of Tenca.
?8. Fountain of Peirene.
?9. Sisypheium. [1.680]
would have been about 40,000. These numbers of Clinton, however, are only
conjectural, and are at the best only an approximation to the truth. (Clinton,
Fasti Hell. vol. ii. p. 423, 2nd ed.)
Notwithstanding the destruction of Corinth by Mummius, some of the ancient
buildings still existed at a later time. Pausanias begins his description of the
city by stating that ?it contained many things worthy of notice, some being the
relics of the ancient city, but the greater part executed in the flourishing
period afterwards? (2.2.6). He appears to have come to Corinth from Cenchreae.
The road leading to the city was lined with sepulchral monuments; and on either
side of the road was a grove of cypresses adorned with temples of Bellerophon
and Aphrodite, the sepulchre of Lais, and many other monuments. This suburb,
called CRANEION (Κράνειον), was the aristocratic quarter of the city, and the
favourite place of residence of the wealthy Corinthians, like Collytus at
Athens, and Pitane at Sparta (Plut. de Exsil. 6, p. 601; see ATHENAE p. 302a.)
Hence it was the chief promenade of Corinth. Here Diogenes of Sinope used to
bask in the sun, a striking contrast to the luxury and splendour around him; and
close to the city gate his tomb was still shown even in the time of Pausanias. (Paus.
2.2.4; Alciphr. 3.60; Lucian, Quom. Hist. conscrib. 3.) Xenophon mentions the
Craneium in his account of the civil dissensions of Corinth in B.C. 392, as the
place where one of the parties took refuge and from thence escaped to the
Acrocorinthus. (Hell. 4.4.4.)
Upon entering Corinth through the gate which probably bore the name of Cenchreae,
Pausanias proceeded to the Agora, where the greatest number of temples stood. He
mentions an Artemis Ephesia;--two wooden statues of Dionysus;--a temple of Tych?
(Fortune);--a temple sacred to all the gods;--near the latter a fountain,
issuing from a dolphin at the foot of a Poseidon in bronze;--statues of Apollo
Clarius, Aphrodite, Hermes, and Zeus. In the middle of the Agora was a statue of
a bronze Athena, on the basis of which were the figures of the Muses in the
relief. Above the Agora was a temple of Octavia, the sister of Augustus
(2.2.6--2.3.1).
From the Agora four principal streets branched off, one leading to Cenchreae, by
which Pausanias entered the city, the second leading to Lechaeum, the third to
Sicyon, and the fourth to the Acrocorinthus.
Pausanias next describes the monuments on the road towards Lechaeum. On leaving
the Agora to go to Lechaeum a person passed through the Propylaea, on which
stood two gilded chariots, one bearing Phaethon and the other the Sun. A little
beyond, to the right of the road, was the fountain of Peirene. This fountain was
adorned with white marble; and the water flowed from certain artificial caverns
into an open receptacle. It was pleasant to drink, and was said to have
contributed to the excellence of the Corinthian bronze, when it was plunged into
the water red hot (2.3. ? ? 2, 3). Further on in his account of the
Acrocorinthus, Pausanias says that a fountain rises behind the temple of
Aphrodite on the summit of the mountain, and that this fountain is supposed to
be the same as that of Peirene in the city, and that the water flowed
underground from the former to the latter (2.5.1). This agrees with the
statement of Strabo already quoted so far as relates to the rise of the Peirene
in the Acrocorinthus, and its connection with the fountain in the lower city;
but the two writers differ respecting the position of the latter fountain,
Strabo placing it at the foot of the Acrocorinthus, and Pausanias on the road
from the Agora to Lechaeum. It would thus appear that there were three sources
at Corinth, all of which were at some period of time at least known by the name
of Peirene. Col. Leake remarks that all the three are still observable; namely,
the well in the Acrocorinthus, the rivulets which issue at the foot of that hill
as described by Strabo, and the single source below the brow of the height on
which the town is situated, in the position alluded to by Pausanias. The same
author adds, with much probability, that ?it is not difficult to imagine, that
between the times of Strabo and Pausanias a change may have taken place in the
application of the name Peirene in the lower city, in consequence of the water
of the northern fountain having been found by experience better than that at the
sources at the foot of the Acrocorinthus. The practice of the modern Corinthians
gives countenance to this supposition; for they use the former fountain alone
for drinking, while the water which issues from below the Acrocorinthus, instead
of being thought the lightest in Greece, as Athenaeus describes that of Peirene,
is considered heavy: the water is little used for drinking, and the springs are
the constant resort: of women washing clothes. As the remark of Athenaeus is
nearly of the same date as the description of Pausanias (ii. p. 43b.), it is
fair to apply them both to the same source of water.? (Morea, vol. iii. p. 242,
seq.) The grotto inclosing the fountain of Peirene upon the Acrocorinthus is
described by G?ttling in the Arch?ologische Zeitung for 1844 (p. 326, seq.). A
representation of it is given in the Dict. of Ant. (p. 544, 2nd ed.)
The fountain of Peirene is frequently mentioned by the ancient writers. So
celebrated was it that Corinth is called by Pindar ?the city of Peirene? (ἄστυ
πειράνας, Pind. O. 13.86), and the Corinthians are described in one of the
oracles of the Pythia at Delphi, as ?those dwelling around the beautiful Peirene?
(οἱ περὶ καλὴν πειρήνην οἰκεῖτε, Hdt. 5.92). The fountain in the lower city was
the favourite place of resort of the Corinthian elders, where they used to
assemble to play at draughts and converse with one another (σεμνὸν ἀμφὶ πειρήνης
ὕδωρ, Eur. Med. 69.) It was at the fountain of Peirene that Bellerophon is said
to have caught the winged horse Pegasus, which is hence called by Euripides the
Peirenaean steed, (Eurip. Electr. 475; Strab. viii. p.379.) As Pegasus was in
some legends represented as the horse of the Muses, Peirene is mentioned by the
Roman poets as a fountain sacred to these goddesses. (Stat. Silv. 1.4. 27; Pers.
Prolog. 4.) The Roman poets frequently use the adjective Pirenis in the general
sense of Corinthian. (Ov. Met. 7.391, ex Pont. 1.3. 75.)
Notwithstanding the excellence of the water of the Peirene, the inhabitants of
the Roman colony were not contented with it; and the Emperor Hadrian accordingly
constructed an aqueduct 20 miles in length, to bring water for them from
Stymphalus. This aqueduct, as well as the native sources, supplied the public
baths and fountains, which abounded in Corinth. (Paus. 2.3.5, 8.22.3.) Some
remains of this aqueduct may still be seen not far from the sea, west of
Corinth, near some mills upon the river Lungo-potamos. (Stauffert, in the
Appendix to Forster's Bauzeitung, 1844, p. 70.)
Returning to the road leading from the agora to [1.681] Lechaeum, Pausanias
mentions near the Peirene a statue of Apollo; and next along the road a statue
of Hermes with a ram, and statues also of Poseidon, Leucothea, and Palaemon upon
a dolphin. Near the statue of Poseidon were the baths constructed by Eurycles,
the Laconian, which were the most splendid in all Corinth, and were adorned with
various kinds of marble, particularly with that which came from Croceae, in
Laconia. Further on was the most remarkable of all the fountains in Corinth; it
represented Bellerophon mounted on Pegasus, through whose hoof the water flowed
(2.3. ? ? 3--5).
Pausanias next describes the monuments in the street leading from the Agora to
Sicyon. (Comp. ?Porta, quae fert Sicyonem,? Liv. 32.23.) These were, in
succession, the Temple of Apollo, with a bronze statue of the god; the fountain
of Glauce; the Odeium, probably the covered theatre, built by Herodes Atticus,
in imitation of the one he had erected at Athens, but of smaller size (θεατρον
ὑπωρόφιον, Philostr. Vit. Soph. 236, Kays.); the tomb of Medea's children; the
temple of Athena Chalinitis, so called because she gave Bellerophon the bridle
by which he secured Pegasus; the theatre (comp. Plut. Arat. 23; Plb. 5.27); the
temple of Jupiter Capitolinus; the ancient gymnasium and the fountain called
Lerna, surrounded with columns and seats; and close to the gymnasium two temples
sacred to Zeus and Asclepius respectively (2.3.6, 3.4. ? ? 1--5).
Pausanias then ascends the Acrocorinthus. In Roman Corinth no part of the
Acrocorinthus appears to have been inhabited: there were only a few public
buildings by the side of the road leading up to the summit. Pausanias mentions
in the ascent two sacred enclosures of Isis, and two of Sarapis; altars of the
Sun, and a sanctuary of Necessity and Force, which no one was allowed to enter;
a temple of the Mother of the Gods, containing a pillar and a throne, both made
of stone; a temple of Juno Bunasa; and upon the summit a temple of Aphrodite, to
whom the whole mountain was sacred (2.4. ? ? 6, 7). Pausanias does not mention
the Sisypheium, which Strabo describes (viii. p. 379) as situated below the
Peirene. This building is mentioned by Diodorus Siculus (20.103), who says that
part of the garrison of Cassander took refuge in the Acrocorinthus, and part in
the Sisypheium,when Demetrius was admitted into the town by a part of the
citizens. From this narrative it is clear that the Sisypheium was near the
fountain issuing at the foot of the Acrocorinthus, and not near the one upon the
top of the mountain: from Strabo's words above, it is not clear which of the two
fountains adjoined the Sisypheium. From its name we may conclude that it was
regarded as the ancient palace of the kings of the race of Sisyphus.
On descending from the Acrocorinthus, Pausanias did not go back to the lower
city, but turned to the south, and quitted Corinth by the Teneatic gate, near
which was a temple of Eileithyia. All the other gates.of the city led towards
the sea; but this one conducted into the mountainous country in the interior.
Hence it is described as the gate behind the mountain (ἡ Τενεατικὴ πύλη, Paus.
2.5.4; αἱ μετὰ κορυφὴν πύλαι, Polyaen. 4.17.8).
Scarcely any thing remains of ancient Corinth. The most important relics are
seven Doric columns on the western outskirts of the modern town. Five of these
columns belonged to one of the fronts of a temple, and three (counting the
angular column twice) to one of the sides of the peristyle. The diameter of the
columns, 5 feet 10 inches, is greater than that of any other columns of the same
order now existing in Greece. When Wheeler visited Greece in 1676, there were
twelve columns standing; and the ruin was in the same state when described by
Stuart 90 years afterwards. It was in its present condition when visited by Mr.
Hawkins in 1795. This temple appears to have had originally six columns in
front. It is conjectured by Leake to have been the temple of Athena Chalinitis.
At a short distance to the northward of these seven columns, on the brow of the
cliffs overlooking the plain and bay of Lechaeum, Leake remarked upon an
artificial level, the foundations of a large building, and some fragments of
Dcric columns, sufficient, in his opinion, to prove that in this spot there
stood another of the principal edifices of Grecian Corinth. He supposes that it
was a hexastyle temple, about 75 feet in breadth, and that from its dimensions
and position, it was one of the chief temples of the lower city. He further
conjectures that this was the temple of Apollo, which Pausanias describes as on
the road to Sicyon; and that as the temple of Aphrodite was the chief sanctuary
on the Acrocorinthus, so this of Apollo was the principal sacred building in the
lower city. This seems to be supported by the fact mentioned by Herodotus, that
in the edict issued by Periander, whoever held any converse with his son,
Lycophron, was to pay a fine to Apollo. (Hdt. 3.52.)
Besides these remains of Grecian Corinth, there are ruins of two buildings of
Roman Corinth. The Roman remains are:--1. A large mass of brickwork on the
northern side of the bazaar of modern Corinth, perhaps a part of one of the
baths built by Hadrian. 2. An amphitheatre, excavated in the rock on the eastern
side of the modern town. As this amphitheatre is not noticed by Pausanias, it is
possibly a work posterior to his time. The area, below is 290 feet by 190: the
thickness of the remaining part of the cavea is 100 feet. At one end of the
amphitheatre are the remains of a subterraneous entrance for the wild beasts, or
gladiators. This, amphitheatre is apparently the place of meeting of the
Corinthians, described in a passage of Dion Chrysostom, to which Leake has
directed attention, (ἔξω τῆς πόλεως ἐν χαράδρᾳ τινὶ, πλῆθος μὲν δυναμένῳ
δέξασθαι, τόπῳ δὲ ῥυπαρῷ ἄλλως, Or. Rhod., p. 347, Morell; Leake, Peloponnesiaca,
p. 393).
The most important of the. isolated antiquities of Corinth is the περιστόμιον or
mouth of an ancient well, the exterior of which is sculptured with ten figures
of divinities in very low relief. This beautiful work of art, which was seen by
Dodwell, Leake and others in the garden of Notar??s house at Corinth, is now in
London, in the collection of the Earl of Guildford. The subject represents the
introduction of Aphrodite into Olympus. (Dodwell, Classical Tour, vol. ii. p.
200; Leake, Morea, vol. iii. p. 264; Welcker, Alte Denkm?ler, vol. ii. p. 27.)
Curtius noticed before the present government buildings a fine torso of
Aphrodite. It has been asserted, but without proof, that the four bronze horses
of St. Mark at Venice, came from Corinth.
Corinth is now a small town, but is extremely unhealthy in the summer and autumn
in consequence of the malaria, for which it is difficult to account, as it
receives the sea breezes from either side. It is called by the inhabitants
Gortho, which is only a corruption of the ancient name. [1.682]
Port-Towns.--LECHAEUM (τὸ Λεχαῖον, Lecheae, Plin. Nat. 4.4. s. 5; Lecheum, Stat.
Silv. 4.3. 59), the port on the Corinthian gulf connected with the city by means
of the Long Walls, 12 stadia in length. already mentioned. (Strab. viii. p.380;
Xen. Hell. 4.4. 17) The Long Walls ran nearly due north, so that the wall on the
right hand was called the eastern, and the one on the left hand the western or
Sicyonian. The space between them must have been considerable; since, as we have
already seen, there was sufficient space for an army to be drawn up for battle.
[See above, p. 677a.] The flat country between Corinth and Lechaeum is composed
only of the sand washed up by the sea; and the port must have been originally
artificial (χωστὸς λίμην, Dionys.), though it was no doubt rendered both
spacious and convenient by the wealthy Corinthians. The site of the port is now
indicated by a lagoon, surrounded by hillocks of sand. Lechaeum was the chief
station of the Corinthian ships of war; and during the occupation of Corinth by
the Macedonians, it was one of the stations of the royal fleet. It was also the
emporium of the traffic with the western parts of Greece, and with Italy and
Sicily. The proximity of Lechaeum to Corinth prevented it from becoming an
important town like Peiraeeus. The only public buildings in the place mentioned
by Pausanias (2.2.3) was a temple of Poseidon, who is hence called Lechaeus by
Callimachus. (Del. 271.) The temple of the Olympian Zeus was probably situated
upon the low ground between Corinth and the shore of Lechaeum. (Paus. 3.9.2;
Theophr. Cans. Plant. 5.14.)
CENCHREAE (Κεγχρεαί, Strab. viii. p.380; Paus. 2.2.3; Ptol. 3.16.13; Κεγχρειά,
Thuc. 4.42; Κεγχρειαί, Thuc. 8.20; Κερχνίς, Callim. Del. 271; Cenchreis or
Cenchris, Ov. Tr. 1.10. 9), the port of the Saronic gulf, was distant from
Corinth about 70 stadia, and was the emporium of the trade with Asia. (Strab.
l.c.) This port was not simply an artificial one, like that of Lechaeum. It is a
bay protected by two promontories on the north and south, from which the
Corinthians carried out moles, as the existing remains prove, in order to render
the harbour more secure. On a Corinthian coin of Antoninus Pius (figured below)
the port of Cenchreae is represented as inclosed between two promontories, on
each of which stands a temple, and between them at the entrance of the harbour a
statue of Poseidon, holding a trident in one hand and a dolphin in the other.
This agrees with the description of Pausanias, from whom we learn that the
brazen Poseidon stood upon a rock in the sea, that to the right of the entrance
was the temple of Aphrodite, and to the left, in the direction of the warm
springs,
COLONIAL COIN OF CORINTH.
On the obverse the lead of Antoninus Pius: on the reverse the port of Cenchreae.
The letters C.L.I. COR. stand for COLONIA LAYS IVLIA CORINTHVS: see above, p.
678a.) were the sanctuaries of Asclepius and of Isis. (Paus. 2.2.3, in which
passage instead of ῥεύματι, we ought either to adopt Leake's emendation, ἕρματι,
or else χάματι.)
Cenchreae is mentioned in the history of St. Paul (Act. Apost. 18.18; Ep. ad
Rom. 16.1.) It is now deserted, but it retains its name in the form Kekhri?s.
The ancient town, stood upon the slopes of the hill above the town, as the
numerous remains of its foundations prove. Between this hill and the heights to
the right and the left there were two small plains, through one of which ran the
road leading to Schoenus, and through the other the road leading to Corinth.
HARBOUR OF CENCHREAE.
A. Site of the town.
a a. Road to Corinth.
b b. Road to Schoenus.
Pausanias mentions (l.c.) certain luke-warm salt-springs, flowing from a rock
into the sea over against Cenchreae, and called the bath of Helen. They are
found about a mile SW. of Cenchreae, on the west promontory. They rise at a
sufficient distance and height from the sea to turn a mill in their passage.
The road from Cenchreae to Corinth ran in a southwesterly direction through a
narrow valley, shut in by two ranges of mountains, which almost served the
purpose of long walls. On the left hand were the high ranges of the Oneian
mountains; on the right the continuation of the heights on which Cenchreae
stood.
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V. THE ISTHMUS.
The most important part of the territory of Corinth was the Isthmus, both as the
place across which merchandise was carried from the eastern to the western sea,
and more especially as hallowed by the celebration of the Isthmian games. The
word Isthmus (Ἰσθμός) probably comes from the root ι, which appears in ἰ-έναι
?to go,? and the Latin i-re, and hence originally meant a passage. From being
the proper name of this spot, it came to be applied to the neck of any
peninsula. The situation of the Isthmus, a stony plain lying between the
mountain barriers of the Geraneia on the north and the Oneia on the south, has
been already described. [See above, p. 674.] The word was used both in a wider
and a narrower signification. In its wider use it indicated the whole land lying
between the two gulfs, and hence Corinth is said to have been situated on the
Isthmus (Κόρινθος ἐπὶ τῷ Ἰσθμῷ [1.683] κείμενος, Strab. viii. p.380; Corinthum
in Isthimo condidit, Vell. 1.3): in its more restricted sense it was applied to
the narrowest part of the Isthmus, and especially to the neighbourhood of the
Poseideium and the locality of the Isthmian games τὴν εἰς Κεγχρέας λόντων ἐξ
Ἰσθμοῦ, Paus. 2.2.3; τὰ Ἰσθμοῖ δγάλματα,, Philostr. Vit, Her. 5.) Most of the
Greek writers make the breadth of the Isthmus 40 stadia.. (Strab. viii. p.335;
Diod. 11.16; Scylax, p. 15.) Pliny states it as 5 miles (4.4. s. 5), and Mela 4
miles (2.3). The last statement is the most correct, the real breadth being
about 3 1/2 English miles in direct distance. In the Byzantine time it was
called τὸ ἑξαμίλιον, the name which the village on the Isthmus still bears, and
which was also given to the Isthmus of Mount Athos.
The only town on the Isthmus in ancient times was SCHOENUS on the Saronic gulf.
(ὁ Σχοινοῦς, viii. p. 380; Portus Schoenitas, Mel. 2.3.) Situated at the
narrowest part of the Isthmus, it was the port of the Isthmian sanctuary, and
the place at which goods, not intended for the Corinthian market, were
transported across the Isthmus by means of the Diolcos. This harbour, which is
now called Kalam?ki, is exposed to the east and south-east: the site of the town
is indicated by a few fragments of Doric columns.
The Isthmian sanctuary lies rather less than a mile south-east of Schoenus. It
was a level spot, of an irregular quadrangular form, containing the temple of
Poseidon and other sanctuaries, and was surrounded on all tides by a strong
wall, which can still be clearly traced. The northern and north-eastern parts of
the enclosure were protected by the wall, which extended across the Isthmus, and
of which we shall speak presently. On the other sides it was shut in by its own
walls, which are in some cases more than 12 feet thick. The enclosure is about
640 feet in length; but its breadth varies, being about 600 feet broad on the
north and northeast, but only 300 feet broad at its southern end. Its form, as
well as the way in which it was connected with the Isthmic wall, is shown in the
annexed plan copied from Curtius, which is taken with a slight improvement from
Leake. The interior of the enclosure is a heap of ruins, which in consequence of
earthquakes and other devastating causes have been so mixed, that it is
impossible without extensive excavations to discover the ground-plan of the
different buildings.
PLAN OF THE ISTHMIAN SANCTUARY.
A. The Sanctuary.
B. The Stadium.
C. The Theatre.
a a. Road to Schoenus.
Pausanias's account of the Isthmian sanctuary is unusually brief and
unsatisfactory (2.1). He came to it from the port. Towards his left he saw the
stadium and theatre, both constructed of white marble, of which there are still
some vestiges. Both lay outside the sacred enclosure, the stadium towards the
south, and the theatre towards the west, Here the Isthmian games were
celebrated; and these buildings were connected with the sacred enclosure by a
grove of pine trees. (Strab. viii. p.380.) The main gate of the sanctuary
appears to have been in the eastern wall, through which Pausanias entered. The
road leading from this gate to the temple of Poseidon, was lined on one side by
the statues of conquerors in the Isthmian games, and on the other side by a row
of pine trees. Upon the temple, which was not large, stood Tritons, probably
serving as weather-cocks, like the Triton on the Horologium of Andronicus
Cyrrhestes at Athens. In the pronaus Pausanias saw two statues of Poseidon, and
by their side statues of Amphitrite and Thalassa. The principal ornament of the
cella was a magnificent gift of Herodes Atticus, consisting of four gilded
horses with ivory hoofs, drawing the chariot of Poseidon, Amphitrite and
Palaemon. The chariot rested upon a base, on which were represented in
bas-relief Thalassa with her child Aphrodite in the centre, while on either side
were the Nereids. The fragments of Doric columns found within the enclosure may
be assigned to this temple. Leake measured the end of the fluting of one of
these shafts, and found it ten inches and a half.
Within the sacred enclosure, to the west, was the Palaemonion, consisting of two
sanctuaries, one above ground, containing statues of Poseidon, Leucothea, and
Palaemon; and a subterraneous adytum, where Palaemon was said to have been
buried. This adytum was the most sacred spot in the Isthmus, since the festival
was originally in honour of Palaemon. Poseidon was subsequently substituted for
this local divinity as the patron god of the festival; but Palaemon continued to
receive special honour, and in his adytum the most sacred oaths were sworn.
Pausanias also mentions an ancient sanctuary, called the altar of the Cyclopes.
Sisyphus and Neleus were said to have been buried here, but the site of their
graves was unknown.
These are all the buildings in the Isthmic sanctuary mentioned by Pausanias; but
we learn, from an inscription discovered by Wheeler in 1676, and now preserved
at Verona, that there were several other buildings besides. (See the inscription
in B?ckh, Corp. Inscr. n. 1104.) It contains a list of the Isthmian edifices
erected by Publius Licinius Priscus Juventianus, high priest for life at Roman
Corinth. ?He built lodgings for the athletae, who came to the Isthmian games
from the whole world. He erected, at his own expense, the Palaemonium, with its
decorations;--the ἐναγιστήριον, probably the subterraneous adytum, spoken of by
Pausanias;--the sacred avenue;--the altars of the native gods, with the
peribolus and the pronaos (perhaps the sanctuary containing the altars of the
Cyclopes);--the houses in which the athletae were examined;--the temple of
Helios, together with the statue and peribolus;--moreover, the peribolus of the
Sacred Grove, and within it temples of Demeter, Core, Dionysus and Artemis, with
their statues, decorations and pronai. He repaired the temples of Eueteria, of
Core, of Pluto, and the steps and terrace-walls, which had fallen into decay by
earthquakes [1.684] and antiquity He also decorated the portico at the Stadium,
with the arched apartments and the decorations belonging to them.?
It has been already mentioned that the northern portion of the walls which
surrounded the Isthmic sanctuary belonged to a line of fortification, which
extended at one period across the Isthmus. This wall may still be traced in its
whole extent across the narrowest part of the Isthmus, beginning at the bay of
Lechaeum and terminating at the bay of Schoenus. It was fortified with square
towers on its northern side in the direction of Megaris, showing that it was
intended for the defence of Peloponnesus against attacks from the north. It was
not built in a straight line, but followed the crest of a range of low hills,
the last falls of the Oneian mountains. The length of the wall, according to
Boblaye, is 7300 m?tres, while the breadth of the Isthmus at its narrowest part
is only 5950 m?tres. At what period this wall was erected, is uncertain. The
first Isthmian wall, mentioned in history, was the one thrown up in haste by the
Peloponnesians when Xerxes was marching into Greece. (Hdt. 8.71; Diod. 11.66.)
But this was a work of haste, and could not have been the same as the massive
walls, of which the remains are extant. Moreover, it is evident from the
military operations in the Corinthia, recorded by Thucydides and Xenophon, that
in their time the Isthmus was not defended by a line of fortifications: the
difficulties of an invading army always begin with the passes through the Oneian
mountains. Diodorus (15.68) speaks of a temporary line of fortifications,
consisting of palisades and trenches, which were thrown across the Isthmus by
the Spartans and their allies, to prevent the Thebans from marching into
Peloponnesus (B.C. 369), from which it clearly appears that there was no
permanent wall. Moreover, Xenophon (Xenoph. Hell. 7.1.15, seq.) does not even
mention the palisading and trenches, but places the Lacedaemonians and their
allies upon the Oneian mountains. It is not till we come to the period of the
decline of the Roman empire, that we find mention of the Isthmian wall. It was
then regarded as an important defence against the invasions of the barbarians.
Hence, it was restored by Valerian in the middle of the third century (Zosim.
1.29), by Justinian towards the end of the sixth (Procop. de Aedif. 4.2), by the
Greeks against the Turks in 1415, and after it had been destroyed by the Turks
it was rebuilt by the Venetians in 1463. It was a second time destroyed by the
Turks; and by the treaty of Carlowitz, in 1699, the remains of the old walls
were made the boundary line between the territories of the Turks and Venetians.
The Isthmian wall formed with the passes of the Geraneian and with those of the
Oneian mountains three distinct lines of defence, which are enumerated in the
following passage of Claudian (de Bell. Get. 188):--
Vallata mari Scironia rupes,
Et duo continuo connectens aequora muro
Isthmus, et angusti patuerunt claustra Lechaei.
A short distance north of the Isthmian wall, where the ground was the most
level, was the Diolcos (δίολκος, Strab. viii. p.335). It was a level road, upon
which smaller vessels were drawn by moving rollers from one sea to the other.
The cargoes of those ships, which were too large for this mode of transport,
were unloaded, carried across, and put on board other vessels upon the opposite
coast Hence we find the expressions διϊσθμεῖν τὰς ναῦς, ὑπερισθμεῖν (Pol. 4.19),
ὑπερφέρειν (Thus. 8.7), διελκύειν (Diod. 4.56). In some seasons of the year
there was an uninterrupted traffic upon the Diolcos, to which allusion is made
in one of the jokes of Aristophanes (Aristoph. Thes. 647).
The narrow breadth of the Isthmus, and the important traffic across it,
frequently suggested the idea of cutting a canal through it. This project is
said to have been formed by Periander (D. L. 1.99), Demetrius Poliorcetes (Strab.
i. p.54), Julius Caesar (D. C. 44.5; Suet. Jul. 44; Plut. Caes. 58), Caligula
(Suet. Calig. 21), Nero, and Herodes Atticus (Philostr. Vit. Soph. 2.6). But the
only one who actually commenced the work was Nero. This emperor opened the
undertaking with great pomp, and cut out part of the earth with his own hands;
but the work had advanced only four stadia, when he was obliged to give it up,
in consequence of the insurrection of Julius Vindex in Gaul. (D. C. 65.16; Suet.
Nero 19; Paus. 2.1.5; Plin. Nat. 4.4. s. 5; Lucian, de Fossa Isthmi.) The canal
was commenced upon the western shore close to the Diolcos, and traces of it may
still be seen at right angled to the shore. It has now little depth; but it is
200 feet wide, and may be traced for about 1200 yards. It ceased where the rocky
ground begins to rise; for even the Isthmus is not a perfect level, but rises
gradually from either shore, and steeper from the eastern than the western side.
Curtius says that the highest point is 246 feet above. the level of the sea. The
existing remains of the canal leave no doubt respecting its position; but since
it was said by some authorities to commence ἀπὸ τοῦ Λεχαίου, Chandler
erroneously concluded that it commenced at the port of Lechaeum. Leake, however,
has shown that the bay of the Corinthian gulf at the Isthmus bore the name of
Lechaeum, and that we are to understand the bay, and not the port, in the
passages referred to.
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VI. TOPOGRAPHY OF THE CORINTHIA.
The territory of Corinth extended some distance to the north and south of the
Isthmus. At an earlier period the boundary line between the Corinthia and
Megaris commenced at Crommyon; but at a later time the Corinthia extended as far
as the Scironian rocks and the other passes of the Geraneia. South of the
Isthmus Corinth possessed the part of the Peloponnesus extending as far as the
northern slopes of the Argive mountains, and along the coast of the Saronic gulf
as far as the territory of Epidaurus. The direct distances in English miles,
from the city of Corinth to its frontiers, as measured by Clinton, are: to the
river Nemea, which divided Corinthia from Sicyonia, 7 1/2 miles; to the confines
of Epidauria, 13 1/2 miles; to the confines of Megaris, 12 miles. Corinth was
only 8 1/2 miles from Cleonae, which stood beyond the Corinthian frontiers
towards Argos. In the time of the Roman empire the Corinthia was included under
Argolis (ἡ Κορινθία χώρα μοῖρα οὖσα τῆς Ἀργείας, Paus. 2.1.1).
South of Cenchreae the Oneium runs out into the Saronic gulf, forming a
promontory called Chersonesus. Between this promontory and a spot called Rheitus
or the stream is a bay with a flat shore, where the Athenians under Nicias
landed in B.C. 425, intending to take possession of the mountain called
SOLYGEIUS (Σολύγειος), which had been Formerly seized by the Dorian invaders for
the purpose [1.685] of carrying on war against the then inhabitants of Corinth.
This hill is described by Thucydides as distant 12 stadia from the shore, 60
from Corinth, and 20 from the Isthmus; and upon it there stood the village of
SOLYGEIA (Σολύγεια). The sepulchres between Mert?si and Galat?ki probably
belonged to Solygeia. It was here that a very ancient vase was found, which
Dodwell procured at Corinth. (Classical Tour, vol. ii. p. 197.) The attempt of
Nicias failed. The Corinthians, having received information of the Athenian
movements, stationed a body of troops at Cenchreae, lest the Athenians should
endeavour to seize the port of Crommyon, outside of the Isthmus, and with the
remainder of their army occupied Solygeia. A battle took place in the broken
ground between the village and the sea, in which the Athenians gained the
victory. The Corinthian detachment at Cenchreae, who could not see the battle in
consequence of the interposition of the ridge of Oneium, marched to the scene of
action as soon as the dust of the fugitives informed them of what was taking
place; and as other reinforcements were also approaching, Nicias thought it more
prudent to re-embark his men, and sailed away to the neighbouring islands. (Thuc.
4.42, foll.; Σολύγης λόφος, Polyaen. 1.39; and the map of the scene of action in
the 2nd volume of Arnold's Thucydides.)
Beyond Solygeius, to the SE., was a harbour, called PEIRAEUS (Πειραιός), which
is described by Thucydides as uninhabited, and the last port towards the
confines of Epidaurus. In this harbour some Peloponnesian ships, which had fled
hither for refuge, were kept blockaded by an Athenian fleet during a great part
of the summer of B.C. 412. The Athenian fleet took up their station at a small
island opposite the entrance of the harbour. (Thuc. 8.10, 11.) Peiraeus is the
harbour now called Frango-Limi?na or Porto Franco; and the small island alluded
to bears the name of Ovrio-n?si, or Ovri?--kastro, Jews-Castle. Ptolemy
(3.16.12) gives the following list of places on this part of the coast:--Ἐπίδαυρος,
Σπείραιον ἄκρον, Ἀθηναίων λιμήν, Βουκέφαλος λιμήν, Κεγχρεαὶ ἐπίνειον. In Pliny
(4.4. s. 5) we find ?Spiraeum promontorium, portus Anthedus et Bucephalus et
Cenchreae.? Both Ptolemy and Pliny omit the harbour Peiraeus; but the promontory
Speiraeum is probably the same name. Miller indeed proposed to read Speiraeus
instead of Peiraeus in Thucydides; but this is hardly admissible, since
Stephanus B. (s. v. Πειραῖος) read Peiraeus.
South of Corinth, on the northern slopes of the Argive mountains, lay Tenea, at
the distance of 60 stadia from the capital [TENEA]; and in the same mountainous
district we may perhaps place PETRA the residence of Eetion, the father of
Cypselus. (Hdt. 5.92.)
The Corinthian territory, north of the Isthmus, may be divided into two parts,
the eastern half consisting of a series of small plains between the Geraneian
mountains sloping down to the Saronic Gulf, while the western half is composed
of a mass of mountains, running out into the Corinthian Gulf, in the form of a
quadrangular peninsula. The north-eastern point of this peninsula was called the
promontory OLMIAE (Ὄλμιαι, Strab. viii. p.380, x. p. 409), which lay opposite
Creusis, the port of Thespiae, in Boeotia, and formed along with the latter the
entrance to the bay called Alcyonis. The south-western point of the peninsula
was the promontory HERAEUM (now C. St. Nikolaos or Melank?vi) of which we shall
speak further presently, and which along with thle opposite Sicyonian coast
formed the entrance to the bay of Lechaeum.
This district bore the general name of PERAEA (Περαία, Steph. B. sub voce or the
country beyond the Isthmus. The possession of it was of great importance to the
Corinthians, who obtained from its mountains a supply of timber, and found here
pasturage for their cattle, when the grass in the plains was burnt up. Moreover,
the shortest road to Boeotia and Phocis ran across this mountainous district.
The chief place in this district was PEIRAEUM (Πείραιον, Xen. Hell. 4.5. 1,
Ages. 2.18), now called Perach?ra, lying inland between the promontories Heraeum
and Olmiae, and not to be confounded with the above-mentioned port of Peiraeus
on the Saronic Gulf. Peiraeum was a strong fortress, and formed one of a chain
of fortresses, intended to secure this part of the country from the attacks of
the Megarians and Athenians. To the east of Peiraeum, and near the Alcyonian
Gulf, was the fortress OENOE (Xen. Hell. 4.5. 5; Strab. viii. p.380, x. p. 409),
the site of which is marked by a quadrangular tower above the harbour of Skino
The third fortress stood on the promontory at the western corner of the
peninsula, which was called the HERAEUM from its being the site of the temple
and oracle of HERA ACRAEA (Strab. viii. p.380; Xen. Hell. 4.5. 5; Plut. Cleom.
20; Liv. 32.23.) The fortress consisted of the temple itself, which stood upon
the extremity of the promontory, and was surrounded with strong walls, of which
the remains are still extant. A little way inland is a chapel of St. Nikolaos,
also surrounded with walls, and probably the site of an ancient sanctuary:
perhaps it was a temple of Poseidon, who is frequently represented by St.
Nikolaos.
The geography of the Peraea is illustrated by the campaign of Agesilaus in B.C.
390, when he took Peiraeum, Oenoe and the Heraeum. (Xen. Hell. 4.5. 1, seq.,
Ages. 2.18.) Xenophon, in his account of this campaign, mentions certain THERMA
(τὰ Θερμὰ) or warm springs, situated on the road to Peiraeum by the bay of
Lechaeum (Hell. 4.5. ? ? 3, 8). These warm springs are still visible at the
small village and port of Lutr?ki, which derives its name from them. They are
situated close to the sea at the foot of the mountain of Peiraeum, where the
level ground of the Isthmus ends and the mountains of the Peraean peninsula
begin. (Ulrichs, Reisen in Griechenland, p. 3.) The lake near the Heraeum, on
the banks of which Agesilaus was seated, when he received the news of the
destruction of the Lacedaemonian mora by Iphicrates (Xen. Hell. 4.5. 6 seq.), is
now called Vuliasm?ni. It is a salt lake surrounded by mountains, except on the
side open to the sea; and it is conjectured by Curtius, with great probability,
to be the same as the lake ESCHATIOTIS (Ἐσχατιῶτις λίμνη). Gorgo, the daughter
of Megareus and wife of Corinthus, is said to have plunged into this lake upon
receiving intelligence of the murder of her children, in consequence of which it
received the name of Gorgopis. (Etym. M. s. v. Ἐσχατιῶτις; Phavorin. Ecl. p.
209, Dind.; Aesch. Ag. 302.)
Towards the Saronic gulf the Geraneian mountains are not nearly so lofty and
rugged as in the Peraea. Between the flat ground of the Isthmus and the
Scironian rocks there are three plains upon the coast. The chief town in this
district was Crommyon [CROMMYON], and the name Crommyonia was sometimes [1.686]
given to the whole country between Megara and Schoenus. Between Crommyon and
Schoenus was the village of Sidus. [SIDUS] To the east of Crommyon, at the
western extremity of the Scironian rocks, was a temple of Apollo Latous, which
marked the boundaries of the Corinthia and Megaris in the time of Pausanias
(1.44.10). This temple must have been near the modern village of Kin?ta, a
little above which the road leads over the Scironian rocks to Megara. [MEGARA]
The best modern authorities on the topography of Corinth and its territory are
Leake, Morea, vol. iii. p. 229, foll., Peloponnesiaca, p. 392; Boblaye,
Recherches, &c., p. 33, seq.; Curtius, Peloponnesos, vol. ii. p. 514, seq. - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography,
William Smith, LLD, Ed.
Read The Bible
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Table of Contents
Main Menu
- Ancient Assyrian Social Structure
- Ancient Babylonia
- Ancient Canaan During the Time of Joshua
- Ancient History Timeline
- Ancient Oil Lamps
- Antonia Fortress
- Archaeology of Ancient Assyria
- Assyria and Bible Prophecy
- Augustus Caesar
- Background Bible Study
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- Fallen Empires - Archaeological Discoveries and the Bible
- First Century Jerusalem
- Glossary of Latin Words
- Herod Agrippa I
- Herod Antipas
- Herod the Great
- Herod's Temple
- High Priest's in New Testament Times
- Jewish Literature in New Testament Times
- Library collection
- Map of David's Kingdom
- Map of the Divided Kingdom - Israel and Judah
- Map of the Ministry of Jesus
- Matthew Henry Bible Commentary
- Messianic Prophecy
- Nero Caesar Emperor
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- Paul's First Missionary Journey
- Paul's Second Missionary Journey
- Paul's Third Missionary Journey
- Pontius Pilate
- Questions About the Ancient World
- Tabernacle of Ancient Israel
- Tax Collectors in New Testament Times
- The Babylonian Captivity
- The Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser
- The Books of the New Testament
- The Court of the Gentiles
- The Court of the Women in the Temple
- The Destruction of Israel
- The Fall of Judah with Map
- The History Of Rome
- The Incredible Bible
- The Jewish Calendar in Ancient Hebrew History
- The Life of Jesus in Chronological Order
- The Life of Jesus in Harmony
- The Names of God
- The New Testament
- The Old Testament
- The Passion of the Christ
- The Pharisees
- The Sacred Year of Israel in New Testament Times
- The Samaritans
- The Scribes
Ancient Questions
- How did the ancient Greeks and Romans practice medicine and treat illnesses?
- What were the major contributions of ancient Babylon to mathematics and astronomy?
- How did the ancient Persians create and administer their vast empire?
- What were the cultural and artistic achievements of ancient India, particularly during the Gupta Empire?
- How did ancient civilizations like the Incas and Aztecs build their remarkable cities and structures?
- What were the major trade routes and trading practices of the ancient world?
- What was the role of slavery in ancient societies like Rome and Greece?
- How did the ancient Mayans develop their sophisticated calendar system?
- What were the key events and significance of the Battle of Thermopylae in ancient Greece?
- What was life like for women in ancient Rome?
Bible Study Questions
- The Authorized (King James) Version (AKJV): Historical Significance, Translation Methodology, and Lasting Impact
- Exploring the English Standard Version (ESV): Its Aspects, Comparisons, Impact on Biblical Studies, and Church Use
- A Detailed Historical Analysis of Language Updates in the KJ21: Comparison with Other Versions
- A Detailed Historical Analysis of the American Standard Version (ASV): Comparison to the King James Version, Influence on Later Translations, and Evaluation of Strengths and Weaknesses
- A Detailed Historical Analysis of Amplifications in the Amplified Bible (AMP) and Its Comparison to Other Bible Translations
- Detailed Historical Analysis of the Amplified Bible Classic Edition (AMPC): Examples of Amplifications and Comparative Analysis with Other Bible Translations
- Theological Implications of the BRG Bible's Color-Coding System: A Comparative Analysis
- The Christian Standard Bible (CSB): An In-Depth Analysis
- The Geneva Bible: Theological Distinctives, Impact on English Literature, and Role in Bible Translation History
- Exploring the Common English Bible (CEB): Translation Methodology, Church Use, and Comparative Analysis
About
Welcome to Free Bible: Unearthing the Past, Illuminating the Present! Step into a world where ancient history and biblical narratives intertwine, inviting you to explore the rich tapestry of human civilization.
Discover the captivating stories of forgotten empires, delve into the customs and cultures of our ancestors, and witness the remarkable findings unearthed by dedicated archaeologists.
Immerse yourself in a treasure trove of knowledge, where the past comes alive and illuminates our understanding of the present.
Join us on this extraordinary journey through time, where curiosity is rewarded and ancient mysteries await your exploration.
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