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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum
Located at the western edge of the walled area of Corinth, the Potters’ quarter was a complex of workshops and domestic quarters used by potters for three centuries from the seventh century until the fourth ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | Potters' Quarter | ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | Potters' Quarter
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Acrocorinth
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Acrocorinth, North Slope | Acrocorinth Sanctuary
In 1960, several Late Roman graves were excavated adjacent to the road to Acrocorinth by Henry Robinson ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Acrocorinth, North Slope
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 ... Corinthia | Penteshouphia | Ancient Corinth, East of | Aetopetra
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 ... Corinthia | Agios Basilios
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Agora south central
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Agora Southeast
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Agora southwest
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, East | Kraneion | Amphitheater
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | Anaploga
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | Anaploga | Anaploga
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Sacred Spring | Apsidal Temple
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Asklepieion
An early trial trench between the Theater and the Temple of Apollo that sought to find the Sanctuary of Athena Chalinitis ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Theater District | East of Theater | Athena
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | West Terrace | Babbius
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Baths of Aphrodite
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Lechaion Road Area | Baths of
The masonary ruins of this bath stand several meters above ground to the north of the theater ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Theater District | Baths of
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Captives' Facade
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum Southwest |
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Central Shops
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Cheliotomylos
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Central Shops |
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | City Wall
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 ... Corinthia | Isthmia | Diolkos
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Theater District | Dump of
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Trial Trenches | Early Excavations
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Theater District | East of Theater
The East Stoa is the name early excavators gave to the Lechaion Road Basilica ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Lechaion Road Area | North
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Forum Southwest | Forum
This fountain is one of several structures of the West Terrace Temples bounding the west side of the Forum ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | West Terrace | Fountain
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Glauke
West of Glauke in 2009 trenches were opened on the site of a proposed souvenir shop. The shop was never built ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Glauke West
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 ... Corinthia | New Corinth | Gonia
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Gymnasium
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Gymnasium | Fountain
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 ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Acrocorinth, North Slope | Hadji Mustafa
In 1998, a small rescue excavation by the ΛΖ ΕΠΚΑ was undertaken across the street from the Great Bath excavation. Several apsidal plunges around a circular room were uncovered ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Ioannou Bath east of
An irrigation channel was built to carry water from Lake Stymphalus to the Isthmus of Corinth in the mid 1960’s. In the course of excavating the channel several Roman tombs were found at the edge of the ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, North | Irrigation Channel
The Julian Basilica closes the east end of the Roman forum. It was a two story structure with cryptoporticus below and a peristyle hall above. The basilica was built in the early years of the 1st century ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | Julian Basilica |
In 146 B.C. the Roman general Mummius reduced the walls of Corinth to make them unusable for defensive purposes. No wall was considered necessary until the Late Roman period when a shorter circuit was ... Corinthia | Justinian's Wall
Literally “Red Spring”, Kokkinovrysi is located at the west end of the lower terrace on which the city of Ancient Corinth stood. The spring is just outside the line of the ancient wall beside a road running ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, West | Kokkinovrysi
Korakou is a hill (260x115m) 35m above sea level overlooking the Corinthian Gulf at the western end of the city of New Corinth. Blegen excavated here in the summers of 1915 and 1916. He used the results ... Corinthia | New Corinth | Korakou
Between 1911 and 1935, Leslie Walker Kosmopoulos excavated a total of 23 trenches in Ancient Corinth in the Forum, on Temple Hill, on the West Terrace, and around Temple E. Some of the material was stored ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | | Kosmopoulos Trenches
This ancient suburb of Corinth lay to the east of the city near the line of the city wall. Here Pausanias saw the tomb of Diogenes the Cynic of Sinope. Nearby, the grave of the famous courtesan Lais was ... Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Ancient Corinth, East | Kraneion | Kraneion