Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

--> YouTube-Generated Transcript <--
·Introduction
0:01·Twice Corinth was the most important
0:04·city on the Greek mainland. During the
0:06·archaic period, the 7th and 6th
0:09·centuries BC, Corinth was the commercial
0:12·center of Greece, a pioneer in naval
0:15·warfare and the mother city of many
0:17·important colonies.
0:19·Half a millennium later, after having
0:21·been destroyed by the Romans and
0:23·refounded by Julius Caesar, Corinth
0:26·became the capital of Aia, the Roman
0:29·province that included most of Greece.
0:32·It grew larger and more prosperous than
0:34·Athens, and its center was rebuilt on
0:37·the Roman model. The Apostle Paul lived
0:40·here for 18 months and was brought
0:42·before the seat of the proconsul Gallio
0:45·in the forum. Despite repeated
0:48·earthquake damage, the city survived to
0:51·the end of late antiquity.
0:56·We'll start our tour of the ruins with
·Temple of Apollo
0:58·the oldest and most prominent building
1:00·in the city center, the Temple of
1:03·Apollo. Built around the middle of the
1:06·6th century BC, its columns were cut
1:08·from the local poros limestone and
1:11·coated with stucco.
1:14·Unusually for a Greek temple, the
1:16·columns are monolithic.
1:18·The surviving columns belonged to the
1:20·back facade. Though only the foundation
1:23·cutings survive of the vanished part,
1:26·you can see that like many early Doric
1:28·temples, the building was exceptionally
1:31·long for its width.
1:33·The temple survived the sack that
1:35·destroyed Hellenistic Corinth and was
1:37·restored by the Roman colonists. Its
1:40·interior columns removed during that
1:42·renovation can be seen elsewhere on the
1:45·site.
·Forum
1:47·From here we have a good view of the
1:49·forum divided into upper and lower
1:52·terraces by a row of shops. Off to our
1:56·left was the Layan Road which led down
1:59·to one of Corinth Harpers. That road
2:02·like this forum dated to the Roman era.
2:05·Corinth Griagura was elsewhere.
2:08·Here
2:10·on the west side of the agura's upper
2:12·terrace, a series of shops alternated
2:15·with small temples in the Roman style.
2:18·The back of the forum's upper terrace
2:20·was dominated by the enormous South
2:23·Stowa, a late classical building
2:26·repaired by the Romans. It was two
2:29·stories tall and originally had 33 shops
2:32·and restaurants opening from its ground
2:34·floor. Over time, many of these spaces
2:38·were converted for official use.
2:41·On this end of the south stoa were the
2:44·Kiraia where the city council met and
2:47·also the office of the procurator, a
2:50·financial official associated with the
2:52·proconsul of aa.
2:54·Just below on the lower terrace was the
2:57·Julian Basilica, an all-purpose public
3:00·building decorated with statues of the
3:02·imperial family.
·Rostra
3:06·At the center of the row of shops that
3:08·separated the upper and lower terraces
3:10·of the forum was an imposing marble
3:13·rostra 10 ft above the lower terrace.
3:16·This is almost certainly the beimma or
3:19·speaker's platform on which the
3:20·proconsul of a sat when he judged cases.
3:24·It was quite likely here that Gallio
3:26·refused to try St. Paul after the elders
3:29·of the local synagogue accused him of
3:31·preaching doctrines contrary to Jewish
3:33·law.
3:34·In commemoration of the event, a
3:37·Byzantine church was built over the
3:38·site.
·Lechaion Road
3:40·This was the Layan Road, the Cardom
3:43·Maximus, main north south street of the
3:46·Roman city. It was named after the
3:49·harbor at its terminus a mile and a half
3:51·away. The road was paved with limestone
3:54·in the reign of Espasian and remained in
3:56·use through the Middle Ages. Almost all
3:58·the monuments that lined it, however,
4:00·date to the Roman era. The road is lined
4:03·with colonades, a feature rare in
4:05·Greece.
4:08·On the right side of the Leean road is
4:10·the famous fountain of Perini. According
4:13·to one myth, it rose up after Pegasus
4:16·stamped his hoof here. Though used since
4:18·the beginnings of the city, it was
4:20·monumentalized under the Romans. In its
4:22·current form, it dates to the second
4:24·century. The spring's six straw basins
4:27·were surrounded by a twostory marble
4:29·facade equipped with shady al coes where
4:32·people could sit and talk. The fountain
4:34·remained in use well into the medieval
4:36·era.
·Sacred Spring
4:38·Like the temple of Apollo, the sacred
4:40·spring complex is much older than the
4:42·Roman forum. The first structure around
4:45·this natural seep dates the 6th century
4:47·BC. It was renovated several times and
4:51·eventually adjoined by a small area used
4:53·for rituals and performances. The area
4:55·around it was sacred. Intriguingly, a
4:58·statue base at the wall's west end
5:00·reads, "Lissipus made it." Elizabeth was
5:03·one of the most famous sculptures in
5:04·classical Greece. But whatever stood in
5:06·this pedestal was stolen by the Romans
5:08·in the sack of 146 BC.
·Odeon
5:13·Corinth Odon, used for musical and
5:15·rhetorical performances, had about 3,000
5:18·seats. It was remodeled by Herod's
5:21·Attakus, the awesomely wealthy second
5:23·century magnate known for his building
5:25·projects at Athens in Olympia.
5:29·After fire damaged the building in the
5:31·3rd century, it was converted into a
5:34·Roman style arena by removing the first
5:36·row of seats and building a protective
5:38·wall.
·Theater
5:42·The theater, built in the classical
5:44·period and reconstructed by the Romans,
5:46·once had an elaborate three-story stage
5:49·building. This is long gone, but you can
5:52·still see how the theater, like the
5:53·Odon, was made into a venue for beast
5:56·hunts and gladiatorial matches by
5:58·cutting away the lowest seats and
6:01·cutting the underlying rock into a sheer
6:03·protective wall. This service was
6:05·decorated with fresco of beast hunters,
6:08·now lost.
6:11·In the late 3rd century, the arena was
6:14·sealed with waterproof mortar so that
6:16·aquatic spectacles could be staged
6:18·there.
6:20·Like Corinth itself, in short, the
6:22·theat's Greek origins were repeatedly
6:24·overwritten to reflect the city's
6:27·prominent place in a Roman world.

1 posted on 11/15/2025 12:26:49 PM PST by SunkenCiv
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies ]


To: SunkenCiv

After 50 years of Bible reading, I always figured that Athens was the DC of Achaea, and Corinth was its Wall St. This is causing a cerebral rewiring.


3 posted on 11/15/2025 1:31:24 PM PST by chajin ("There is no other name under heaven given among people by which we must be saved." Acts 4:12)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

To: SunkenCiv

https://share.google/images/lFkGoVHELwthLTCex


4 posted on 11/15/2025 3:00:33 PM PST by rfp1234 (E Porcibus Unum)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson