The following list of dissertations completed since 2000 is presumably incomplete (contact corinthianmatters if you have titles to add to the list). These dissertations focus on Corinthian archaeology and history or discuss the Corinthia extensively. The hundreds of New Testament dissertations are not included in the following. A current list of researchers working at the urban center of Corinth available here.
Current dissertations:
- Mark Hammond, Late Roman Pottery from the Panayia Field Excavations at Corinth (University of Missouri-Columbia)
- Jeremy Ott, Mortuary Practices in Late Antique Corinth (IFA/NYU)
- Mark Abbe, The Polychromy of Ancient Roman Sculpture (IFA / NYU)
Completed / Defended Dissertations:
- David Scahill, The South Stoa at Corinth: Design, Construction and Function of the Greek Phase (University of Bath 2012)
- Sarah James, The Hellenistic Pottery from the Panayia Field, Corinth: Studies in Chronology and Context (U Texas 2010)
- Angela Ziskowski, The Construction of Corinthian Identity in the Early Iron Age and Archaic Period (Bryn Mawr College)
- Theo Kopestonsky, Kokkinovrysi: A Classical Shrine to the Nymphs at Corinth(SUNY-Buffalo 2009)
- Sarah Lepinski, Roman Wall Painting from Panayia Field, Corinth, Greece: A Contextual Study (Bryn Mawr 2008)
- Phil Sapirstein, The Emergence of Ceramic Roof Tiles in Archaic Greek Architecture (Cornell 2008)
- Amelia Brown, The City of Corinth and Urbanism in Late Antique Greece (Berkeley 2008). Summary here, abstract here, and dissertation in Pdf here.
- Sarah Roland, Corinth and the Birth of Figural Representation in Greek Monumental Architecture (Columbia 2008)
- Agiatis Benardou, The social and economic history of the Corinthia from the beginning of the Peloponnesian League until the King’s Peace (Kings College, London 2007)
- Jorge Bravo, The Hero Shrine of Opheltes/Archemoros at Nemea: A Case Study of Ancient Greek Hero Cult (Berkeley 2006)
- David Pettegrew, Corinth on the Isthmus: Studies of the End of an Ancient Landscape (Ohio State 2006)
- Jon Frey, Speaking through spolia: The language of architectural reuse in the fortifications of late Roman Greece (Berkeley 2006)
- Marina Thomatos, The Final Revival of the Aegean Bronze Age: A Case Study of the Argolid, Corinthia, Attica, Euboea, the Cyclades, and the Dodecanese during the LH IIIC Middle (Edinburgh, 2005)
- Jayne Huntington Reinhard, The Roman Bath at Isthmia: decoration, cult, and Herodes Atticus (U Minnesota, 2005)
- William Caraher, Church, Society, and the Sacred in Early Christian Greece (Ohio State 2003)
- Hanne Thomasen, Corinthian Pottery: Production, Distribution, Use: a case study of finds from Corinth, Athens, and Pithekoussai (Copenhagen 2003)
- Jeannette C. Marchand, Well-built Kleonai: a history of the Peloponnesian city based on a survey of the visible remains and a study of the literary and epigraphci sources (Berkeley 2002)
- Betsey Robinson, Fountains and Cultures of Water at Roman Corinth (Penn 2001)
- Sally-Anne Coupar, The chronology and development of the coinage of Corinth to the Peloponnesian War (Glasgow 2000)
- Michael Dixon, Disputed Territories: interstate arbitrations in the northeast Peloponnese (Ohio State 2000).