Category: Periods, Roman
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SBL International 2012 Abstracts
The International Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature in Amsterdam this summer included about 20 papers related to Paul’s letters to the Corinthians and the early Christian community at Corinth. I have copied the titles below and trimmed the abstracts to their main ideas (You can find full abstracts at the SBL website). For…
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Corinthian Scholarship (monthly): June-August
The second installment of Corinth-related scholarship that went digital in June-August. Happy reading! Geology Ford, Mary, Sebastian Rohais, Edward A. Williams, Sylvain Bourlange, David Jousselin, Nicolas Backert, and Fabrice Malartre. “Tectono-sedimentary Evolution of the Western Corinth Rift (Central Greece).” Basin Research (2012). Rathossi, C. E., P. G. Lampropoulou, K. C. Skourlis, and C. G. Katagas.…
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Corinthian Scholarship (monthly): March-May
Here is the first installment of Corinth-related scholarship, or scholarship discussing Corinth, which appeared in digital form in March to May. I will post the second installment for June-August on Friday. [Reposting this at 11:00 as I accidentally deleted the original] Diachronic Francis, J.e. “Experiments with an Old Ceramic Beehive.” Oxford Journal of Archaeology 31,…
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Another Article on the Diolkos
Back in January, I noted another new article on the diolkos of Corinth by Yannis Nakas and D. Koutsoumba forthcoming in the Loutraki volume (more on this soon). Since then, I’ve been in contact with Yannis Nakas about the piece and his ideas about the diolkos. Yannis is a maritime archaeologist in Greece and also…
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2 Corinthians: A Select Bibliography
Pepperdine University has provided free access to its past issues of Leaven: A Journal of Christian Ministry through its digital commons site. There are about 20 articles and reviews on Corinth and the Corinthians. Most useful is Carl Holladay’s select bibliography of 2 Corinthians, which actually includes a mix of commentaries, books, and articles on…
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Corinthian Scholarship (February)
Here’s the latest in Corinthian-related scholarship published, presented, or released online in February. These 13 articles, books, and studies represent about 7% of ca 175 studies that triggered Google Scholar alerts last month. There are many, many “false positives” that have little to do with ancient or medieval Corinth, or make only passing and insignificant…
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Corinthian Exceptionalism in Western Civ Textbooks
In the comments to my post last week on Athens, Sparta, and Corinth in Western Civilization texts, Dimitri Nakassis pressed me to say a little more about how Corinth has figured differently into western civ textbooks over time—how changing times have differently imaged Corinth. Since western civ textbooks were traditionally conceived to provide the foundations…
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Corinthian Scholarship (January)
New Corinthian-related scholarship published or released online in the last month. Diachronic Yannis A. Lolos, Land of Sikyon: Archaeology and History of a Greek City-State, Hesperia Supplement 39, Princeton 2011: ASCSA. Bronze Age Tartaron, Thomas F., Daniel J. Pullen, Richard K. Dunn, Lita Tzortzopoulou-Gregory, Amy Dill, Joseph I. Boyce, “The Saronic Harbors Archaeological Research Project…
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Land of Sikyon published
I just heard the good news that Yannis Lolos’ Land of Sikyon: Archaeology and History of a Greek City-State has finally been published. Lolos completed his dissertation study of the Sikyonia well over a decade ago and completed the monograph in 2005. I read his dissertation back in the day and have been eagerly waiting…
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Ancient Corinth: 2011 Publications
I finally had time this week to gather together the 2011 publications for various aspects of Corinth’s history. The first installment today includes about 3 dozen publications related to the history and archaeology of Corinth in antiquity, i.e., from the Bronze Age to Late Antiquity. I will follow the rest of the week with sections…