Category: Periods
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Corinthian Scholarship (August 2011)
Archaic-Hellenistic: Corinth gets some attention in the newest Mediterranean history book: David Abulafia, The Great Sea: A Human History of the Mediterranean, Oxford 2011: Oxford University Press. Also in this book: Victor Davis Hanson (ed.), Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome, Princeton 2010: Princeton University Press. Late Antiquity …
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Ano Vayia and Lychnari Tower
The Saronic coast of the southern Corinthia provides some of the most beautiful views of Corinthian territory. It also provided for the Eastern Korinthia Archaeological Survey some of its most spectacular finds. One week spent in the area of Kalamianos near the harbor village of Korphos, for example, led to the discover of a major…
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Views from Mt. Oneion
I was twice dragged up to the top of Mt. Oneion, the range that marks the visual southern boundary of the Isthmus. While Dimitri Nakassis and I were walking survey teams around the plain of the Isthmus in 2000 and 2001, Bill Caraher was driving all over the eastern Corinthia doing “extensive survey” in remote…
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The Search for the Historical Erastus
In case you missed it, the feast day of St. Erastus, friend and associate of the apostle Paul, came and went three weeks ago in the western church calendar (July 26). And in case you missed him, Erastus is a relatively minor figure mentioned only three times in the New Testament: 1) In Acts 19.22,…
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The Diolkos – Two New Articles
When I was a PhD student at OSU, there was a common joke among the grad students that if you had arrived somehow at a good dissertation topic, writer beware: the study had probably already been written in German. And so, when I was wrapping up the revisions of a forthcoming article called simply “The…
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A Roman Road in the Panayia Field
For most people who visit the site of Ancient Corinth, the Roman forum is the principal (if not only) destination. Many visitors are unaware of the ancient buildings and ancient spaces scattered about the modern village and enclosed in chain-linked fences. Temples, tombs, villas, walls, churches, amphitheater all highlight the urban world buried beneath the…
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Corinthian Scholarship (July 2011)
Archaic-Hellenistic Corinth D. Obbink and R. Rutherford (eds.), Culture in Pieces: Essays on Ancient Texts in Honour of Peter Parsons, Oxford 2011: Oxford University Press, has several Corinthiaka: a fragment of the archaic poet Eumelus of Corinth, discussions of Pindar’s Thirteenth Olympian and Posidonius of Corinth, a chapter on the Argo adventure J.A. Agnew, J.S.…
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An Account of Travel to the Corinthia: Major Sir Greenville Temple (1836)
While conducting research on the diolkos of Corinth last year, I discovered the enormous corpus of scanned texts in Google Books relating travel accounts to Greece and the Aegean from the late 18th to 20th centuries. These searchable texts offer the researcher an easy way of measuring historical interest in ancient landscapes. I was interested…
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Temple of Apollo Photographs at the Benaki Museum
A recent article from the Greek Reporter highlights the photographic exhibition of James Robertson at the Benaki Museum: James Robertson was one of the first prominent traveler-photographers to depict scenes of mid-nineteenth century Greece. Of Scottish descent, he has been identified as the engraver James Robertson, who worked in London around 1830. He first settled…