Corinth (Κόρινθος). Ancient and modern

Corinth is located - the legendary ancient Greek polis, and now the administrative center of the prefecture of Corinthia, located on the isthmus bearing its name, which connects the Peloponnese and Central Greece. The modern city was built 5 km from the ancient city, which was destroyed in 1858 by a devastating earthquake. Today Corinth is the second largest city in the Peloponnese.

The city has in its arsenal everything necessary for a decent meeting of guests from different parts of our planet. Including a network of comfortable and homely hotels of various categories with a high level of service. Tourists are offered many excursions that provide an opportunity to get up close and personal with the ruins of ancient temples and other equally valuable architectural monuments. The city periodically hosts entertainment events, by participating in which you can get to know the culture and traditions of the local population.

A little history

The territory where Corinth is located was inhabited in the Neolithic era. Throughout its history, Corinth has repeatedly become an important place among the entire eastern Mediterranean. This was facilitated by its geographical location - the city controlled absolutely all movements of various goods along the isthmus, and in addition, it carried ships from the Ionian Sea to the Aegean Sea and vice versa. Naturally, this situation aroused the envy of the enemies - Corinth was repeatedly captured and mercilessly plundered. Whoever ruled here - Macedonians, Romans, Goths and Normans, Byzantines and Turks.

In the first half of the 1st century, the Apostle Paul set foot in the city, who, during his six-month residence here, managed to found a Christian community and write several famous epistles, which were eventually included in the New Testament. After liberation from the Turkish pasha in 1833, Corinth, again due to its geographical location, was considered as the future capital of all Greece. However, Athens prevailed, and the city became a major industrial and transport hub.

Sights of Corinth

The city's most prominent landmark is Temple of Apollo, towering majestically above the ruins of the agora (shopping arcades). It dates back to the 6th century BC. e. In the northern part of the agora there is a sacred spring and Bema (tribune), on which the Apostle Paul once stood when he defended the Christian faith from the accusations of the proconsul of Corinth Gallio.

Temple of Apollo


Bema (tribune)


Within the boundaries of the same agora there are ruins Pyrene- in the past the main source of drinking water in the city. And a beautiful but sad legend is associated with this place - the spring was named in honor of the heroine of myths, who mourned her grandson so intensely that an inexhaustible spring appeared. A little north-west of the source you can see the Theatre, the lower level of which was rebuilt during the reign of Augustus and was used for bloody gladiatorial fights. Further north are the ruins of a complex named after the healing god Asclepius. It consists of the sanctuary of Asclepius and the spring of Lerna.

Pirena


Information for your information. On the territory of the complex there is a Archaeological Museum. In summer, its opening hours are from 8.00 to 20.00, and in winter visiting hours are reduced to 15.00. Ticket price 6 euros.


Another outstanding landmark of the city, reminiscent of the times when the Byzantines, Romans and Turks ruled here. The ruins of the fortress walls rise above the hill where the Temple of Aphrodite previously stood. The height of the hill is 566 meters, so climbing it may be difficult for some. A taxi is an excellent way out of a difficult situation.


It is impossible not to mention such a landmark as the one that turned the Peloponnese into an island. Powerful building! Length 6 km and width only 23 m! The sheer 90-meter walls of the canal cause a slight trembling in the knees. By the way, the idea of ​​connecting the Aegean and Ionian Seas is almost as old as Corinth. In general, Nero, the slightly unbalanced Roman emperor, began to dig it, literally a year before introducing himself. Moreover, “dig” - in the literal sense of the word. He took a golden pickaxe and began poking it into the ground. After he dug up a small stone, he retired to the baths, and was replaced by 6 thousand Jewish slaves. But the long-term construction was quickly curtailed due to the impending war, and it was completed only at the end of the last century, calling on engineers from France for help. This is how the island turned out!

Useful information for tourists

In summer, it is best to explore the city early to avoid the heat and the ever-present crowds of tourists.

For those who prefer a beach holiday, they should turn their attention to Kalamya - the main and, importantly, accessible coast of Corinth, which was named after the densely growing reeds here long before the tourist boom. A superbly organized sandy beach, which has recently been constantly awarded the Blue Flag of the European Union.

Postcode Vehicle code Official site

(Greek)

Modern Corinth was rebuilt after the 1858 earthquake three kilometers northeast of the destroyed city; to the northeast of the modern city there is the Corinth Canal (built 1881-93; length - 6.3 km, width - 22 m, depth - 8 m), opening into the Saronikos Gulf near the city of Isthmia.

Story

Prehistoric era

Periander is sometimes classified as one of the Seven Sages. During his reign, the first Corinthian coins were minted, and for the first time an attempt was made to create a canal across the Isthmian Isthmus, which would allow ships to travel directly from Corinth to the Saronic Gulf. The project was never implemented due to the difficulties of its technical implementation, but instead of a canal, Diolk was created - a portage across the Isthmus of Corinth. The golden age of Corinth was the Cypselid era, which ended with the reign of Periander's nephew Psammetichus, named after the Egyptian Hellenophile pharaoh Psammetichus I. Psammetichus was killed in a conspiracy in the third year of his reign, and an oligarchic system was established in Corinth.

During this period, the Corinthian order developed, the third order of classical ancient Greek architecture after the Ionic and Dorian. The design of its capital was the most complex and magnificent of the three, reflecting the wealth and wasteful lifestyle of the citizens of the polis, in contrast to the severity and simplicity of the Dorian order, corresponding to the rule of life of the Spartans (the Corinthians, like the Spartans, were Dorians), while the Ionic order expressed the balance between the first two orders, embodying the idea of ​​measure among the Ionians.

Then the saying appeared: “ οὐ παντὸς πλεῖν ἐς Κόρινθον » ( ou pantos plein es Korinthon), which literally translates as “Not everyone can sail to Corinth” - life in the city was very expensive. The city was famous for the temple of prostitutes, dedicated to the goddess of love Aphrodite; they served wealthy merchants and influential government officials in the city or traveling with them outside the city. The most famous of them, Laisa, had a reputation for being gifted with outstanding abilities in her field and charging the highest fees for her services.

The city owned two ports, one on the shores of the Corinthian Gulf, the other on the Saronic Gulf, open to trade routes, respectively, of the western and eastern Mediterranean. Through Lechayon, located on the shores of the Gulf of Corinth, communication was established with the Western colonies ( ἀποικία - eviction) and Magna Graecia, and ships from Athens, Ionia, Cyprus, and the regions of the Levant came to Cenchrea. Both harbors had docks to support the city-state's large fleet.

Roman time


The military leader of the Roman Republic, Lucius Mummius of Achaea, destroyed the city after a siege in 146 BC. e. ; Having entered Corinth, Mummius put the men to the sword, sold the women and children into slavery and set the city on fire. For the victory over the Achaean League he received the Achaean cognomen. Archaeological evidence suggests that even after the devastation there was a small settlement here, until in 44 BC. e. , shortly before his death, Julius Caesar did not recreate the city under the name Colonia laus Iulia Corinthiensis. Appian writes that the new settlers were Roman freedmen. Corinth was later the seat of the government of the province of Achaea (according to the Acts of the Apostles). The city was distinguished by its wealth, and its population by its vicious morals and love of luxury. The population was mixed and consisted of Romans, Greeks and Jews.

Paul was also the author of two letters to the Christian community of Corinth; The first message notes the complexity of the existence of a Christian community in this cosmopolitan city.

Byzantine time

Corinth was destroyed by earthquakes in 551. Alaric I, during the invasion of Greece, plundered the city and sold many of its inhabitants into slavery. Under Justinian I, a stone wall stretched from the Saronic to the Corinthian Gulf, protecting the city and the entire Peloponnese from invasions from the north. The length of the structure, called Examilion, was approximately ten kilometers. At that time, Corinth housed the administration of the Hellas theme, which roughly coincided in territory with modern Greece. In the 12th century, during the Komnenos dynasty, the city became rich in the silk trade with the countries of Western Europe; the wealth of the city attracted Roger of Sicily, who ravaged Corinth in 1147.

Achaean Principality

After breaking resistance, Corinth became part of the Achaean Principality, which was ruled by the Villehardouins from their capital Andravida, located in the region of Elis. Corinth was the closest significant city to the border with another Crusader state, the Principality of Athens.

In the Ottoman Empire

Modern Corinth


In 1858, the old city, located on the site of ancient Corinth, was completely destroyed by an earthquake, now it is known as Αρχαία Κόρινθος - Ancient Corinth. The new city was founded three kilometers to the northeast, on the coast of the Gulf of Corinth.

Corinth is the second most populous city in the Peloponnese periphery after Kalamata, whose population is 53,659 people (). According to the 1991 census, 28,071 people lived in the city, according to the 2001 census - 30,434 people, that is, over ten years the increase was 8.4%. Between 1991 and 1991, population growth was among the highest in the country.

The population of the municipal district of Corinth in 2001 was 36,991 inhabitants. In the district there are settlements: Ancient Corinth, located three kilometers from the center of the new city, at the foot of the Acrocorinth rock, on the site of ancient and medieval Corinth, with a population of 1,770 people, Examilia - 1,567 people, Xylokerisa - 777 people and Solomos - 686 people .

Thanks to its position on the isthmus connecting the Peloponnese and the rest of Greece, Corinth is a transport hub. The Corinth Canal, crossing the Isthmian Isthmus, provides water transport links between the western Mediterranean and the Aegean Sea. A port adjoins the city from the north, meeting the needs of local industry and agriculture, mainly exporting goods.

Corinth is also a major industrial center. The oil refining complex, considered one of the largest in the eastern Mediterranean, is located 12 kilometers northeast of the city. The enterprises' products include copper cables, oil refining products, medical equipment, marble, gypsum, ceramic tiles, salt, mineral waters and drinks, meat products and gum. By now, the process of deindustrialization has begun, paper enterprises, a textile factory and a meat packaging plant have closed their production.

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Notes

Literature

  • Shatalov A.V. 2010: Author. diss... Ph.D. Stavropol.

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Like its ancient predecessor, the city of Corinth (Korinthos), located on the Isthmian Isthmus, was destroyed several times by earthquakes (most recently in 1981) and was literally rebuilt from ruins more than once. Therefore, the modern city is quite faceless and has few attractions. This is a large industrial and agricultural center, the Greek “capital of currants” (the word “currant” itself in all Western European languages ​​comes from the name of this city), an important transport hub and the “gateway of the Peloponnese”, through which the only highway crossing the Corinth Canal passes. In summer it is also the hottest and driest part of the peninsula. The only noteworthy objects here are the good Folklore Museum (open from Thursday to Sunday from 8.30 to 13.30; 2 euros), the cozy village of Archaia Corinthos, 7 km southwest of the city, and, of course, the Corinth Canal itself.

To explore ancient Corinth, it is better to set aside a whole day. The modern village of Archea Korinthos (the name itself translates as “Ancient Corinth”) lies right along the edge of the main excavation site. Buses go here from the modern city literally every hour (from 8.00 to 21.00, travel time about 20 minutes; 1 euro). According to legends, the city was founded by Corinth - one of the descendants of either Helios or Zeus himself. According to modern data, people lived here already in the 6th millennium BC. e., but in the III-II millennium BC. e. the city was completely destroyed by unknown invaders and then rebuilt. By the classical period it was already a major trading and political center, competing on equal terms with Athens and Thebes, and its women were considered the most beautiful in Hellas. However, subsequently several earthquakes practically razed it to the ground, and at the end of the 18th century, residents moved north, to the site of the modern city.

Now the ruins of the ancient city occupy a fairly large area between the mountains of Agios Dimitrios (574 m) and Kalderimi (93 m), and its acropolis Acrocorinth rises 565 meters above the plain. It should be borne in mind that the ruins of several cities, both Greek, Roman, and Byzantine, are mixed here, so traveling between the ruins, many of which are still being excavated, can be a tedious task. Only the central part of the ancient city, centered around the Roman forum and the classical temple of Apollo, has been preserved in better condition and has been almost completely excavated (open to the public every day: in summer - from 8.00 to 19.30; in winter - from 8.00 to 17.00; 6 euros), the rest of the buildings can sometimes be found in the most unexpected places, even among the residential areas of a modern village. Worth visiting are the Roman agora, the huge market between two porticos (once a multi-storey shopping mall!), the bema (a marble platform used for announcements and meetings), the ruins of a basilica and numerous Roman administrative buildings, a grated sacred spring, a Roman fountain and fragments of the Lecheon road lined with marble slabs (once the main road of the city). From the Temple of Apollo (5th century BC), only seven strict Doric columns towering above the forum have survived. Somewhat further west is the Corinth Museum (open the same hours as the rest of the site, admission fee included in general admission) with a good collection of Greek and Roman mosaics. Even further to the west, the foundations of two theaters were discovered - a Roman odeon and a large Greek one, used by the Romans for gladiator fights (including simulating sea battles). And just to the north lie the ruins of the Temple of Asclepius (access is closed).

Towering over the city, Acrocorinth (open daily in summer from 8.00 to 19.00, in winter from Thursday to Sunday from 8.30 to 15.00; admission free) is crowned by a massive rock and is still surrounded by the old fortress walls (total length about 2 km). Despite the difficult four-kilometer climb to the fortress gates, visiting it is definitely worth the effort. From here you can enjoy a beautiful panorama of the gulfs of Saronicos and Korinthos (Corinthian), and you can wander for hours in the chaos of temples, chapels, mosques, fountains, ancient buildings and battlements of all styles and eras.

Address: Greece, 5 km from Corinth
Main attractions: Temple of Apollo, Roman Baths, Amphitheater
Coordinates: 37°54"21.7"N 22°52"44.9"E

Content:

Short description

Most travelers visiting Greece in order to get acquainted with a huge number of attractions, historical monuments and architecture of the ancient people, first of all go to Athens.

Ancient street

However, according to most guides, this route is wrong for people interested in Greek history. It cannot be said that in Athens and the area surrounding the city there are few ruins, ancient temples and sanctuaries. Not at all, but it would be more correct to start getting acquainted with Ancient Greece from the city of Corinth, which, according to historians, is the first settlement to appear on the territory belonging to a modern European state.

Surprisingly, the name Corinth bears not one city, but two, the distance between them is just over three kilometers. The first Corinth is the oldest city, and the second, rebuilt relatively recently, “only” at the end of the 19th century. The most attractive for a person interested in the sights and ruins of temples that were built before our era is undoubtedly old Corinth. It is considered a “natural” museum, with numerous exhibits located directly in the open air.

Ruins of an ancient city

If a tourist is taken to ancient Corinth, then he should know that this “dead” city is separated from the capital of modern Greece by a distance of almost eighty kilometers. A car ride to Old Corinth will take no more than an hour and a half. However, the excursion bus takes almost the same amount of time to get to the museum city. The once powerful and rich Corinth is located on the Isthmian Isthmus. If you look at the ruins of Corinth, which were left behind by the powerful earthquake that occurred in 1858, from a bird's eye view, you can immediately draw a certain conclusion. In ancient centuries, the city was of great strategic importance - from its ports one could immediately access two bays of the Aegean Sea: Corinthian and Saronic.

Ancient Corinth - the foundation and origin of the city's name

Speaking about the foundation and origin of the name of the ancient city, it should immediately be noted that the versions put forward by modern historians are mostly based on archaeological excavations, which, by the way, began in Greece only at the dawn of the 20th century. Alas, too few documents, chronicles and descriptions of the city by ancient travelers were found to speak with confidence about the origin and purpose of the ruins of a particular building located on the territory of old Corinth. However, modern technologies, the tireless and painstaking work of archaeologists, have made it possible to assume that the first settlers appeared here 6 thousand years (!) BC.

There are even myths that tell about the origin of the city's name. According to the first legend, the settlement was founded by the ancient king of Corinth, who was born from the love affair of the daughter of a titan named Ocean and the god Helios, often called Ether. The second myth says that the city of Corinth was created by Sisyphus. The same legend tells that it was in Corinth that the well-known Argonaut Jason abandoned the beautiful Medea, who went mad with grief and burned the city. By the way, even if we have the courage to assume that this myth is not fiction, then Corinth burned in those days not for the last time. This ancient city was too tasty a morsel for numerous conquerors.

More reliable sources that could tell us about the origin of the city’s name have not been found these days. It could not have been otherwise: numerous captures of Corinth and destructive earthquakes destroyed most of the ancient chronicles and buildings that could shed light on the history of the city during the Neolithic.

Temple of Apollo

Corinth - the story of the rise and fall of the ancient city

As mentioned above, Corinth had two important ports that allowed its merchants to access the bays of the sea. This could only mean one thing: the townspeople could trade successfully, which means they were provided with everything they needed. It is worth noting that before the capture of Corinth by the Romans, it was more influential and powerful than the great Athens. If in Athens the sages talked about the purpose of man in this world, and in Sparta warriors improved their martial arts and often died en masse in bloody battles, then the Corinthians were much more pragmatic: they carried on uninterrupted trade with neighboring cities and even other countries.

In addition, there is confirmed evidence that in the 7th century BC, during the reign of Periander, the city even founded its own colonies, in particular, a colony in Albania. Corinth was also one of the nine powerful cities that created the colony of Naucradite, which allowed trade with Ancient Egypt. It is also interesting that some historians classify Periander as one of the legendary “seven wise men.” It was he who tried to be the first to dig a canal that would connect the Saronic and Corinthian Gulfs.

To be fair, it is worth clarifying that the ancient ruler failed to do this. Looking far ahead, I would like to say that Periander’s idea was brought to life only in 1893. After the reign of Periander, the city experienced prosperity. Even an ancient proverb has survived to this day, which roughly reads: “Not everyone can sail to Corinth.” It can only be interpreted this way: in a luxurious city, the most powerful in all of Ancient Greece, life was very expensive. Only a native of Corinth or a wealthy guest could afford to enjoy all the benefits.

In Corinth, a beautiful temple of prostitutes rose and delighted everyone... Yes, yes, you heard right, it is the temple of prostitutes! This is not surprising, because this profession is much older than Corinth itself. This temple was dedicated to the goddess Aphrodite, who, as is known from ancient Greek myths, was the patroness of love, including carnal love.

Amphitheater

The people of Corinth managed to think everything through so much that they practically didn’t have to work. According to some sources, the indigenous population of ancient Corinth was neither more nor less - 300 thousand people, which at that time was something out of science fiction for Greece. They were provided with a comfortable life by more than half a million (!) slaves.

If you pay attention to the history of any city, or even an entire empire, you will notice that the period of greatest prosperity always precedes decline. Was no exception the city of Corinth, which was destroyed by the Roman strategist and great warrior Lucius Mummius of Achaea. In addition to his talent, which allowed him to conquer cities and states, the military leader had a penchant for cruelty: he massacred all the men in Corinth, and sold young girls, women and their children into slavery. The tyrant simply destroyed the city with its temples, two ports and a mass of residential buildings and burned it to the ground.

After Lucius Mummius of Achaea, the city, which was beginning to be rebuilt and “come to life,” began to be plagued by failures. One might say that the gods themselves were angry with Corinth: the terrible earthquakes that occurred in 375 and 551 erased all the buildings of the Corinthians from the face of the earth. In 395, the conqueror Alaric again sacked the city, killed most of its inhabitants, and, miraculously, those who survived were sold into slavery. In the 13th century, Corinth, like many other Greek cities, became part of the Ottoman Empire. Only in 1830, Corinth, almost completely destroyed, during the war for independence, which lasted almost nine years, again gets a chance for independence.

It is worth noting that in 1833, it was Corinth that they wanted to proclaim as the capital of free Greece, which was patronized by Germany. This fact suggests that Corinth, despite the destruction and looting, still had the most important strategic importance for all of Greece. But, as everyone knows from history, the capital of the Greek Kingdom became a small and sparsely populated settlement at that time called Athens.

Roman baths

All of the above is just a small part of the long and intricate history of the oldest city in Greece, Corinth. It is unlikely that it will be possible to describe it all in one material, and many of the opinions of historians at the moment are not yet supported by facts, but are based, as already mentioned, only on the finds of archaeologists. Exhibits recovered from the ground during excavations can speak about the culture, way of life, beliefs of the ancient people who inhabited the city, and even about the times of barbarian plunder. However, they cannot confirm with utmost accuracy this or that important date relating to the ancient history of Corinth.

The ancient city of Corinth today

If you look at ancient Corinth now, it resembles not a once majestic and powerful city, but an archaeological site on which specialists conduct their work. Thanks to their efforts, today you can see the ruins of the huge Agora structure, which included 71 Doric columns on the outside. Without exaggeration, this building can be called truly huge even today. In its rear part alone there were 66 shops, 31 of them had wells, the depth of which often exceeded 10 meters. All of them connected to a channel that was of natural origin. It is not known for certain what these wells were used for. Most likely, they stored food that quickly deteriorated due to high temperatures.

A tourist walking among the ancient ruins discovers the ruins of a temple, which many call the Sanctuary of Apollo. There are too few facts indicating that this structure was erected in honor of the god of predictions and arts: at the site of the ruins, a small tablet was found on which the name of the god was engraved, and a description of the traveler Pausanias, dating back to the 2nd century BC . The Temple of Apollo (and perhaps another deity) was left untouched even by the Romans when they completely rebuilt Corinth. According to archaeologists, only a devastating earthquake did not spare him.

In addition to the ruins of the Agora, the Temple of Apollo, you can see the two main streets of the ancient city, which, as you might guess, do not belong to the ancient history of Corinth, but were built under the leadership of the Romans. Without exception, all lovers of architectural monuments will be interested in the Glavka fountain. It is unique because the water was supplied through pipes leading to a source located in the south of the city. Who and when built this amazing fountain, as well as the northwestern and western stores, is not yet known: historians are still engaged in fierce debate among themselves about these architectural structures. By the way, there is more than one Glavka fountain in ancient Corinth: you can see the Pirin Fountain there. Much more is known about him. It was given to the Corinthians by a wealthy resident of Athens, Herodes Attica. The Pirin fountain threw upward jets of water from a natural source, without which it would now be impossible to imagine the existence of new Corinth.

In front of the ruins of the city-museum in the open air, various sculptures found on its territory are put on public display. It is worth remembering that entrance to ancient Corinth is paid: the ticket costs 6 euros. Before visiting it, you should definitely make sure that you have drinking water and a sun umbrella in your travel bag: there are no operating shops among the ruins of Corinth, as well as shaded areas.

7 km southwest of the modern city, rebuilt after the earthquake in 1928, which is of little interest, are the ruins of ancient Corinth. Of the 38 Doric columns of the Temple of Apollo from the 6th century BC. only seven left. Not far from here stretched a two-level agora, flanked on either side by rows of benches. A long portico adjoins it on the south side; Here are the remains of a double colonnade. From the northern end of the agora a paved road began that led to the port of Lehei. There was also a staircase leading down to the vaulted rooms and to the colonnades of the lower spring of Pirena, very well preserved. It was built around a square pool dug into the ground and was rebuilt many times.

Artifacts from the Greek and Roman periods found during excavations are exhibited in the museum: marble, ceramics, mosaics, remains of frescoes and, in the central hall, statues and bas-reliefs that decorated the proscenium of the theater.

Near the entrance you can also see the ruins of a small Roman theater and behind it a large arena where gladiator fights were held or, when it was filled with water, naval battles.

Acrocorinth

Looking over the city from a high cliff, the citadel passed from hand to hand of all the peoples who ruled Greece. It took the Franks a full five years of siege to capture it! You can walk here in 30 minutes along a steep road, passing through many fortifications and gates. The first line of fortress walls was built by the Turks in the 14th century, the next by the Venetians. The last fortifications are associated with two towers: one Byzantine, the other ancient.

After passing behind the fortifications, you will see the mosque of the old Turkish quarter with a minaret without a top, and on the right a restored Orthodox chapel.

The main path leads to the right, up to a ledge where the upper Pyrene spring is located, located in an underground room from the Hellenistic period. The lower hall is filled with clean cold water, which, however, should not be drunk.

The road goes uphill and after a while it splits in two. The right one leads to the Frankish keep, a remnant of the fortress built by William II Villehardouin in the second half of the 13th century. The left road ascends to the Temple of Aphrodite (575 m), practically not preserved. Nevertheless, the view from the top is amazing, it covers the entire isthmus, in the north to the Gulf of Corinth and Mount Parnassus, in the east Attica, in the north the Peloponnesian Mountains.

Neighborhoods of Corinth

Corinth Canal

Even in Antiquity, people thought about digging a canal and no longer carrying ships across the 6-kilometer Isthmus of Corinth. Periander, tyrant of the city in 600 BC, seems to have been the first. Alexander the Great, Caesar, Caligula, Hadrian and Herodes Atticus also raised this issue, but only Nero in 67 began this work. Vespasian sent him 6,000 Jewish captives from Judea as labor. Construction was in full swing when the emperor was forced to deal with a rebellion in Gaul, and the project was suspended and finally abandoned after his death.

From the 7th century BC. ships were pulled onto carts that were pulled along a paved road (diolkos) along parallel furrows, the distance between which was 150 meters and equal to the distance between the wheels of the cart - their traces can be distinguished in the west of the canal, near the Possidonius Bridge. In 1882, the French took up the baton, following the path laid out by Nero. But the campaign was not successful, and the canal was completed by a Greek company only in 1893.

The technical side is impressive: the length of the canal is 6.3 km, it is dug out of white limestone, reaching a depth of 70 m in its central part, where it is crossed by a railway. At the bottom, its depth is only 7 m and its width is 21 m. Since this process requires caution, the vessels follow special boats. The passage lasts from 2 to 3 hours.

Isthmia

Founded near the place where the canal flows into the Saronic Gulf, Isthmia was famous in Antiquity for its games, which were not inferior in importance to the Olympic Games. These sporting and musical competitions have been held in the sanctuary of Poseidon every two years since 582 BC. until the 4th century. Participants, who came from all over Greece, showed their skills in running, wrestling, fist fighting, chariot racing and pentathlon.

The local museum displays the results of excavations conducted by American archaeologists since 1952. Maps and tablets annotated in English identify the Roman baths, sanctuary ruins, theater and two stadiums.

Nemea

It was here, as the myths say, that Hercules performed the first of his twelve labors - he defeated the Nemean Lion, sent by the goddess Hera to destroy the sanctuary. Every two years the city hosted the Nemean competition, one of the four great sports competitions dedicated to Zeus. The supreme deity was given a Doric temple, of which only three columns remained.

The museum presents the results of local excavations (including the Mycenaean treasury), and 500 m from here you can see the ruins of the stadium where the competition took place. It could accommodate up to 40,000 spectators!

Mycenae

Even pierced by the blinding rays of the sun, the ruins of this old royal city seem saturated with treachery and fear. A gloomy atmosphere in these places is not uncommon. But, according to mythology, it was here that Orestes committed the most terrible crime - matricide, the first in a series of bloody atrocities committed by the family of Atrides, the legendary rulers of Mycenae, about which the Iliad narrates. From legend to history is sometimes one step... playfully made by Heinrich Schliemann, a German amateur archaeologist, in 1876. Based on the texts of Homer, he easily discovered luxurious burials here, where rulers in golden masks rested. According to him, it was Agamemnon and his companions. Historians, although more skeptical, still admit that myth and reality, in all likelihood, met at Mycenae. At least one thing is clear: in its heyday, from the 16th to the 13th centuries BC, the city, protected by high stone walls, was the most powerful in mainland Greece.

Acropolis

You enter the Acropolis through its most beautiful decoration, the Lions Gate (or Lionesses Gate), a huge limestone tympanum decorated with headless predators. On either side are two colossal blocks stacked on top of each other.

After passing through the gate, on the right you see six rock-cut graves surrounded by a double parapet. Heinrich Schliemann discovered 19 remains in them wearing gold death masks. Archaeologists date them to the end of the 16th century BC, i.e. three centuries earlier than the supposed reign of Agamemnon. Also found nearby was a magnificent ensemble of funerary objects and gold jewelry.

Road of Kings (today this is a common path) rises to the top of the hill, where a few ruins of the Atridian palace, dating from the 15th century BC, are scattered, overlooking the megaron (royal hall).

Graves

Near the Lion Gate there are several tombs with a beehive-shaped dome, a feature inherent in the Mycenaean civilization. The tomb of Clytemnestra - wife of Agamemnon - is actually a group tomb (XIV century BC) with a raised arch.

On your return to the village you will pass the Treasure of the Atrides, also called the Tomb of Agamemnon, from a later period. This building is the largest and most beautiful of all. The entrance here is through the dromos, a long stone corridor - another characteristic feature of Mycenae - which is dug into the hill. The tholos, or rotunda, is closed by a monumental door 5.4 m high, with a crossbar consisting of two monoliths, each weighing about 120 tons! Fun fact: the vault, made of uneven stones, was so perfect that there was no need to hold them together with mortar.

Museum

A museum located near the city displays various sites and buildings found during excavations. Here you can see an interesting collection of metal objects found in the grave in which the bronze master is supposedly buried. The most beautiful artifacts (items found in graves, funeral masks) kept in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens.

Argos

Considered in ancient times to be the oldest city in Greece, Argos reached its apogee in the 8th century BC, when its influence extended throughout the northeastern Peloponnese. Its ruins are located outside the center of the modern city, at the foot of Larissa Hill. You will discover impressive Roman baths here (II century), some of whose rooms still have geometric tiled floors, and a 4th-century BC theater excavated on the hillside that could seat up to 20,000 spectators.

Nearby are the ruins of an odeon from the 3rd century BC. and on the other side of the road are the ruins of the agora. Objects found during the excavations are exhibited in the Archaeological Museum on Vassilissos Olgas Street; You will see here magnificent armor and bronze helmets, as well as weapons, jewelry and pottery.

Larissa Fortress

Overhanging the city, the ruined fortress, perched at an altitude of 267 m, offers stunning views of Nafplio Bay, olive trees and orange orchards. On the site of the ancient acropolis, where the Franks erected their citadel in the 13th or 14th centuries, there are also later Venetian and Turkish extensions.