"dc-publisher","Type","Collection","Name","UserLevel","dc-title","dc-creator","Id","dc-date","Icon","dc-description","Redirect","dc-subject","Chronology" "","Drawing","Agora","PD 1353-c (DA 3362)","","Civic Offices. Watercolor.","Marian Welker","Agora:Drawing:DA 3362","","Agora:Drawing:DA 3362::/Agora/Architecture/DAs/03000-03999/DA 3362.jpg::0::0","XLIV-94c","","Site | By Area | South | Residential-Industrial Area to West and South of the Areopagus | Plans and Drawings","" "","PublicationPage","Agora","Agora 3, s. 136, p. 126","","Public Buildings and Offices","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-3-136","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-3-136::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 003/Agora 003 136 (126).png::1449::2048","Agora 3","","","12th A.D.; 9th A.D." "","Image","Agora","2004.01.0493 (HAT 50-28)","","Civic Offices after conservation. Note that the east foundation of the main building, and the east and north foundations of its porch, have been restored.","","Agora:Image:2004.01.0493","June 1950","Agora:Image:2004.01.0493::/Agora/2004/2004.01/2004.01.0493.tif::1709::1180","=XLII-50","","Site | By Area | Central | Civic Offices | General Views","" "","Image","Agora","1997.09.0384 (XLII-50)","","Civic Offices after conservation. Note that the east foundation of the main building, and the east and north foundations of its porch, have been restored.","","Agora:Image:1997.09.0384","June 1950","Agora:Image:1997.09.0384::/Agora/1997/1997.09/1997.09.0384.tif::1107::725","southwest","","Site | By Area | Central | Civic Offices | General Views","" "","Image","Agora","2012.52.1141 (XLII-50)","","Civic Offices after conservation. Note that the east foundation of the main building, and the east and north foundations of its porch, have been restored.","","Agora:Image:2012.52.1141","June 1950","Agora:Image:2012.52.1141::/Agora/2012/2012.52/2012.52.1141.jpg::2048::1531","AMS","","Site | By Area | Central | Civic Offices | General Views","" "American School of Classical Studies at Athens","Publication","Corinth","Broneer, Corinth 1:4, 1954","","Corinth I.4. The South Stoa and its Roman Successors","Broneer, Oscar","Corinth:Publication:Broneer, Corinth 1:4, 1954","1954","Corinth:Image:digital 2014 11114::/Corinth/Icons/PublicationCovers/01.4.jpg::200::275","Corinth","","","" "American School of Classical Studies at Athens","Publication","Agora","Corinth I.4","","The South Stoa and its Roman Successors","Broneer, Oscar","Agora:Publication:Corinth 1.4","1954","","After a discussion of the fragmentary evidence for several buildings of the Greek period which were swept to construct it, the South Stoa at Corinth is treated in detail. Careful description of all the remains, both those in situ and reused blocks, forms the basis of the reconstruction of this extensive two-story building of the third quarter of the 4th century B.C. which stretched the full length of the south side of the Corinthian Agora and, more than any other single building, established the size and shape of the center of the Hellenistic and Roman city. One of the largest secular buildings in Greece, the South Stoa appears to have been planned as a kind of hotel to accommodate visitors at a time when Corinth served as the capital of a briefly united Greek world. After the destruction of the city, it remained comparatively undamaged and was taken over by the Roman Colony as the seat of its administrative offices. In its final phase various buildings, including a bouleuterion, a fountain house, a bathing establishment, and a public latrine were built into the ground floor.","","","" "","Object","Agora","I 6409","","Decree Fragment","","Agora:Object:I 6409","10 July 1951","Agora:Image:2007.01.0963::/Agora/2007/2007.01/2007.01.0963.tif::1633::1580","Inscribed fragment.; Broken above, below, back.; Left side, and possibly bit of right side preserved (?).; Portion of four lines of the inscription preserved; stoichedon.; Letter spacing: 0.006m.; Pentelic marble.","","",""