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[Corinth Monument] Northwest Stoa

The Northwest Stoa was once thought to have been a Hellenistic building refurbished in the Roman period. It is now understood to be entirely a Roman monument, built in the time of the emperor Augustus, ... Northwest Stoa ... South Stoa

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[Corinth Monument] South Stoa

Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | South Stoa

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[Agora Monument] Southeast Stoa

Commercial Unknown Poros Limestone, Marble Fair, foundations and stylobate ... 2nd A.D ... Southeast Stoa ... Southeast Stoa

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[Agora Monument] Middle Stoa

Commercial Unknown Conglomerate, Limestone Fair, foundations and east stylobate with column drums ... Mid 2nd B.C ... Site | By Area | South | Middle Stoa

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[Agora Monument] Stoa Poikile

Social, Military Display, Museum Peisianax Limestone, Some Marble Fair, foundations and parts of superstructure ... 500-450 B.C ... Stoa Poikile ... Stoa Poikile

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[Agora Monument] Royal Stoa

Civic Unknown Limestone Fair, foundations and lower part of superstructure ... Late 6th. B.C. to 5th B.C ... Royal Stoa ... Royal Stoa

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[Agora Monument] Northeast Stoa

Unknown Unknown Miscellaneous Reused Material Poor, foundations only ... 1st A.D ... Site | By Area | North | Miscellaneous | Northeast Stoa

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[Agora Monument] Stoa of Attalos

Commercial Attalos II of Pergamon Conglomerate, Limestone, Pentelic Marble, Hymettian Marble Fully Restored ... Ca. 150 B.C ... Stoa of Attalos ... Stoa of Attalos

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[Agora Monument] South Stoa I

Commercial, Civic Unknown Reused Material, Mudbrick Fair, foundations and walls up to a meter high ... 450-400 B.C ... Site | By Area | South | South Stoa I

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[Agora Monument] South Stoa II

Possibly Commercial Unknown Conglomerate, Limestone Fair, foundations and parts of stylobate and back wall ... Mid 2nd B.C ... South Stoa II ... South Stoa II

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[Agora Monument] Stoa of Zeus

Civic, Religious Unknown Pentelic Marble, Limestone Poor, foundations and fragments of superstructure ... 450-400 B.C ... Site | By Area | West | Stoa of Zeus Eleutherios

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[Corinth Monument] South Stoa west

The Stele Shrine includes a square-shaped temenos enclosed by a wall, established in the mid-6th century B.C. Inside the temenos, a stele, evidence of burnt offerings, and an offering table are indications ... South Stoa, but the use of ... irregular shape, using the stoa

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[Corinth Monument] South Stoa east

Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | South Stoa east

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[Corinth Monument] Lechaion Harbor Basilica

The basilica is built on a sand spit separating the inner basins of Lechaion harbor from the sea. It consists of a three aisled structure with two atria at the west end and a transept and single apse at ... North Stoa

[Corinth Monument] Old_Forum southeast South Stoa?

| South Stoa | Old_Forum southeast South Stoa?

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[Corinth Monument] East Stoa, west of Lechaion Road

The East Stoa is the name early excavators gave to the Lechaion Road Basilica ... Building | East Stoa, west of

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[Corinth Monument] Agora Southeast

Oscar Broneer and R. H. Howland excavated in this area of the forum in 1933-35. Key monuments that they uncovered include the Central Shops and the South Stoa ... Shops and the South Stoa.

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[Agora Monument] Square Peristyle

Law Court Unknown Limestone, Conglomerate Poor, foundations only ... 4th B.C ... Site | By Area | East | Early Buildings beneath the Stoa of Attalos

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[Corinth Monument] Mosaic House

Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Forum | South Stoa | Mosaic

[Corinth Monument] Old_North of School South Basilica

Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | South Stoa | South Basilica |

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[Corinth Monument] Northwest Shops

The shops were built immediately in front of the Northwest stoa later in the 1st century A.D. The large central chamber still preserves its stone vault. It is flanked by seven shops, which originally had ... The shops were built immediately in front of the Northwest stoa later in the 1st

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[Corinth Monument] Central Shops

The central shops run from the Circular Monument to the Bema and from the Bema to the Doric colonnade extending from the West end of the South Stoa. The shops separated the Forum proper from the upper ... the South Stoa. The shops ... the South Stoa. The eastern

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[Corinth Monument] Gymnasium

The Gymnasium mentioned by Pausanias was thought to lie at the northern edge of the city where several inscriptions dealing with athletes and athletics have been found. Excavations during the 1960s and ... early imperial L-shaped stoa

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[Corinth Monument] Nezi Field

Excavations renewed south of the South Stoa in 2007 in an area where in the 1960s Henry Robinson uncovered several Byzantine buildings and and Early Modern/Ottoman Era house. These structures were further ... Excavations renewed south of the South Stoa in 2007 in an area where in the

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[Corinth Monument] Temple E

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... to the west and by stoas ... completely enclosed by stoas

[Corinth Monument] Temple E northwest

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... to the west and by stoas ... completely enclosed by stoas

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[Corinth Monument] Temple E, Temenos

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... to the west and by stoas ... completely enclosed by stoas

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[Corinth Monument] Temple E south

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... to the west and by stoas ... completely enclosed by stoas

[Corinth Monument] Temple E, Southwest

Standing 9 meters above the Forum, Temple E occupied as prominent a place in the Roman city as the Temple of Apollo. In its first phase, the temple had stone foundations, probably with a triple crepis ... to the west and by stoas ... completely enclosed by stoas

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[Corinth Monument] St. John's

The church of St. Johns stood until 1938 when it was demolished to complete the excavation of the Forum to Roman levels. The original church was part of a thirteenth century monastic complex at the west ... of the South Stoa to

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[Corinth Monument] Forum

The Forum, lying at the heart of the Roman City was the commercial and administrative center of the city. Its orientation conforms to the surviving Classical and Hellenistic buildings, such as the South ... South Stoa, the Southeast

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[Corinth Monument] South Basilica

The south basilica appears to have been built using the earlier Julian Basilica as a prototype. The entrance to the basilica from the north was via a broad marble reveted concrete staircase in a court ... Stoa rooms. The extant

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[Corinth Monument] Odeion

The Roman Odeion of Ancient Corinth was a small, indoor theatre intended for musical events and rhetorical competitions. It consisted of a semicircular orchestra surrounded by seating, a stage building, ... by stoas was constructed

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[Corinth Monument] Theater

The theater was a place in which dramatic and musical events were staged. In the Roman period staged fighting was added. The theater has several phases. The original structure was built late in the 5th ... stoa. The stage building was

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[Corinth Monument] Asklepieion

The sanctuary of Asklepios is located in what was probably considered a healthy location on the north side of the city close to a supply of fresh spring water. It incorporated hospital facilities. The ... there is a stoa and, on the

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[Corinth Monument] Temple of Apollo

The seven standing columns of the Archaic temple are one of the most prominent landmarks of Corinth. The dedication of the temple to Apollo is deduced from Pausanias’ description of Corinth combined with ... west end of the South Stoa