Ancient Corinth Bazaar Temple Home

Panoramic Views of Corinth:
Description of
Images
Travellers' Texts
Description of Images: In this section, I have chosen four
images of Corinth from a distance to give the viewer a sense of the general appearance of
the village. The images range in date from 1685 to 1838 in order also to give a sense of
changes to the village over that period. They also show Corinth from four different
locations: Coronelli is the furthest
away, from the gulf at the north, Dodwell
is from the northeast of the village, Stackleberg
from the northwest and Blouet is from
the north, inside the limits of the village.
figure 2 : Coronelli, 1685.
This picture, oriented towards Acrocorinth in the south with the Gulf of Corinth in the
foreground, is topographically inaccurate. The several elevations of the plain are
exaggerated, as is the height of the Mount Oneion on the left hand side of the picture.
The ship in the foreground is western, probably a Venetian ship. The regular rows of
buildings below the Xs on the hillside most likely represent a Venetian encampment,
intended to defend the narrows of the Isthmus (and hence the Peloponnese from a land
attack), and so the Xs might be a fence or wall. Other plans and maps left by the
Venetians suggest that they thought of the entire Isthmus area, from the fortifications on
Acrocorinth to the wall across the narrows, as a defensive region, and had several lines
of defense. The village of Corinth appears to be as the other descriptions of the time
have it--sparsely settled with fields in between housing clusters. What they don't
describe is the wall that seems to encircle it. Perhaps this was something the Venetians
built themselves, or perhaps it didn't exist, or perhaps the travellers didn't find it
noteworthy. On the second hillside in the foreground is a structure; this may be the
Venetian fortification found in some plans and from evidence of airphotos.
Figure 3 : Dodwell, 1801.
This picture was drawn from a vantage point to the northeast of the village, somewhere
closer to the isthmus. In the 150 years that passed since the Venetian view, the town
appears to have grown. It is walled and compact. The topography shows a much greater
degree of verisimilitude; the elevations of the levels of the plain and the mountains in
the back look quite similar to what they are today. The structure to the far right,
set off from the rest by some walls but seemingly no other buildings is most likely the
palace of Kamil Bey, the last Turkish Pasha to rule Corinth. To the left of that is a
minaret , this is the "lower" mosque, whose location is shown on the 1831-33 map. The location of this mosque and
images of it in ruins are known, but space does not permit a detailed exploration of this
part of town at this time. There is a second minaret to the left of the lower mosque; this
is from the "central" mosque, images and descriptions of which are included elsewhere in this exhibition.
Figure 4: Von Stackelberg,
1810.
This image is taken from a vantage point to the northwest of the village. Only one decade
had passed in between Dodwell's visit and Von Stackleberg's, and the appearance of the
town is quite similar in the two views. This similarity is helpful in establishing the
versimilitude of the two artists, and the views of the village are complementary, as they
represent the town from the northeast and the northwest. Again in this image, the
elevations are reasonably accurate, as well as some of the details, including the large
column drum sections in the foreground. These sections are described also by some of
the travellers. Many details are similar, the location on the plain of the village, the
two mosque minarets, the apppearance of the slopes of Acrocorinth, suggesting that these
details can be trusted. This picture gives some sense of the placement of the village on
the plain--the columns of the temple are in view in the center of the picture. Judging
from the distance from the second mosque, it would appear that the mosque was located
close to the modern plateia, which fact is confirmed by the 1831-33
map and some of the descriptions in the texts.
For comparison, I took a modern photograph
(figure 5) from the same spot. It is strikingly similar, which suggests that
perhaps Von Stackelberg's drawings can be considered accurate. The two images can
also be compared side by side.
Figure 6: Blouet,
1829.
This image was taken from the north end of the village, but within it. The small building
on the right side of the picture may well be extant still, used currently as a chicken
coop. The state of the village is confirmed by nearly all of the travellers' descriptions,
note in particular the description by Burnouf from 1856 which
describes the ruins as being primarily on the lower plateau. This picture reflects
that--there is little by the temple, and much in the foreground, though in this case, it
may well be due to the artist's wish to emphasize the temple.
Travellers' Texts:
Randolph 1671-1679:
"Corinth, by the Turks Gouverned, is an Ancient City
which stands on a Rising Ground, about Two Miles from the Sea of the Gulph of Lepanto. The
Houses are much scattered, having many Fields amongst them, together with which they take
up above Three Miles in compass. There are many pleasant Gardens with all sorts of Fruits.
The Houses here are more for Trade and Pleasure than Security, most having other Houses up
on the Castle which stands upon a Hill...It is above Two Miles from the Town to the
Castle." (1-2)
Spon 1676:
"La ville est au Nord et au Nord-est de cette montagne. Il n'y a que deux Mosquees et
une Eglise de Grecs appellee Panagia, ou demeure le Metroplitain de Corinthe.(302)
"Il n'y a quere plus de quinze cens ames dans Corinthe;` mais la campagne est
pleine de villages et de Zeugaris ou Metairies. Entre Sycion et Corinthe nous en comptames
jusqu'avingt-cinq. Ainsi je ne me etonne pas que le Cady ait, comme on dit, sous la
jursidiction trois cent Villages."(305)
Wheler 1676:
"The plain of Corinth, toward Sicyon, or Basilico, is
well-watered by two rivulets, well-tilled, well-planted with olive-yards and vine-yards,
and having many little villages scattered up and down in it, is none the least of the
ornaments of this prospect [from Acrocorinth]. The town also, that lieth north of the
castle, in little knots of houses, surrounded with orchards, and gardens of oranges,
lemons, citrons and cypress trees, and mixed with cornfields in between, is a sight no
less delightful." (443)
"It [Corinth] is situated towards the right hand, just within the Isthmus, on the
Peloponnesian Shore, being distant from the Gulph of Corinth, about a couple of Miles, and
from the Saronick Gulph, at least six or seven...." (439)
"It is not big enough now, to deserve the Title of a City; but may very well pass
for a good considerable Country Town. It consists of the Castle, an the Town below it,
North of it, and at almost a Miles distance nearer the Sea. The lower Town lieth
pleasantly upon an easie Descent of the Ground towards the Gulph of Lepanto. The Buildings
are not close together; but in parcels, of half a dozen or half a score, sometimes twenty
together; but seldom more; with Gardens of Orange-trees, Lemons, and Cypress-trees about
them, set with more Regularity, than is usual in these Countries; and such a distance is
between the several Parcels or Buildings, as that they have Corn-fields between them. The
Houses are more spruce here, than ordinary; and the biggest quarter is, where the Bazar,
or Market place is, consisting of about fourscore, or an hundred Houses. There are two
Mosques here, and one small church, called Panagia; at which the Arch-Bishop liveth, who
was then absent: and few Marks either of his, or St.Paul's Preaching, Pains or Care of ;
this famous Church of Corinth are now to be observed there." (439-440)
Pococke 1736:
"The antient city seems to have been on the spot of
the present town, and to the west of it in the plain: without the town to the north there
are great ruins of a large building of very thick walls of brick, which might be antient
baths or the foundation of some very great building; for I observed that the rooms which
are arched are very small:" (174)
"...The present town is very small, and more like a village: they have an export
of corn and some oil." (174)
Clarke 1800-1803:
coming from Sicyon "within a mile of Corinth we passed
a fountain in a cavern upon our right, formed by a dropping rock consisting of a soft
sand-stone. Farther up the hill and upon the same side of the road, as we entered the
straggling town now occupying the site of the antient city, we observed some ruins and a
quantity of broken pottery scattered upon the soil. The old city occupied an elevated
level above the rich plain we had now passed. Upon the edge of this natural terrace, where
it begins to fall towards the corn land, we found the flanked shaft of a Doric pillar of
limestone, equal in its dimensions to any of the columns of the Temple of Jupiter Olympius
at Athens. It was six feet and one inch in diameter. Close to this we observed the
ground-plot of a building, once strongly fortified; that is to say a square platform
fronting the plain and the sea: on this side of it is a precipice and its three other
sides were surrounded by a fosse. The area measures 66 paces by 53; its major diameter
being parallel to the seashore. Upon the opposite side within the fosse are also remains
of other foundations; possibly of a bridge or causeway, leading into the area on that
side." tries to find a reference in Pausanius to the fountain to figure out the
temple, but can't so surmises it was destroyed when Pausanius came and so "if this be
the case, it may be a relic of the Sisypheum; a mole or bulwark." (547-548)
Dodwell 1801-1806:
"The present town of Corinth, though very thinly
peopled, is of considerable extent. The houses are placed wide apart, and much space is
occupied by gardens. There are some fine fountains in the town, one of which is extremely
curious, on account of the fantastic ornaments with which it has been enriched by the
singular combinations of Turkish taste." (192)
"The chief produce of the territory is corn, cotton, tobacco and oil and a better
wine than that of Athens..." (193)
Turner 1813:
his host tells him that there are 1300 houses in Corinth
and 300 are Turkish, this includes those on Acro. (295)
"The houses are very much scattered, and corn grows in the spaces between
them." (295)
Bramsen 1813-1814:
"It is a long straggling place, but can boast of some
tolerable good buildings. It is well-paved and its castle kept in better repair and in a
more compleat state of defense than any I had for some time witnessed, but they want the
convenience of a good harbour." (55)
Williams 1816:
all that remains are "a few Doric columns of an ancient temple, and some paltry
foundations of a theater and a stadium." (392)
500-600 houses, "and these scattered, irregular and with little feature."
(393)
Cochrane 1826:
"There is nothing worth notice in Corinth but the fortress; the town itself from the
succession of civil war which it has experienced is in a most dilapidated state."
(311)
Keppel 1829-1830:
"The town of Corinth is one heap of ruins; a few
newly-built huts are the only habitations now standing. Bones of men and horses lie
scattered amongst the rubbish of fallen houses, and attest the last bloody massacre which
visited this once prosperous town. (10)
"There was considerable cultivation near Corinth. To the westward we observed some
vineyards and olive groves. (12)
Trant 1829-1830:
not more than 100 cottages standing in ancient Corinth, one of the first towns destroyed
and the last rebuilt (312)
Fitzmaurice 1832
:
"Having got clear of the town which, though poor and insignificant, still straggles
out a long way." (70)
Burgess 1834:
lands at Lechaion. "After a walk of thirty-five minutes, came to a low broken cliff
which forms a natural wall and has probably been used as such ever since the days of
Cypselus and Periander. We easily surmounted this cliff and then traversed the stony lanes
which wind among the ruined habitations: these conduct to the upper site of Corinth; and
here some new houses have been built and a street is almost formed." (163)
population 600 "occupations lie chiefly in the fields" (167)
Quin 1834:
"The town is nearly as shapeless a mass of ruins as
Athens itself. But even here the "restoration" of Greece was beginning to
exhibit itself in the construction of several new houses which are built in a plain
substantial style." (213)
Temple 1834:
coming from Kencrae, via Hexamilia. "Having crossed
the stream of Eupheeli, we soon reached a small collection of houses scattered through a
large extent of others in ruins; and this, to my surprise, I found to be Corinth."
(58)
"The town was entirely destroyed during the last revolutionary war, but a few
houses are rising out of the ashes; the bazaar is tolerably supplied...." (60)
"In the rear [of Acro] are two roads, which winding through beautiful valleys and
mountain passes, lead to Argos, Nauplia and etc." (63)
Addison 1835:
"The whole of the houses, with the exception of those just built, in the centre of
the village, being heaps of ruins, destroyed by the Turks, or deserted by the inhabitants
who have been thinned by the sword and the plague. Bare mud walls, roofless tenements and
the shattered remnants of Turkish mosques present themselves on either side...We traversed
a rugged path over stinging-nettles and stones, past a fragment of a marble column to the
principle street, consisting of a few houses of wood and shops." (16)
Giffard 1836:
"Climbing over masses of masonry and by ruined walls,
we at length arrived in the main streets of Corinth. Here there was some little appearance
of life and trade, of which the suburbs gave no promise; houses were building and shops
were opened, in some of which we recognized the handiworks of Birmingham." (100)
Perdicaris 1838-1839:
"The province of Corinth, though the largest in point of territorial extent, holds
the sixth rank in point of population among the provinces of the Peloponnese. The present
number is a little more than 25,000; while Mantinea, with half the extent, and most of
this mountainous, has more than 53,000 people. Even in its present state of depopulation
Corinth yields to the national treasury an annual income of more than 600,000 drachmas and
might be made to yield three and even four times this amount under a different
management..." (25)
Cusani 1840:
in 1840, there were 1500 inhabitants, "d'ogni parte
sorgevano nuove fabbriche, e l'agricoltura rifioriva colla coltivazione dei grani, degli
ulivi e della vite." (184)
Hettner 1852:
"The Corinth of to-day is a small town just struggling
again into importance, with a few thousand inhabitants." (134)
Olin 1852:
"A few of the houses are substantially built of stone,
most are mud cottages. The population is 1200. It must have been much larger before the
revolution, judging from the ruined houses, which as everywhere else in Greece, attest to
the barbarous spirit in which the fierce contest was waged." (142)
Howe 1853:
"Since the Greek revolution, quite a town has sprung
up here, but the location is very unhealthy. This circumstance if no other, precluded it
from becoming the capital of the new kingdom under Otto. There are many ruined and
desolate walls of dwellings destroyed in the devastation of the revolution still
standing." (35)
Baird 1855:
"On our return to Corinth, we spent a short time in
the examination of the only objects of interest that remain in the site of a city which
once exceeded Athens for commerce and population--a temple in the very midst of the modern
village, and an amphitheater about three quarters of a mile east of it. ...All the loose
stones have been incorporated into the buildings of the village, to which they were so
conveniently situated." (158)
"The village of Corinth barely contains a couple of thousand inhabitants. It's
houses are low and poorly built. (158)
Burnouf 1856:
"L ville moderne est sur le sol de l'ancienne ville.
Elle s'etend horizontalement et forme une zone etroite au pied de l'acrocorinthe. Trois
gradins paralleles au rivage: Le premier est au pied de la montagne et supporte la ville
moderne; le deuxieme est au-dessous, a la hauteur d'une tour qui porte le nom de Kiamyl
Bey; le troisieme est a mi-chemin entre celui-ci et la mer; la plaine qui forme le dernier
niveau est cette alluvion recente qui s'agrandit chaque jour et suit la rivage bien au de
la Sicyone et jusque vers l'embouchure du Crathis. Entre la ville et la tour de Kaimyl-Bey
s'entend un vaste champ de ruines; ce sont les maisons de la ville turque, detruites lors
de la guerre de l'independence et dont les murailles a demi renversees recouvrent d'autres
ruines que firent a d'autres epoques d'autres barbares." (on that plain was destroyed
the army of Drama Ali--28,000 men's bodies lay there for a long time.) (41)
Taylor 1857:
"A ride of half an hour brought us to Corinth--or
rather what had been Corinth--for although a few houses were standing, they were cracked
from top to bottom and had been abandoned. The greater part of the city was a shapeless
heap of ruins and most of the inhabitants seemed to have deserted it." ( 156)
"The government decided to remove the town of Corinth to a new site on the plain,
two or three miles nearer the gulf. No commencement has been made, however, and I doubt
whether the people will second this measure." (157)
Clark 1858:
the village of Corinth is immediately below to the North
"standing about those dark columns. The grounds about it, how green with wheat and
maize and vines descends in a succession of terraces to the belt of the barren sand which
lines the shore." (58)
"Of all the buildings, sacred and secular, of the old city, no trace remains,
except a few unsightly heaps of Roman brickwork, which have outlived their history as
completely as the pyramids. The ancient walls, famed for their dimensions have entirely
disappeared." (55)
Pressense 1864:
"La nouvelle Corinthe n'est qu'un chef-lieu improvise.
Que ne deviendrait pas une ville ainsisituee s'il y avait des routes pour le rejoindre,
une protection efficace pour y maintenir la securite et un peu de cette confiance dans
l'avenir sans laquelle l'esprit d'enterprise ne saurait se developper."
Jerningham 1870:
"The site of old Corinth, which may before the great earthquake of 1858 have been a
picturesque town, with its mosques and houses intermingling with cypresses and with
gardens of orange and other fruit trees, but which now presents the dreariest of modern
aspects." (85-86)
Belle 1875-1878:
all have moved to New Corinth (257)
Smith 1883:
"We drove into the streets, or rather the ruins, of
old Corinth. Few villages are more desolate." (102)
"The chaos of broken walls which stand upon its site is all that remains of a town
which was destroyed by the Turks and finally abandoned on account of repeated
earthquakes." (103)
"Amongst the ruins, only two houses seemed not
quite dismantled." one was a priest's house where they stayed. (104)