Strabo, Geography, 8.6.20-23
(Late 1st Century BCE-Early 1st Century)
The Wealth of Corinth [8.6.20] Corinth is called
"wealthy" because of its commerce, since it is situated on the Isthmus
and is master of two harbors, of which the one leads straight to Asia,
and the other to Italy; and it makes easy the exchange of merchandise
from both countries that are so far distant from each other. And
just as in early times the Strait of Sicily was not easy to navigate,
so also the high seas, and particularly the sea beyond Maleae, were not,
on account of the contrary winds; and hence the proverb, "But when you
double Maleae, forget your home." At any rate, it was a welcome
alternative, for the merchants both from Italy and from Asia, to avoid
the voyage to Maleae and to land their cargoes here. And also the duties
on what by land was exported from the Peloponnesus and what was imported
to it fell to those who held the keys. And to later times this remained
ever so. But to the Corinthians of later times still greater advantages
were added, for also the Isthmian Games, which were celebrated there,
were wont to draw crowds of people. The Early History of Corinth And the Bacchiadae, a rich
and numerous and illustrious family, became tyrants of Corinth, and held
their empire for nearly two hundred years, and without disturbance reaped
the fruits of the commerce; and when Cypselus overthrew these, he himself
became tyrant, and his house endured for three generations; and an evidence
of the wealth of this house is the offering which Cypselus dedicated at
Olympia, a huge statue of beaten gold. Again, Demaratus, one of
the men who had been in power at Corinth, fleeing from the seditions there,
carried with him so much wealth from his home to Tyrrhenia that not only
he himself became the ruler of the city that admitted him, but his son
was made king of the Romans. The Cult of Aphrodite And the temple of Aphrodite
was so rich that it owned more than a thousand temple slaves, courtesans,
whom both men and women had dedicated to the goddess. And therefore
it was also on account of these women that the city was crowded with people
and grew rich; for instance, the ship captains freely squandered their
money, and hence the proverb, "Not for every man is the voyage to Corinth."
Moreover, it is recorded that a certain courtesan said to the woman who
reproached her with the charge that she did not like to work or touch
wool: "Yet, such as I am, in this short time I have taken down three
webs." Description of Corinth [8.6.21] The situation of the
city, as described by Hieronymus and Eudoxus and others, and from what
I myself saw after the recent restoration of the city by the Romans, is
about as follows: A lofty mountain with a perpendicular height of
three stadia and one half, and an ascent of as much as thirty stadia,
ends in a sharp peak; it is called Acrocorinthus, and its northern side
is the steepest; and beneath it lies the city in a level, trapezium-shaped
place close to the very base of the Acrocorinthus. Now the circuit
of the city itself used to be as much as forty stadia, and all of it that
was unprotected by the mountain was enclosed by a wall; and even the mountain
itself, the Acrocorinthus, used to be comprehended within the circuit
of this wall wherever wall-building was possible, and when I went up the
mountain the ruins of the encircling wall were plainly visible. And so
the whole perimeter amounted to about eighty-five stadia. On its
other sides the mountain is less steep, though here too it rises to a
considerable height and is conspicuous all round. The Summit of the Acrocorinth Now the summit has a small
temple of Aphrodite; and below the summit is the spring Peirene, which,
although it has no overflow, is always full of transparent, potable water.
And they say that the spring at the base of the mountain is the joint
result of pressure from this and other subterranean veins of water--a
spring which flows out into the city in such quantity that it affords
a fairly large supply of water. And there is a good supply of wells
throughout the city, as also, they say, on the Acrocorinthus; but I myself
did not see the latter wells. At any rate, when Euripides says, "I am
come, having left Acrocorinthus that is washed on all sides, the sacred
hill-city of Aphrodite," one should take "washed on all sides" as meaning
in the depths of the mountain, since wells and subterranean pools extend
through it, or else should assume that in early times Peirene was wont
to rise over the surface and flow down the sides of the mountain.
And here, they say, Pegasus, a winged horse which sprang from the neck
of the Gorgon Medusa when her head was cut off, was caught while drinking
by Bellerophon. And the same horse, it is said, caused Hippucrene
to spring up on Helicon when he struck with his hoof the rock that lay
below that mountain. And at the foot of Peirene is the Sisypheium,
which preserves no inconsiderable ruins of a certain temple, or royal
palace, made of white marble. View from the Acrocorinth And from the summit, looking
towards the north, one can view Parnassus and Helicon--lofty, snow-clad
mountains--and the Crisaean Gulf, which lies at the foot of the two mountains
and is surrounded by Phocis, Boeotia, and Megaris, and by the parts of
Corinthia and Sicyonia which lie across the gulf opposite to Phocis, that
is, towards the west. And above all these countries lie the Oneian
Mountains, as they are called, which extend as far as Boeotia and Cithaeron
from the Sceironian Rocks, that is, from the road that leads along these
rocks towards Attica. The Harbors of Corinth [8.6.22] The beginning of the
seaboard on the two sides is, on the one side, Lechaeum, and, on the other,
Cenchreae, a village and a harbor distant about seventy stadia from Corinth.
Now this latter they use for the trade from Asia, but Lechaeum for that
from Italy. Lechaeum lies beneath the city, and does not contain many
residences; but long walls about twelve stadia in length have been built
on both sides of the road that leads to Lechaeum. Description of the Isthmus The shore that extends from
here to Pagae in Megaris is washed by the Corinthian Gulf; it is concave,
and with the shore on the other side, at Schoenus, which is near Cenchreae,
it forms the "Diolcus." In the interval between Lechaeum and Pagae
there used to be, in early times, the oracle of the Acraean Hera; and
here, too, is Olmiae, the promontory that forms the gulf in which are
situated Oenoe and Pagae, the latter a stronghold of the Megarians and
Oenoe of the Corinthians. From Cenchreae one comes to Schoenus,
where is the narrow part of the isthmus, I mean the "Diolcus"; and then
one comes to Crommyonia. Off this shore lie the Saronic and Eleusinian
Gulfs, which in a way are the same, and border on the Hermionic Gulf.
On the Isthmus is also the temple of the Isthmian Poseidon, in the shade
of a grove of pinetrees, where the Corinthians used to celebrate the Isthmian
Games. Crommyon is a village in Corinthia, though in earlier times
it was in Megaris; and in it is laid the scene of the myth of the Crommyonian
sow, which, it is said, was the mother of the Caledonian boar; and, according
to tradition, the destruction of this sow was one of the labors of Theseus.
The City of Tenea Tenea, also, is in Corinthia,
and in it is a temple of the Teneatan Apollo; and it is said that most
of the colonists who accompanied Archias, the leader of the colonists
to Syracuse, set out from there, and that afterwards Tenea prospered more
than the other settlements, and finally even had a government of its own,
and, revolting from the Corinthians, joined the Romans, and endured after
the destruction of Corinth. And mention is also made of an oracle that
was given to a certain man from Asia, who enquired whether it was better
to change his home to Corinth: "Blest is Corinth, but Tenea for me."
But in ignorance some pervert this as follows: "but Tegea for me!"
And it is said that Polybus reared Oedipus here. And it seems, also, that
there is a kinship between the peoples of Tenedos and Tenea, through Tennes
the son of Cycnus, as Aristotle says; and the similarity in the worship
of Apollo among the two peoples affords strong indications of such kinship.
The Fall of Corinth [8.6.23] The Corinthians, when
they were subject to Philip, not only sided with him in his quarrel with
the Romans, but individually behaved so contemptuously towards the Romans
that certain persons ventured to pour down filth upon the Roman ambassadors
when passing by their house. For this and other offences, however, they
soon paid the penalty, for a considerable army was sent thither, and the
city itself was razed to the ground by Leucius Mummius; and the other
countries as far as Macedonia became subject to the Romans, different
commanders being sent into different countries; but the Sicyonians obtained
most of the Corinthian country. The Plundering of Corinth Polybius, who speaks in a tone
of pity of the events connected with the capture of Corinth, goes on to
speak of the disregard shown by the army for the works of art and votive
offerings; for he says that he was present and saw paintings that had
been flung to the ground and saw the soldiers playing dice on these.
Among the paintings he names that of Dionysus by Aristeides, to which,
according to some writers, the saying, "Nothing in comparison with the
Dionysus," referred; and also the painting of Heracles in torture in the
robe of Deianeira. Now I have not seen the latter, but I saw the
Dionysus, a most beautiful work, on the walls of the temple of Ceres in
Rome; but when recently the temple was burned, the painting perished with
it. And I may almost say that the most and best of the other dedicatory
offerings at Rome came from there; and the cities in the neighborhood
of Rome also obtained some; for Mummius, being magnanimous rather than
fond of art, as they say, readily shared with those who asked. And
when Leucullus built the Temple of Good Fortune and a portico, he asked
Mummius for the use of the statues which he had, saying that he would
adorn the temple with them until the dedication and then give them back.
However, he did not give them back, but dedicated them to the goddess,
and then bade Mummius to take them away if he wished. But Mummius
took it lightly, for he cared nothing about them, so that he gained more
repute than the man who dedicated them. The Refounding of Corinth Now after Corinth had remained
deserted for a long time, it was restored again, because of its favorable
position, by the deified Caesar, who colonized it with people that belonged
for the most part to the freedmen class. And when these were removing
the ruins and at the same time digging open the graves, they found numbers
of terra-cotta reliefs, and also many bronze vessels. And since
they admired the workmanship they left no grave unransacked; so that,
well supplied with such things and disposing of them at a high price,
they filled Rome with Corinthian "mortuaries," for thus they called the
things taken from the graves, and in particular the earthenware.
Now at the outset the earthenware was very highly prized, like the bronzes
of Corinthian workmanship, but later they ceased to care much for them,
since the supply of earthen vessels failed and most of them were not even
well executed. Conclusion The city of the Corinthians, then, was always great and wealthy, and it was well equipped with men skilled both in the affairs of state and in the craftsman's arts; for both here and in Sicyon the arts of painting and modeling and all such arts of the craftsman flourished most. The city had territory, however, that was not very fertile, but rifted and rough; and from this fact all have called Corinth "beetling," and use the proverb, "Corinth is both beetle-browed and full of hollows." |