Corinth in Smiths Bible Dictionary
an ancient and celebrated city of Greece, on the Isthmus of
Corinth, and about 40 miles west of Athens. In consequence of
its geographical position it formed the most direct
communication between the Ionian and AEgean seas. A remarkable
feature was the Acrocorinthus, a vast citadel of rock, which
rises abruptly to the height of 2000 feet above the level of
the sea, and the summit of which is so extensive that it once
contained a whole town. The situation of Corinth, and the
possession of its eastern and western harbors, Cenchreae and
Lechaeum, are the secrets of its history. Corinth was a place
of great mental activity, as well as of commercial and
manufacturing enterprise. Its wealth was so celebrated as to
be proverbial; so were the vice and profligacy of its
inhabitants. The worship of Venus where was attended with
shameful licentiousness. Corinth is still an episcopal see.
The city has now shrunk to a wretched village, ont he old site
and bearing the old name, which, however, is corrupted into
Gortho. St. Paul preached here, Ac 18:11 and founded a church,
to which his Epistles to the Corinthians are addressed.
[EPISTLES TO THE CORINTHIANS]
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