Corinth in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
kor'-inth (Korinthos, "ornament"): A celebrated city of the
Peloponnesus, capital of Corinthia, which lay North of
Argolis, and with the isthmus joined the peninsula to the
mainland. Corinth had three good harbors (Lechaeum, on the
Corinthian, and Cenchrea and Schoenus on the Saronic Gulf),
and thus commanded the traffic of both the eastern and the
western seas. The larger ships could not be hauled across
the isthmus (Acts 27:6,37); smaller vessels were taken over
by means of a ship tramway with wooden rails. The
Phoenicians, who settled here very early, left many traces
of their civilization in the industrial arts, such as dyeing
and weaving, as well as in their religion and mythology. The
Corinthian cult of Aphrodite, of Melikertes (Melkart) and of
Athene Phoenike are of Phoenician origin. Poseidon, too, and
other sea deities were held in high esteem in the commercial
city. Various arts were cultivated and the Corinthians, even
in the earliest times, were famous for their cleverness,
inventiveness and artistic sense, and they prided themselves
on surpassing the other Greeks in the embellishment of their
city and in the adornment of their temples. There were many
celebrated painters in Corinth, and the city became famous
for the Corinthian order of architecture: an order, which,
by the way, though held in high esteem by the Romans, was
very little used by the Greeks themselves. It was here, too,
that the dithyramb (hymn to Dionysus) was first arranged
artistically to be sung by a chorus; and the Isthmian games,
held every two years, were celebrated just outside the city
on the isthmus near the Saronic Gulf. But the commercial and
materialistic spirit prevailed later. Not a single
Corinthian distinguished himself in literature. Statesmen,
however, there were in abundance: Periander, Phidon,
Timoleon.
Harbors are few on the Corinthian Gulf. Hence, no other city
could wrest the commerce of these waters from Corinth.
According to Thucydides, the first ships of war were built
here in 664 BC. In those early days Corinth held a leading
position among the Greek cities; but in consequence of her
great material prosperity she would not risk all as Athens
did, and win eternal supremacy over men: she had too much to
1ose to jeopardize her material interests for principle, and
she soon sank into the second class. But when Athens,
Thebes, Sparta and Argos fell away, Corinth came to the
front again as the wealthiest and most important city in
Greece; and when it was destroyed by Mummius in 146 BC, the
treasures of art carried to Rome were as great...
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