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Monuments in the Lower Agora and North of the Archaic Temple

by Robert L. Scranton

Corinth I.3
216 pp, 83 figs, 15 plans, 76 pls
9" x 12"
Cloth, ISBN: 978-0-87661-013-8
Publication Date: Nov 1951
Status: Out of Print


Description:
Part 3 of Corinth I continues the publication of the architectural remains in the general area of the Agora. The volume includes monuments which limit the Agora at the west, those which run through the center of the Agora separating the Lower from the Upper Agora, those immediately above Peirene facing onto the Agora, Roman monuments in the Lower Agora area, and finally the buildings on the north slope of the hill on which stands the Archaic Temple. Since the area of the Lower Agora had not yet been dug to the Greek level, this volume is concerned with the buildings and topography of the Roman period: temples on the West Terrace; shops, circular monument, Dionysion, and Bema on the central terrace; and isolated monuments in the open Agora. Both the Greek Painted Building and the North Stoa and the Roman Market north of the Archaic Temple are treated.

This volume with the parts already published completes the architectural and topographical study of the Lower Agora and its periphery in Roman times, except for the Julian Basilica at the east end, and adds a significant chapter to the study of civic architecture and planning in Greece in the Roman period.

Reviews:
"Scranton is to be commended for his caution and the care with which he distinguishes between restorations and identifcations based on speculation, probable conjecture, and real evidence." Robert E. Carter, AJA 57 (1953), p. 226