ANCIENT CORINTH - 2004
General Information
Record ID
2494
Activity Date
2004
Chronology
Key-words
Type of Operation
Institution
Localisation
Toponym
Korinthos, Corinth
Korinthos, Corinth
Linked Record
20012004
Report
Ancient Corinth, Anapnoa (Anaploga) (property of A. Papathanasopoulou). V. Tassinos and P. Kassimi (ΛΖ’ ΕΠΚΑ) reports the discovery of a cemetery alongside the road which leads from the centre of the city towards the Phlius Gate. Most graves date to the late fourth and early third century BC.
A funerary monument (5,3 x 3m, 2,4m high) built with large isodomic limestone masonry (fig. 1) contained three chambers of approximately equal size, each holding a single inhumation (tombs 1-3). In chamber 1, a monolithic limestone sarcophagus lay beneath a layer of offerings (a mass of Corinthian terracotta figurines depicting women of different ages in various poses, some placed on the cover slab, and a little bronze sheet). Offerings arrayed around the poorly preserved skeleton include two alabaster pyxides with polychrome decoration, one of which contained cosmetic white lead, bronze pins and a needle, a silver coin, fragments of a chteni shell a small terracotta hydria, bronze and iron sheet, nails, rings, pegs and earrings. These may indicate that the deceased was a young woman. Chamber 2 contained cist grave 2, laid on the beaten earth chamber floor and accompanied by an iron pin. Chamber 3 also contained a limestone sarcophagus with an iron strigil as a grave offerings. The structure was set into a pre-existing deep hollow cut into the rock (perhaps a disused quarry) which was entered via a passageway at the west (the entire cemetery was set within and around this hollow). Part of the peribolos wall was preserved on the west side, also of large limestone blocks. A pebble surface surrounded the monument.
A funerary monument (5,3 x 3m, 2,4m high) built with large isodomic limestone masonry (fig. 1) contained three chambers of approximately equal size, each holding a single inhumation (tombs 1-3). In chamber 1, a monolithic limestone sarcophagus lay beneath a layer of offerings (a mass of Corinthian terracotta figurines depicting women of different ages in various poses, some placed on the cover slab, and a little bronze sheet). Offerings arrayed around the poorly preserved skeleton include two alabaster pyxides with polychrome decoration, one of which contained cosmetic white lead, bronze pins and a needle, a silver coin, fragments of a chteni shell a small terracotta hydria, bronze and iron sheet, nails, rings, pegs and earrings. These may indicate that the deceased was a young woman. Chamber 2 contained cist grave 2, laid on the beaten earth chamber floor and accompanied by an iron pin. Chamber 3 also contained a limestone sarcophagus with an iron strigil as a grave offerings. The structure was set into a pre-existing deep hollow cut into the rock (perhaps a disused quarry) which was entered via a passageway at the west (the entire cemetery was set within and around this hollow). Part of the peribolos wall was preserved on the west side, also of large limestone blocks. A pebble surface surrounded the monument.
Individual tombs surrounding the tripartite monument include four simple cists (5, 6, 8 and 11), a built cist, (4) a monolithic limestone sarcophagus (7), and a Late Roman tile grave (10). Tomb 4 was covered with two re-used Classical limestone geison blocks and a slab of sandstone: the grave contained iron nails by the feet of the corpse. The irregular oval cist grave 5, cut into a thick layer of stones and pebbles, contained an iron strigil, a skyphos, an egg, a lamp, and a squat lekythos, plus iron nails as those in tomb 4. Remains of a funerary pyre (ash and burnt soil containing sherds of miniature vessels and burnt olive stones over an area of 0.5 x 0.5m) lay between the southeast corner of the funerary monument and the northeast corner of tomb 4. Tombs 6 and 11, cut into the hard pebble fill of the hollow, lay to the east of the funerary monument. In each case the deceased received a skyphos, lekythos, lamp, egg, and iron pin. In tomb 6, iron nails were concentrated round the feet. Tomb 11 was covered with five re-used slabs of different sizes, with patches of earlier plaster, plus two Corinthian cover tiles at the west end. Tomb 8, set in a niche in the north face of the passageway into the hollowed area, contained two terracotta alabastra. Tombs 7 and 9 were east of the passageway. Tomb 7 (a sarcophagus) contained an iron pin placed by the feet of the corpse, while cist grave 9 (which has plastered walls) contained an iron strigil.
The cemetery continued towards the north/northeast, beyond the excavation area. The fill of the hollow contained a large quantity of Geometric and early historical period sherds: a likely connection with extensive local settlement in and around the Potters' Quarter is noted. Geometric and Archaic pottery is also noted in the sub-foundation layer beneath the funerary monument.
The cemetery continued towards the north/northeast, beyond the excavation area. The fill of the hollow contained a large quantity of Geometric and early historical period sherds: a likely connection with extensive local settlement in and around the Potters' Quarter is noted. Geometric and Archaic pottery is also noted in the sub-foundation layer beneath the funerary monument.
Author
Robert PITT
Bibliographic reference(s)
http://www.yppo.gr/0/anaskafes/pdfs/LZ_EPKA.pdf. V. Tassinos and P. Kassimi, in K. Kissas and W.-D. Niemeier (eds), The Corinthia and the Northeast Peloponnese (Munich 2013), 125-133.
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Date of creation
2012-07-04 00:00:00
Last modification
2023-10-10 09:41:22
Picture(s)
Fig. 2/ Ancient Corinth, Anapnoa, the location of the cemetery in relation to other sites in ancient Corinth.