Things To Do in Corinth
Corinth Attractions
Most highway traffic zooms across the Isthmus of Corinth, but you can pull off into the Canal Tourist Area and a well-marked overlook for a look at the ribbon-like waterway, the ship traffic, and, most impressively, the 86m-high (282 ft.) walls of rock through which the canal was cut. An added attraction is the daredevil antics of bungee jumpers, for whom the chasm is a big draw. Before the new road was completed in 1997, almost everyone stopped here for a coffee, a souvlaki, and a look at the canal that separates the Peloponnese from the mainland. Now, traffic hurtles past, and the cafes, restaurants, and shops here are hurting. There's a small post office at the canal, along with a kiosk with postcards and English-language newspapers; most of the large souvlaki places have clean toilet facilities (but tough souvlaki). Warning: The lookout is also popular with thieves who prey on gawking tourists, so be sure to lock your car doors and watch for pickpockets.
Building the Corinth Canal
The French engineers who built the Corinth Canal between 1881 and 1893 used dynamite to blast through 86m (285 ft.) of sheer rock to make this 6.4km-long (4-mile), 27m-wide (90-ft.), 90m-deep (300-ft.) passageway. This revolutionized shipping in the Mediterranean: Ships that previously had made their way around Cape Matapan at the southern tip of the Peloponnese could now dart through the canal. The journey from Brindisi, Italy, to Athens was shortened by more than 320km (200 miles).
Although it took modern technology to build the canal, the Roman emperors Caligula and Nero had tried, and failed, to dig a canal with slave labor. Nero was obsessed with the project, going so far as to lift the first shovelful of earth with a golden trowel. That done, he headed back to Rome and left the real work to the 6,000 Jewish slaves he had brought from Judea.
- Natural Attraction
Acrocorinth
A road twists from the ancient site to the summit of Acrocorinth, the limestone sugarloaf mountain that looms 566m (1,855 ft.) above the plain. This is a stiff climb; if you don't have a car, allow several hours for the ascent, or grab a taxi by the ancient site; it's about 15€ for… - Neighborhood
Ancient Corinth
If you visit in summer, try to come here first thing in the morning or late in the afternoon: The sun on this virtually shadeless site will be less fierce, and fewer tourists will clog the area. Excavations continue at Corinth (you may see archaeologists at work) and since 1995, they… - Museum
The Archaeological Museum
Display cases groan under the weight of the famous Corinthian pottery, decorated with red-and-black figures of birds, animals, and gods and humans, often in procession. Among the city’s chief exports was black figure pottery, the most common style of ancient Greek vases, in which…
