Canal of Corinth - The prehistory of the Isthmus of Corinth
- Written by Portal Editor
Traveling from Athens towards Peloponnesus / Corinth by car, you can easily miss the imposing view into the Canal of Corinth, which construction plans are going back so far into history.
Especially if you are on the motorway, which hardly gives an insight view into the canal. There is a bit of perseverance and patience necessary, when visiting the canal, as it is an interesting observation to watch the passage of a larger ship on the rope of a tugboat, which hardly seems to fit in width. In the meantime almost 130 years old, the Canal of Corinth is still one of the most imposing constructions on earth.
Worthy of note and always worth a visit are also the lowering bridges at both flat ends of the canal. As a vessel approaches, they are sunk into the canal by a motor-driven linkage.
Canal of Corinth - Looking back into history
In Roman times, the idea of a channel for the connection of the Saronic with the Corinthian Gulf was reopened. Plans were worked out under Caesar, Caligula (37-41 AD), Nero (54-68 AD) and Hadrian (117-138 AD). Mammoth projects from Roman history are still today the basis for modern large-scale projects, as is the channel of Pliny. While Caesar and Hadrian remained only in the first sketches, the actions of the two other Roman emperors continued:
In AD 40, Caligula sent some of his engineers to the Isthmus of Corinth to carry out exact measurements. However, the result was crushing: one was convinced that the water level of the Corinthian Gulf is much higher than that of the Saronic Gulf, so that in case of a breakthrough the island of Aegina and perhaps even parts of Attica would be flooded. The project was cautiously dropped.
To form a pininscula to an island - the Isthmus
After three months, however, the work was discontinued because Nero had now passed away, and his successor, Galba (68 AD) and Otho (69 AD), the construction seemed to be too risky and too expensive. The remains of the canal were rebuilt and are no longer visible.
Source: Wikipedia Bela Gerster, Werner, Walter: "The greatest ship track in ancient times: the Diolkos of the Isthmus of Corinth, Greece, and early attempts to build a canal." The International Journal of Nautical Archeology, vol. 2 (1997), pp. 98-119 (114, Fig. 25). Remains of Nero's project to cut a channel through the Isthmus of Corinth (AD 67). The dark shaded areas mark the ancient excavation work. The vertical shafts in the picture below served the Romans to examine the stone material in depth. The map was created by the chief engineer of the modern Belgasterster Canal Project in 1881 when exploring the Isthmus.
Please read as well:
The legendary Channel of Xerxes at Chalkidiki
Karlsplatz, Karls Church and MuseumQuartier
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Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth -
Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth -
Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth -
Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth -
Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth -
Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth Viewpoints at the Canal of Corinth
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