The Peloponnesian site of Corinth, about fifty …

Years: 765BCE - 622BCE

The Peloponnesian site of Corinth, about fifty miles (eighty kilometers) west of Athens, at the eastern end of the Gulf of Corinth, had been occupied from before 3000 BCE, but its history is obscure until the early eighth century BCE, when the city-state of Corinth, established by Dorians, begins to develop as a commercial center.

The city has grown up at the base of the citadel of the Acrocorinthus—a Gibraltar-like eminence rising 1,886 feet (575 meters) above sea level.

The Acrocorinthus lies about one and a half miles (two and a half kilometers) south of the Isthmus of Corinth, which connects the Peloponnese with central Greece and which also separates the Saronic and Corinthian gulfs from each other.

The citadel of the Acrocorinthus rises precipitously above the old city and commands the land route into the Peloponnese, a circumstance that gives Corinth great strategic and commercial importance.

Corinth's political influence is increased through territorial expansion in the vicinity, and by the late eighth century, it has secured control of the isthmus.

During the eighth and seventh centuries, the Bacchiad family of nobles rules Corinth, but they are eventually overthrown by Cypselus, one of the newly powerful class of ambitious merchant-aristocrats and only a partial Bacchiad, who rules the city as a tyrant from about 657.

This is the first firmly datable and well-authenticated Greek tyranny, or one-man rule by a usurper.

Evidently, no one regrets the passing of the Bacchiadae.

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