Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Corinthie'
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Buisine, Dimitri. "Cultes et sanctuaires en Corinthie." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lille (2022-....), 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024ULILH068.
Full textFrom Fustel de Coulanges to M. H. Hansen, the Greek city has never ceased to intrigue historians. In ancient times, Corinth was one of the most powerful cities in the Greek world. Studies on the Corinthian city are often old, written in English and focused on the oldest periods of ancient times.Literary sources provide a better understanding of the wealth and the diversity of the Corinthian pantheon. However, these writings are not enough and the researches must based on other disciplines ; archeology, epigraphy, numismatic, for instance. A joint analysis of these sources provides an overview of Corinthian religious life between archaic and imperial times, presents the region's shrines and temples, describes and analyses the cults and rituals practiced in these places
Chang, Steven S. H. "Fund-raising in Corinth : a socio-economic study of the Corinthian church, the collection and 2 Corinthians." Thesis, University of Aberdeen, 2000. http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk:80/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=220195.
Full textVallet, Xavier. "Recherches sur le commerce corinthien en mer Égée et Méditerranée orientale du IXe siècle au milieu du VIe siècle av. J.-C." Thesis, Paris 10, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA100185/document.
Full textThe aim of the research project is to better understand Corinthian trade in the Greek and the Eastern Mediterranean world through the analysis of its exports volume and the local and temporal variations while trying at the same time to clarify its economic, political or social mechanisms. This study is mainly based on the figured Corinthian pottery that spread during most of the Archaic Age from the 9th to the 6th century BC. The geometric pottery (non-figured) and the amphora are also used in the analysis as much as possible, to sharpen our study, as well as other exportation products less important in terms of quantities such as bronze horses. The whole of the exports is studied with the imports which were far fewer in order to put the Corinthian trade into the larger setting of the Greek and Mediterranean trade and to have a better understanding of the nature of the economic relations binding Corinth to its trading partners. A comparison with a wider corpus of documents enables us to put the study into perspective and to reinforce the broad features of the Corinthian trade in the Eastern Mediterranean region. Every big stage of this trade (Geometric, Protocorinthian, Corinthian) is subdivided into thirteen periods allowing us to follow the economic activities along thirteen generations of men. Finally, the study of each type of shapes enables us to follow the evolution of tastes and markets during the whole Archaic Age
Chester, Stephen J. "Conversion at Corinth : an exploration of the understandings of conversion held by the Apostle Paul and the Corinthian Christians." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 1999. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/3936/.
Full textKřížová, Jitka. "Analýza organizační architektury hotelu - Corinthia Towers Hotel." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2007. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-2274.
Full textBeckers, Arnaud. "Late quaternary sedimentation in the western gulf of Corinth : interplay between tectonic deformation, seismicity, and eustatic changes." Thesis, Université Grenoble Alpes (ComUE), 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015GREAS046/document.
Full textThe Corinth Rift, in Greece, is a young and active continental rift stretching between Continental Greece and the Peloponnese. The most active part of the rift, where the subsidence has been the highest during the Late Quaternary, has been covered by the sea and forms the Gulf of Corinth. This area is prone to natural hazards, including frequent large earthquakes, tsunamis and coastal landslides. The present thesis is dedicated to the study of these processes at the western tip of the Gulf, where the earthquake hazard, in particular, is considered as very high. We have investigated the Quaternary sediments below the Gulf of Corinth floor, through seismic reflection profiling and gravity coring. First, 22 large mass transport deposits were discovered. Their estimated volumes range from 106 to 109 m3. Large mass wasting events occurred in six stratigraphic intervals, four attributed to the Holocene and two attributed to the Upper Pleistocene. Among possible preconditioning factors and triggers, the likely influence of the sediment supply is highlighted. Then, an accurate map of offshore faults is presented. The map highlights for the first time significant strike-slip component in the offshore Corinth Rift, in addition to the dominant normal strain. Three phases are proposed for the Late Quaternary tectono-sedimentary evolution of the area. During these phases, the strain was suggested to migrate northward, driving the progressive deactivation of the large south-dipping faults that controlled the subsidence in an earlier phase of the rifting. Based on the sediment cores, sedimentary events triggered by large historical earthquakes in the last 3 centuries have been looked for. The best fit between the age of the identified event deposits and large historical earthquakes is observed in the deep basin. Finally, four longer cores retrieved in this area reveal specific spatial and temporal patterns of slope failures for the last 500-1000 yr. Such pattern is interpreted as resulting primarily from changes in the frequency of strong earthquakes. From these data, a period of seismic quiescence may have occurred between ~1740 and ~1890 AD in the west of the study area, while eastward, seismic quiescence would have occurred earlier, between ~1500 and ~1700 AD
Schenk, Ralf. "Der korinthische Tempel bis zum Ende des Prinzipats des Augustus /." Espelkamp : M. Leidorf, 1997. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb39275905t.
Full textHermant, Brigitte B. "Corinthe au temps des Bakchiades et des Kypselides." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/213383.
Full textElias, Panagiotis. "Ground deformation observed in the western Corinth rift (Greece) by means of SAR interferometry." Paris, Ecole normale supérieure, 2013. https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00839348.
Full textBoiselet, Aurélien. "Cycle sismique et aléa sismique d'un réseau de failles actives : le cas du rift de Corinthe (Grèce)." Paris, Ecole normale supérieure, 2014. https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01456400.
Full textRothaus, Richard M. "Pagan cult and late antique society in the Corinthia." The Ohio State University, 1993. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1299515772.
Full textRothaus, Richard Martin. "Pagan cult and Late Antique society in the Corinthia /." The Ohio State University, 1993. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1487844105975192.
Full textRigo, Alexis. "Etude sismotectonique et géodésique du Golfe de Corinthe (Grèce)." Paris 7, 1994. http://www.theses.fr/1994PA077185.
Full textGarcilazo, Albert V. "The Corinthian dissenters and the Stoics /." New York, NY [u.a.] : Lang, 2007. http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip076/2006100656.html.
Full textGans, Ulrich-Walter. "Korinthisierende Kapitelle der römischen Kaiserzeit : Schmuckkapitelle in Italien und den nordwestlichen Provinzen /." Köln : Böhlau, 1992. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb35615794m.
Full textPacchiani, Francesco. "Etude sismologique des failles normales actives du Rift de Corinthe." Paris 11, 2006. https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01576334.
Full textThe research work effectuated in the present thesis aims to constrain the deformation mecanisms in the context of continental extension by carrying out an analysis of the geometry of the active faults at depth as well as by studying the relation between faults, seismicity and fluids. The study region is the Corinth Rift (Greece) whose microseismicity of year 2001 has been relocated by spectral analysis, thereby enabling a high resolution image of the active structures at depth. From the study of the geometry of the relocated seismicity, we show, first, the existence of a fault zone whose surfacet trace coincides with the Kerinitis Valley, where we propose that it outcrops second, that the Aigion Fault is not listric down to 6. 5 km depth and third we suggest a correlation between the dip and the depth of the rift's multiplets. The spatio-temporal study of the 2001 seismic crisis shows a 0. 02 km/day migration of the seismicity towards the surface that we propose related to fluid motion at depth. The estimated rock permeability, 7 x 10e-13 m^2, is coherent with other estimates as well as with the supposed permeability of tectonically stable crust. Moreover a program, MOMAG, has been developed to calculate the moment magnitude. The resulting overall b value in the rift, b=1. 35, shows that at depth the medium is heterogeneous. The diverse results obtained confirm the generally accepted Corinth Rift model: the extension is accommodated by planar faults at the surface and by a weakly dipping structure at depth, assimilated to a detachment. Furthermore, they evidence the fault heterogeneity and the involvement of fluids in the extensional deformation mecanisms
Barbaroussi, Vassiliki. "Spatiocartes et cartographie de la vegetation mediterraneenne : application en grece (corinthia)." Toulouse 3, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988TOU30032.
Full textBarbaroussi, Vassiliki. "Spatiocartes et cartographie de la végétation méditerranéenne application en Grèce, Corinthia /." Grenoble 2 : ANRT, 1988. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb376114885.
Full textHemelsdaël, Romain. "Évolution spatio-temporelle du couplage entre système fluviatile et rifting : étude du rift de Corinthe (Grèce)." Thesis, Université de Lorraine, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016LORR0141/document.
Full textRivers behaviour during early rifting can significantly impact on syn-rift sedimentation and the distribution of subsidence. During normal fault growth, existing rivers can be diverted toward subsiding zones. They can respond to footwall uplift either by reversing their flow or by incising into uplifting zones. Long-lived river systems and their stratigraphic record in rifts are poorly documented, not only during early fault propagation and linkage processes but also during successive migrating phases of fault activity. We investigate the interactions of major antecedent rivers with a growing normal fault system and the implications for facies distributions, both on a basin scale and at the scale of individual normal fault blocks. Along the southern margin of the western Corinth rift (Greece), the Plio-Pleistocene fluvial and deltaic successions are investigated. Syn-rift deposits are preserved in a series of uplifted normal fault blocks (10–20 km long, 3–7 km wide). Detailed sedimentary logging and high resolution mapping of the syn-rift deposits document variations of alluvial architecture across the basin and enable to define lithostratigraphic units. Magnetostratigraphy and rare biostratigraphic data are used to date and correlate the alluvial succession between fault blocks. Burial ages were tentatively determined using cosmogenic isotopes 10Be and 26Al produced in situ in quartz grains. Based on the correlation model, we reconstruct the evolution of the early western Corinth rift between about 3.6 and 1.8 Ma. (1) The transverse and antecedent Kalavryta river system flowed and deposited across a series of active normal fault blocks. (2) This river system was inherited from the Hellenide mountain belt and supplied high volumes of coarse sediments from the onset of extension. (3) As depocentres enlarged through time, the fluvial deposits progressively filled palaeorelief. A continuous braided plain developed above active buried faults and no significant consequent drainage system developed between the narrow fault blocks. (4) The main fluvial axis of the antecedent drainage persists through time and controlled facies distribution. (5) The length scale of facies transitions is greater than, and therefore not related to fault spacing. Here, along-strike subsidence variations in individual fault blocks represent a secondary contributor to the alluvial architecture. (6) The zones of maximum subsidence on individual faults are aligned across strike, parallel to the persistent fluvial axis. This implies that long-term sediment supply and loading influenced normal fault growth. Sediment supply largely outpaced local hangingwall subsidence and overfilled the early rift basin. The river system terminated eastward where small deltas are built into a shallow lake that occupied the central Corinth rift. During this time, another river system built fan deltas along the southern margin, recording diachronous deepening of the basin. The behaviour of antecedent rivers is also studied at the scale of a relay zone, that developed later in the rift history between two growing fault segments. During the Middle to Late Pleistocene, the relay zone captured the antecedent Krathis River, which deposited prograding Gilbert-type deltas. Transfer faults record progressive linkage and basinward migration of accommodation along the ramp axis, while marine terraces record diachronous uplift in their footwalls. Although early linkage occurred, the main normal faults continued to propagate until final connexion. For the first time a reconstruction of the linkage phase is presented over a period of ca. 0.5 Myr. Throughout this linkage history, the Krathis River continued to flow across the relay zone. Again, this emphasizes the role of antecedent rivers in supplying sediments and controlling the location of the major depocentres along the rift margins
Villeneuve, Merda Rachel de. "L’elocutio en 1 Corinthiens. Inventaire, stratégie et herméneutique." Thesis, Paris 4, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA040166.
Full textThis dissertation analyzes 1Co as a work of Greek literature from the 1stcentury. The heuristic hypothesis is as follows: there is an epistoral style which Paul used to convey his message the best he could. As the letter was meant to be read, and is also a discourse, it played with the modalities of both writing style and orature, which is what makes its style distinctive. This research focuses on elocutio, an element that defines style in rhetorics, and which covers all processes, whether lexical, syntactic or poetic, that characterize the mode of expression. Our study proposes a thorough, in-depth reading of 1Co, allowing the text to reveal its aural dimension. The methodology includes a phase of identification of the most frequent processes that support the orality of Paul's writing. With this inventory, the main stylistic traits are identified. The poetic process illuminates the thematic development of the missive, whose dynamics is proper to dialogue and whose sound cartography suggests that the letter has to be voiced aloud. The conclusion reached by such a reading is that orality is an essential component of Paul's strategy in 1Co. There is a link between the style used by the author and the purpose of the letter. We can then speak of a hermeneutics of orality. Based on the criteria which Walter Ong suggested to distinguish orature, this thesis proposes a definition of the elocutio of 1Co, which shows to what extent Paul’s poetics was meant to serve his policy. This one is twofold: to rectify and to edify. Between a fighting style and a style of reconciliation, the letter deploys a discourse fully oriented towards the figure of the resurrected Christ. What had been so far unheard of in Paul’s kerygma gives rise to a stylistic creativity which subverts rhetorics in the broader sense of the term to change it into a rhetorics of conversion
Bell, Rebecca E. "Tectonic evolution of the Corinth Rift." Thesis, University of Southampton, 2008. https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/63290/.
Full textFornis, César. "Estabilidad y conflicto civil en la guerra del Peloponeso : las sociedades corintia y argiva /." Oxford : Archaeopress, 1999. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb370923711.
Full textClément, Christophe. "Imagerie sismique crustale de la subduction hellenique et du golfe de corinthe." Paris 7, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000PA077043.
Full textde, Vals Marilou. "Emploi de la pierre en Grèce antique autour du Golfe de Corinthe." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2022. http://www.theses.fr/2022SORUS493.
Full textThis work focuses on limestone construction-stones used in archaeological context, in monumental construction from the 7th to the 1st century B.C., in continental Greece, more precisely on sites in the eastern Gulf of Corinth. Unlike marbles, limestones and their associated quarries have rarely been the subject of archaeometric and systematic study, and confusions about the geological nature of the rocks are common. The main questions addressed here are therefore: (1) what types of stone are used? (2) where do these stones come from? (3) why were these stones chosen? This thesis is based on extensive fieldworks, which provide an inventory of construction-stones and ancient quarries. It is combined with the study of geological contexts and an important historiographical study, as work on archaeological site is limited (working on remains, without sampling). The Gulf of Corinth is an active quaternary graben: on the southern margin, syn-rift deposits are outcropping because of the uplift of the Peloponnese. These formations were exploited by Greek builders and provided the majority of the pôros, a generic term used since Antiquity to speak about recent unconsolidated rocks of various types (sandstone, travertine, tuff, shell limestone). Some of these facies were imported, but the majority of the sites exploited local resources (hard limestone, conglomerate or sandstone, depending on the geology): a low diversity of stones is observed in each site (<5 facies), and more than 80% of the volume of stone is represented by one single local facies. Finally, to understand the choice of stones by the Greek builders, a study of the petrophysical properties of different materials was carried out. It seems that the density was the only important physical property. One site shows exceptional characteristics: the sanctuary of Delphi, where more than twenty facies have been identified: the local facies (limestone, breccia and travertine) represent a relatively small volume. Half of the facies are allochthonous and represent more than 50% of the volume of stone used: the oolitic dune of Corinth, the limestone of Megara, black stones, Cycladic and Attic marbles, but also various sandstones whose origin remains to be defined. These new data inform us about the exchange of stones at the scale of the Gulf in Antiquity, and suggest areas for future research on the study of limestone used in construction
Pettegrew, David K. "Corinth on the Isthmus studies of the end of an ancient landscape /." Columbus, Ohio : Ohio State University, 2006. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1152884521.
Full textDuverger, Clara. "Sismicité, couplages sismique-asismiques et processus transitoires de déformation dans un système de failles actives : le rift de Corinthe, Grèce." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017USPCC252/document.
Full textThe western part of the Corinth Rift in Greece is opening at about 15 mm per year, generating one of the highest deformation rates in the world, some destructive earthquakes of magnitude M>6 per decade, and high microseismic activity irregular in space and time. In order to better understand the mechanisms related to this crustal deformation and to specify the major active structures, this research work makes use of the seismological database of the Corinth Rift Laboratory from 2000 to 2015 by finely analyzing microearthquakes and their spatio-temporal evolution. The global relocation of the seismic sources and their classification into multiplets enable to refine the geometry of the faults and to identify different mechanical behaviors. The western zone, in the middle of the gulf, is affected by fluctuations of fluid pore pressures in a geological layer, resulting in microseismic swarm migrations at a velocity of about 50 m per day. The deep multiplets of the central part, near the northern coast, are persistent and appear to be triggered by episodes of slow aseismic slip along an immature detachment, which can reach the ductile crust. The low percentage of dynamic triggering by passing seismic waves suggests that the overall state of the fault system is not at the critical breaking point. The magnitude of earthquakes is correlated with the initial impulsiveness of the rupture. These results specify the dynamics of the rift deformation, the seismic-aseismic interactions, and will make possible the improvement of the seismic hazard models of the region
Oladipo, M. O. A. "Trace element analysis of Corinthian pottery and related clays." Thesis, University of Manchester, 1987. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.233057.
Full textMeyer, Roland. "L'hermeneutique paulinienne de la resurrection d'apres 1 corinthiens 15." Université Marc Bloch (Strasbourg) (1971-2008), 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987STR20049.
Full textPaul brings out the extraordinary far-reaching of the passover event. In christ's humanity resurrection is already substantially fulfilled. He is the first, not chronologicaly speaking, but as principle. Being the cause of the coming resurrections, christ's resurrection will appoint us to his image and it exerts from now its influence on the believer. These events escape the historical science, but to accept christ's resurrection means recognizing it in hope. To recognize christ as lord means perceiving the reality of eternal life. The materiality of the risen body is no more in the earthly nature, because god's spirit transcends, in its entity, space and time. The spiritual body doesn't belong to natural anthropology, but to a transcendant element. "pneuma" gives rise to a new humanity. Resurrection appears as a new and necessary act. It isn't a materialistic revification, but a radical transformation that cannot be perceived without faith. The hope of resurrection isn't subjective, but is based on the reality of a passed event that actualizes itself in christ's person. Resurrection affirms christ's lordship on the univers and the final and complete victory on death. The paulinian thought constantly establishes a connection between the passed of christ's resurrection and the eschatological future. The christological event is projected in an eschatological expectation and the eschatological expectation is based on the christological event. Paul establishes a causal relationship: men rise because christ is risen, and a temporal relationship: christ is risen first, then men. Paulinian theology and christology are turned towards eschatology
Darton, Ruth Claire. "Training manual for new presidents at Corinthian Colleges, Inc." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2004. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/2609.
Full textStorer, Sandra J. "Paul's depiction of celibacy in 1 Corinthians 7:25-35 specific to the Corinthian situation, but conveying enduring principles /." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 2007. http://www.tren.com/search.cfm?p006-1509.
Full textCanitano, Alexandre. "Analyse des influences externes et internes sur les mesures extensométriques en forage dans le rift de Corinthe (Grèce)." Paris, Institut de physique du globe, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011GLOB0018.
Full textA crustal strain network was installed few years ago in the western part of the Gulf of Corinth, around the city of Aigion. It acts as a complement to the seismological network of the Corinth Rift Laboratory and is devoted to the observation of possible crustal strains related to the 5 and 10 km depth local microseismicity in order to constrain the mechanical processes of the area. The research is focused on the study of the two Sacks-Evertson borehole strainmeters installed at 150 meters depth, on the north coast of the gulf. The physical features of the observed signals are studied with a particular attention, as the prediction and correction of the external forcing. This protocol is fondamental to exhibit the internal strain signature related to solid tide and seismic or aseismic events. The Monasteraki 3-component strainmeter exhibits an instrumental behaviour close to that expected in the case of a good coupling with rock. The corrections have been made under the assumption of an elastic perturbation of all the forcings. The noise level related to the strain residual signals is close to the nanostrain at short period and the instrument has a resolution around 10−8 at one-day period. The Trizonia island dilatometer exhibits a solid-porous coupling due to installation problems, which make the observed signal complicated. Due to the proximity of the marina, the instrument is sensitive to pore pressure diffusion in the rocks and so the correction is performed by considering a frequential dependance. The solid tide which lies in the residual signal seems to indicate the existence of an internal heterogeneity. This is enhanced by seismic waves observations. The internal strain signal analysis is therefore perturbated as for example the 2008 Andravida earthquake or the 2002 strain transient related signals
Tiberi, Christel. "Rifts de Corinthe et d'Evvia (Grèce) : structure lithosphérique par tomographie télésismique et gravimétrie." Paris 7, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999PA077236.
Full textBackert, Nicolas. "Interaction tectonique-sédimentation dans le rift de Corinthe, Grèce. Architecture stratigraphique et sédimentologie du Gilbert-delta de Kerinitis." Phd thesis, Institut National Polytechnique de Lorraine - INPL, 2009. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00457060.
Full textPralong, Annie. "Recherches sur les chapiteaux corinthiens tardifs en marbre de Proconnèse." Paris 1, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997PA010609.
Full textThe marble quarries located in the proconnesus island were very busy all over the ancient times, et specially during the protobyzantine period. The intensive production meaned to a huge exportation in every part of the Mediteranean area. The thesis, devoted to the late corinthian capitals has two chief aims : first, the establishment of a formal typology for understanding the evolution of the different identified kinds of Corinthian capitals, and the selection of stylistical criterions for determining the origin of capitals located far from constantinople. The first criterion was the type of acanthus leaves observed on the capitals : crowded acanthus or mask acanthus. Then the morphology of the capitals of the two groups have used for the determination of the types : capitals with two rows of leaves, capitals with two rows of leaves and "engainantes" leaves, chapitals with a single row of leaves and angle leavez or "engainantes" leaves. The correlations established with computer methods have demonstrated that the workshops simplify the capitals et produce morre and more compact exemplars. This evidence has been confirmed by the localisation of the samples all around the Mediterranean sea. The 8 leaves capitals are the least exported, and the 4 or 5 leaves are the more exported. We observed too that the types very much diffused capitals belong to the types with a single row of leaves
Page, Steven Larry. "Two wisdoms, two spirits, and church unity an exegetical analysis of 1 Corinthians 2:6-16 /." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 2006. http://www.tren.com/search.cfm?p062-0283.
Full textPanagiotis, Elias. "Terrain déformation du rift de Corinthe (Grèce) et ses environs, en utilisant l'interférométrie SAR." Phd thesis, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris - ENS Paris, 2013. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00839348.
Full textBouteiller, Xavier. "Le territoire de Corinthe : transformations politiques et aménagements du paysage (440 av. J.C. - 96)." Le Mans, 2006. http://cyberdoc.univ-lemans.fr/theses/2006/2006LEMA3007.pdf.
Full textBetween 440 B. C. And 96 A. D. , Corinth’s territory met several evolutions marked by the will and the political choices of the city. The independent Corinth fought against Athenian, Spartan, Theban and Macedonian hegemonies. But, with the decline of its liberty and its control on its territory, the city fought resolutely on the Macedonian side against Achaeans and Romans, then blindly on the Achaean side against the Romans. The latter finally destroyed her and dismantled its territory with Sikyonian help after 146 B. C. Even if the ex-Corinthian territory could have been centuriated, it is only in 44 B. C. With the birth of the Colonia Laus Iulia Corinthiensis that revive the political, juridical and territorial existence of Corinth. Organized by a centuriation, the Corinthian plain offered a better viability for their farmers. The Flavians who rebuild the city and reorganize its territory at the end of the first century will bring about the last important change
Avallone, Antonio. "Analyse de dix ans de déformation du rift de Corinthe (Grèce) par géodésie spatiale." Paris, Institut de physique du globe, 2003. https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01576320.
Full textGPS data collected in the Corinth rift during eleven camapigns between 1990 and 2001 provide velocities of 57 points with ~1. 5mm/yr. Peloponnissos moves at 30mm/yr to the N215°E with respect to the stable Europe. Extension across the rift is accommodated in a narrow band off-shore. Its rate increases from east to west and is 16mm/yr near Aigion. Both sides of the rift behave as a rifid clockwise rotating blocks with rates of 7#0. 5°/Myr and 2. 8#0. 8°/Myr respectively for the northern and southern blocks. The strain accumulation accross the major faults located along the southern coast of the Corinth gulf is less than 1mm/yr. This implies long recurrence periods for large earthquakes on these faults. At the western and eastern ends of the rift the deformation is more diffuse. The resulting velocity field allowed us to constrain the comparison between the old triangulation coordinates and new GPS coordinates at 224 pilars of the old greek tringulation network analysis of the coseismic and interseismic vertical movements in the gulf of Corinth has been carried out with a large interferograms database. The presence of atmospheric contributions in SAR interferograms represents the main limit for the detection of ground deformations. A methodological approach is presented to reduce at both global and local scales the tropospheric contributions in the interferograms. It first requires the refined knowledge of the permanent scatterers that can only be obtained from the analysis of a large population of interferograms. The correction of global scale atmospheric contribution exploits the correlation between phase and topography and the correction of local artefacts is based oncorrelation between interferograms containing one common acquisition
Flotté, Nicolas. "Caractérisation structurale et cinématique d'un rift sur détachement : le rift de Corinthe-Patras, Grèce." Paris 11, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA112132.
Full textA structural study of the southern margin of the Corinth rift shows the existence of a quaternary detachment fault, which outcrops along 150km in the northern Peloponnese, from the Saronic gulf to the Patras gulf. Its onshore part is inactive. It dips 30-35ʿN, flats northward till 0-10ʿN and progressively increases beneath the gulf. Steeper normal faults cut through the hangingwall of the detachment and progressively branched onto it. Balanced cross-sections suggest that the onshore detachment prolonged beneath the gulf in the low-angle seismological zone. Since 300ky, the Psathopyrgos, Helike and Aigion active faults transfer the slip from the detachment to the surface. The emergence of the detachment initiated from east to west 1. 7-1My ago, and is sealed since roughly 900ky. The strain has progressively migrated toward the north on several fault-system which remained active during 250-400ky. In the gulf of Patras, seismological data show that the emergence of the detachment is still active. This differential evolution is accommodated by transfer-faults and led to the 25km shift of the Patras and Corinth gulfs. A study of fault-crystallisations shows that syntectonic breccias are cemented by two generations of calcite. The first was formed with formation water at a depth of more than 1200m and the second generation was formed with meteoric-water at a depth of 500-1000m. These data allow determining an uplift rate of 1. 7-2. 5mm/y. This result is close to uplift rates determined near the coast. Dating of these calcites by the U/Th method confirms the young age of the Corinth-Patras rift. The results show that this method is a reliable way for quaternary faults
Bouteiller, Xavier Compatangelo-Soussignan Rita. "Le territoire de Corinthe transformations politiques et aménagements du paysage (440 av. J.C. - 96) /." [S.l.] : [s.n.], 2006. http://cyberdoc.univ-lemans.fr/theses/2006/2006LEMA3007.pdf.
Full textSanders, Guy Dominic Robson. "Byzantine glazed pottery at Corinth to c. 1125." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.324112.
Full textLe, Pourhiet Laetitia. "Modélisation thermo-mécanique de l'extension continentale : développements théoriques et applications au golfe de Corinthe (Grèce)." Phd thesis, Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris VI, 2004. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00589848.
Full textLe, Pourhiet Laetitia. "Modélisation thermo-mécanique de l'extension continentale : développements théoriques et applications au golfe de Corinthe (Grèce)." Paris 6, 2004. https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00589848.
Full textChow, John Kin-Man. "Patronage and power : studies on social networks in Corinth." Thesis, Durham University, 1991. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/6245/.
Full textMwombeki, Fidon Rwezahula. "The mission of Paul's churches evangelistic outreach at Corinth /." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 2005. http://www.tren.com.
Full textRudd, David G. "A historical-critical study of tongues and prophecy at Corinth the possible influence of the Dionysian cult and worship of Apollo (I Cor. 12-14) /." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 1988. http://www.tren.com.
Full textFrère, Dominique. "Les recherches sur les aryballes et alabastres italo-corinthiens à décor subgéométrique." Nantes, 1995. http://www.theses.fr/1995NANT3011.
Full textThe purpose of this thesis is to set up a typology of italo-corinthian subgeometric aryballoi and alabastoi plastic forms and decorations and to provide commercial, cultural and technical information on recent easternisation in central Italy and Campania. The first part of this work sets out the processes used to study greek style vases and perfume vases as well as the methodology used to carry out this work (survey of criteria of forms, decorations, ceramic pastes ; chronological contexts). The second part deals with the ceramical study itself based on the survey of 14 types of forms, 5 patterns of decorations and statistical series. Based on this typology, the third part concentrates on the problems of localization and circulation of these perfume vases, attempts to define their purpose and draws up a general survey of ceramic workshops in recent easternisation. Invaluable information on potters techniques and perfume making have been provided by pastes and content analyses
Ben, Issa Fouzi Rajab. "Obstacles to foreign direct investment in the Libyan hotel sector : a case study of the Corinthia company." Thesis, University of Gloucestershire, 2011. http://eprints.glos.ac.uk/3265/.
Full textPalmberg, Dan. "2 Corinthians 3:1-6 Paul's ministry validated at Corinth /." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN) Access this title online, 2005. http://www.tren.com.
Full textBallast, David M. "Contextualizing the Gospel comparing Paul's methods in Athens and Corinth /." Online full text .pdf document, available to Fuller patrons only, 2003. http://www.tren.com.
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