Diolkos

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The Diolkos – from the Greek dia (across) and olkos(train) – was an artificial trackway, resembling a modern portage railway, constructed in ancient times to enable boats to be moved overland across the Isthmus of Corinth, a neck of land 4 miles wide at its narrowest, which separated the Gulf of Corinth from the Saronic Gulf.

The Diolkos allowed ships sailing from the Ionian Sea to the Aegean Sea to avoid sailing around the Peloponnese peninsula, whose rocky, exposed coastline was extremely hazardous: many a merchant ship was wrecked on the three headlands of the peninsula, especially Cape Matapan and Cape Malea . By contrast, both the Gulf of Corinth and the Saronic Gulf were relatively sheltered waters. In addition, the overland passage of the Isthmus offered a much shorter route to Athens for ships sailing to/from the Ionian coast of Greece.

The Diolkos was first constructed in the seventh century B.C. and remained in use for well over a thousand years, into the early Middle Ages.

Situation of the Isthmus of Corinth
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Situation of the Isthmus of Corinth
Remains of the roadway along which boats were dragged
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Remains of the roadway along which boats were dragged
Slipway at the western end of the Diolkos
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Slipway at the western end of the Diolkos

Contents

[edit] Construction

It is likely that the Diolkos was built by the second tyrant (ruler) of Corinth, Periander (628-588 B.C.).

If so, this means of portage was apparently Periander's second choice, as he originally envisaged a canal through the Isthmus[1].He was dissuaded apparently by some Egyptian mathematicians, who warned him that directly linking the two seas risked submerging the entire Peloponnese.

Periander replaced the previous method of transporting boats – on large wooden rollers – with a 4-mile (6 km) long trackway from Schinous on the Saronic Gulf to Poseidonia on the Gulf of Corinth.

The trackway, varying between 3m to 6m in width, was paved with limestone blocks. These were set in a deep layer of sand and gravel. Two parallel grooves were cut into the trackway, 1.5m apart (surprisingly close to the 1.435m standard gauge of modern railways). Along these ran the wheels of the olkos, a vehicle analogous to a modern rail flatcar, on which boats were pulled by teams of slaves or animals. The transported boats' cargoes would be unloaded to reduce weight and carried separately across the isthmus and then reloaded at the other end [2]

The limits to the lifting capacity of ancient cranes, and to the carrying capacity of the olkos, must have restricted use of the diolkos to the smaller range of boats, keeping alive the issue of cutting a canal through the isthmus.

Sections of the trackway are still visible today, and about 500m of its course were excavated in the period 1956-62.

[edit] Roman era

The Diolkos remained in use throughout the period of Roman rule in Greece (c.180 B.C.- 395 A.D.) and well into the Byzantine era to as late as the ninth century.

However, Periander's idea of a canal continued to fascinate Roman rulers. The historian Suetonius tells us that Julius Caesar (dictator of Rome 48-44 B.C.) planned a canal through the Isthmus[3], among other grandiose engineering schemes: however, he was assassinated before he could bring the scheme to fruition. The Emperor Nero (54-68 A.D.) actually launched an excavation, personally breaking the ground with a golden pickaxe and removing the first basket-load of spoil, [4] but the project was abandoned when he died shortly afterwards.

Almost 2,000 years were to pass before ships were able to sail directly through the Isthmus: in 1893 the Corinth Canal was finally opened, transforming the Peloponnese into an island.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Diogenes Laertius Life of Periander 6
  2. ^ A. Snisarenko Rulers of the Ancient Seas (St Petersburg, 1986: translated by Kasetuh)
  3. ^ Suetonius Jul. 44.3
  4. ^ Suetonius Nero 19.2

[edit] Literature

  • Walter Werner, “The largest ship trackway in ancient times: the Diolkos of the Isthmus of Corinth, Greece, and early attempts to build a canal,” The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology (1997) 26.2: 98–119

[edit] External links

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