The Diolkos (Δίολκος, from the Greek dia διά, "across", and holkos ὁλκός, "portage machine"[1]) was a paved trackway near Corinth in Ancient Greece which enabled boats to be moved overland across the Isthmus of Corinth. The shortcut allowed ancient vessels to avoid the long and dangerous circumnavigation of the Peloponnese peninsula. The phrase "as fast as a Corinthian", penned by the comic playwright Aristophanes, indicates that the trackway was common knowledge and had acquired a reputation for swiftness.[2]

The Isthmus with the Canal of Corinth close to where the diolkos ran.
Strategic position of the Isthmus of Corinth between two seas.

The main function of the Diolkos was the transfer of goods, although in times of war it also became a preferred means of speeding up naval campaigns. The 6-to-8.5-kilometre-long (3+34 to 5+14 mi) roadway was a rudimentary form of railway,[3] and operated from c. 600 BC until the middle of the first century AD.[4] The Diolkos combined the two principles of the railway and the overland transport of ships, on a scale that remained unique in antiquity.[5]

Function

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The Diolkos saved ships sailing from the Ionian Sea to the Aegean Sea, a dangerous sea journey round the Peloponnese, whose three headlands had a reputation for gales, especially Cape Matapan and Cape Malea.[6] By contrast, both the Gulf of Corinth and the Saronic Gulf were relatively sheltered waters. In addition, the overland passage of the Isthmus, a neck of land 6.4 km (4.0 mi) wide at its narrowest, offered a much shorter route to Athens for ships sailing to and from the Ionian coast of Greece.

The Diolkos also had a commercial function in transporting goods. Little is known of its success in increasing trade but because of the length of time it was maintained, it is presumed that it had some positive impact. In addition to trade, during wartime the Diolkos may have been used to transport lighter ships across land. [7]

History

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Excavated western end close to the Gulf of Corinth

Ancient literature is silent on the date of the construction of the Diolkos. For Thucydides (460–395 BC) the Diolkos already seemed to be something ancient.[8] Excavated letters and associated pottery found at the site indicate a construction date at the end of the 7th or beginning of the 6th century BC, that is around the time when Periander was tyrant of Corinth.[9]

The Diolkos remained reportedly in regular service until at least the middle of the 1st century AD, after which no more written references appear.[10] Possibly the trackway was put out of use by Nero's abortive canal works in 67 AD.[11] Much later transports of warships across the Isthmus in the late 9th century,[12] and around 1150, are assumed to have used a route other than the Diolkos, due to the extensive time lag.[13]

Role in warfare

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The Diolkos played an important role in Ancient Greek naval warfare. Greek historians note several occasions from the 5th to the 1st century BC when warships were hauled and pulled across the Isthmus in order to speed up naval campaigning.[14] In 428 BC, the Spartans planned to transport their warships over the Diolkos to the Saronic Gulf to threaten Athens,[15] while later in the Peloponnesian War, in 411 BC, they carted over a squadron heading quickly for operations at Chios.[16] In 220 BC, Demetrius of Pharos had a fleet of about fifty vessels dragged across the Isthmus to the Bay of Corinth by his men.[17]

Three years later, a Macedonian fleet of 38 vessels was sent across by Philip V, while the larger warships sailed around Cape Malea.[18] After his victory at Actium in 31 BC, Octavian advanced as fast as possible against Marc Antony by ordering part of his 260 Liburnians to be carried over the Isthmus.[19] In 868 AD, the Byzantine admiral Niketas Oryphas had his whole fleet of one hundred dromons dragged across the Isthmus in a quickly executed operation,[20] but this took place most likely on a different route.[13]

Role in commerce

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Despite the frequent mentioning of the Diolkos in connection with military operations, modern scholarship assumes that the prime purpose of the trackway must have been the transport of cargo, considering that warships would not have needed transporting in this manner very often, and ancient historians were always more interested in war than commerce.[21] Comments by Pliny the Elder and Strabo, which described the Diolkos as being in regular service during times of peace, also imply a commercial use of the trackway.[22] Coinciding with the rise of monumental architecture in Greece, the construction of the Diolkos may have initially served particularly for transporting heavy goods like marble, monoliths and timber to points west and east.[23] It is not known what tolls Corinth extracted from the Diolkos on its territory, but the fact that the trackway was used and maintained long after its construction indicates that it remained for merchant ships an attractive alternative to the trip around Cape Malea for much of antiquity.[24]

Structure

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Course

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Mooring place

The Diolkos ran across the narrowest part of the Isthmus, where the trackway followed the local topography in a curved course in order to avoid steeper gradients.[25] The roadway passed the Isthmus ridge at c. 79 m (259 ft) height with an average gradient of 1:70 (a 1.43% grade),[25] while the steepest sections rose at a gradient of 1:16.5 (a 6% grade).[26] Its total length is estimated at 6–7 km (3.7–4.3 mi),[26] 8 km (5 mi)[25] or 8.5 km (5.3 mi)[27] depending on the number of supposed bends taken into account. A total of 1,100 m (3,609 ft) has been archaeologically traced, mainly at its western end close to the Bay of Corinth.[25] There the known trackway began at a mooring place south of the more recent canal and ran parallel to the waterway for a few hundred meters, after which it switched to the north side, running in a slight bend a similar distance along the canal.[28] From there on, the Diolkos either followed in a straight line the course of the modern canal,[29] or swung south in a wide arc.[30] The roadway ended at the Saronic Gulf at the village Schoinos, modern-day Kalamaki, described by Strabo as the trackway's eastern terminal.[25] Sections of the Diolkos have been destroyed by the 19th-century Corinth Canal[27] and other modern installations.[31]

Track and transport

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Image of a ship on Attic black-figure pottery (c. 520 BC). This is the sort of boat that the Diolkos may have transported in Periander's time.

The Diolkos was a trackway paved with hard limestone[27] with parallel grooves running about 1.60 metres (63 in) apart.[32] The roadway was 3.4 to 6 metres (11 to 20 ft) wide.[27] Since ancient sources tell little about how the ships were hauled across,[25] the mode of ship transport has largely to be reconstructed from the archaeological evidence. The tracks indicate that transport on the Diolkos was done with some sort of wheeled vehicle.[33] Either vessel and cargo were hauled across on separate vehicles, or only the cargo was taken across and reloaded on a different ship at the other side of the Isthmus.[34]

Although a technical analysis has shown that the transport of triremes (25 t, 35 metres (115 ft) long, 5 metres (16 ft) beam), albeit difficult,[35] was technically feasible,[36] it is assumed that the vessels were usually smaller boats rather than ships.[37] To avoid damaging the keel during transport, hypozomata, thick ropes running from bow to stern, to reduce sagging and hogging of the hull,[38] must have been used. Ship and cargo were presumably pulled by men and animals with ropes, tackles[39] and possibly also capstans.[40]

The scientist Tolley aimed to establish the manpower needed to haul the vessels over the isthmus ridge. Assuming that a trireme soaked with water weighed 38 tons including its trolley, and that a man can exert a force of 300 N over an extended period of time, the pulling teams—depending on the slope and the surface of the cart track—must have numbered between 112 and 142 people, with a combined exertion of force of 33 to 42 kN, or around 3.8 tons weight. Bringing the trolley up to speed may have required as many as 180 men. Assuming a speed of 2 km per hour over an estimated length of 6 kilometres, the transfer from sea to sea would have taken three hours to complete.[41]

Assuming less load and rolling friction, Raepsaet, in contrast, calculates a maximum pulling force of 27 kN, which would have needed a slightly smaller towing crew. Under these circumstances, the use of harnessed oxen—which has been refuted by Tolley on the basis of their relatively diminished pulling capabilities[42]—would have become feasible. However, the necessary expenditure of energy at the Diolkos must be regarded in both scenarios as considerable.[41]

Ancient railway

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According to the British historian of science M. J. T. Lewis, the Diolkos represented a railway, in the basic sense of a prepared track which so guides the vehicles running on it that they cannot leave the track.[3] Measuring between 6 km (4 mi) and 8.5 km (5.3 mi),[43] and being open to all on payment, it constituted even a public railway, a concept which according to Lewis did not reoccur until c. 1800.[5] Also, its average gauge of around 160 cm (5 ft 3 in)[32] is similar to modern standards.

However, a close examination of the excavated tracks may give a different picture. While there is agreement that the grooves in the eastern part were cut deliberately into the stone slabs to guide cart wheels,[44] those in the western section are interpreted by some authors as a result of wear or do not appear at all.[45] On the other hand, the marked cambers of this road section may point at deliberate tracks as well.[32] Generally, varying forms of the grooves can also be explained by the long period of operation of the Diolkos, during which modifications and repairs must have significantly changed the appearance of the trackway.[46]

Modern exploration

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Bank erosion at the western end
 
When the tide comes in, blocks of the Diolkos fall into the sea, one by one

The chief engineer of the Corinth Canal, Béla Gerster, conducted extensive research on the topography of the Isthmus, but did not discover the Diolkos.[47] Remains of the ship trackway were probably first identified by the German archaeologist Habbo Gerhard Lolling in the 1883 Baedeker edition.[48] In 1913, James George Frazer reported in his commentary on Pausanias on traces of an ancient trackway across the Isthmus,[49] while parts of the western quay were discovered by Harold North Fowler in 1932.[48]

Systematic excavations were finally undertaken by the Greek archaeologist Nikolaos Verdelis between 1956 and 1962,[50] and these uncovered a nearly continuous stretch of 800 m (2,600 ft) and traced about 1,100 m (3,600 ft) in all.[27] Even though Verdelis' excavation reports continue to provide the basis for modern interpretations, his premature death prevented full publication, leaving many open questions concerning the exact nature of the structure.[51] Additional investigations in situ, meant to complement Verdelis’ work, were later published by Georges Raepsaet and Walter Werner.[52][53]

Today, erosion caused by ship movements on the nearby Canal has left considerable portions of the Diolkos in a poor state, particularly at its excavated western end. Critics who blame the Greek Ministry of Culture for continued inactivity have launched a petition to save and restore the registered archaeological site.[54][55]

Ancient sources

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The following ancient writers mention the transfer of ships across the Isthmus (in chronological order):[56]

Other ship trackways

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Apart from the Diolkos at Corinth, there is scant literary evidence for two more ship trackways by that name in antiquity, both in Roman Egypt: The physician Oribasius[57] (c. 320–400 AD) records two passages from his 1st century AD colleague Xenocrates, in which the latter casually refers to a diolkos close to the harbor of Alexandria which may have been located at the southern tip of the island of Pharos.[58] Another diolkos is mentioned by Ptolemy (90–168 AD) in his book on geography (IV, 5, 10) as connecting a false mouth of a partly silted up Nile branch with the Mediterranean Sea.[59] Neither Xenocrates nor Ptolemy offers any details on his trackway.

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ Liddell & Scott
  2. ^ Hutchins, R. M: "Thesmophoriazusae", The Great Books of The Western World, N.Y: William Benton, pp. 647f.
  3. ^ a b Lewis 2001, pp. 8 & 15
  4. ^ Verdelis 1957, p. 526; Cook 1979, p. 152; Drijvers 1992, p. 75; Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 256; Lewis 2001, p. 11
  5. ^ a b Lewis 2001, p. 15
  6. ^ Drijvers 1992, p. 75; Lewis 2001, p. 10; Werner 1997, p. 98
  7. ^ MacDonald 1986
  8. ^ Werner 1997, pp. 99 & 112
  9. ^ Cook 1979, p. 152; Drijvers 1992, p. 75; Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 256; Lewis 2001, p. 11; Verdelis 1957, p. 526
  10. ^ Lewis 2001, p. 11
  11. ^ Lewis 2001, p. 11; Cook 1979, p. 152 (fn. 8)
  12. ^ Cook 1979, p. 152 (fn. 7); Werner 1997, p. 114
  13. ^ a b Cook 1979, p. 152 (fn. 7); Lewis 2001, p. 12
  14. ^ Although the name of the Diolkos is not explicitly mentioned in these historical sources, its use on these occasions is generally assumed, as the Diolkos existed earlier and was available later. (Cook 1979, p. 152 (fn. 7); MacDonald 1986, p. 192 (fn. 6))
  15. ^ Thucydides, A History of the Peloponnesian War, 3.15.1
  16. ^ Thucydides, A History of the Peloponnesian War, 8.7–8
  17. ^ Polybius, Histories, 4.19.77–79
  18. ^ Polybius, Histories, 5.101.4
  19. ^ Werner 1997, pp. 113f.
  20. ^ Werner 1997, p. 114
  21. ^ Cook 1979, p. 152; MacDonald 1986, p. 192; Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 235; Werner 1997, p. 112; Lewis 2001, p. 13
  22. ^ Cook 1979, p. 152
  23. ^ Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 256; MacDonald 1986, p. 193; Lewis 2001, p. 14
  24. ^ MacDonald 1986, p. 195
  25. ^ a b c d e f Werner 1997, p. 109
  26. ^ a b Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 246
  27. ^ a b c d e Lewis 2001, p. 10
  28. ^ Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, pp. 237–246
  29. ^ Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 238 (fig. 3)
  30. ^ Lewis 2001, p. 10; Werner 1997, p. 108 (fig. 16)
  31. ^ Werner 1997, p. 106
  32. ^ a b c Lewis 2001, p. 12
  33. ^ Cook 1979, p. 152; MacDonald 1986, p. 195; Werner 1997, p. 111
  34. ^ Lewis 2001, p. 14; Cook 1979, p. 153
  35. ^ Werner 1997, p. 109 (fig. 17)
  36. ^ Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, pp. 259–261
  37. ^ Lewis 2001, p. 14; Drijvers 1992, p. 76
  38. ^ Werner 1997, p. 111
  39. ^ Werner 1997, p. 112
  40. ^ Lewis 2001, pp. 12f.
  41. ^ a b Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, pp. 252f., 257–261
  42. ^ For example, according to Tolley, three pairs of oxen can exert only twice as much pulling force as a single one Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 261.
  43. ^ Lewis 2001, p. 10; Werner 1997, p. 109; Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 246
  44. ^ Lewis 2001, p. 12; Werner 1997, p. 106; Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 243
  45. ^ Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, pp. 237–243; Werner 1997, pp. 103–105
  46. ^ Lewis 2001, p. 13
  47. ^ Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 235
  48. ^ a b Werner 1997, p. 98
  49. ^ Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 236
  50. ^ Verdelis, Nikolaos: "Le diolkos de L'Isthme", Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique, (1957, 1958, 1960, 1961, 1963)
  51. ^ Lewis 2001, p. 10; Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 239
  52. ^ Raepsaet & Tolley 1993
  53. ^ Werner 1997
  54. ^ Greek article of GreekArchitechts.gr mentioning petition site and showing pictures of the deterioration of the Diolkos from 1960 to 2006, retrieved 2010-08-19
  55. ^ "Plans for the Restoration of the Ancient Diolkos Given Go-Ahead". 25 January 2022.
  56. ^ All references from Raepsaet & Tolley 1993, p. 233, save Livy and al-Idrisi (Lewis 2001, p. 18)
  57. ^ Coll. Med II, 58, 54-55 (CMG VI, 1, 1)
  58. ^ Fraser 1961, pp. 134 & 137
  59. ^ Fraser 1961, pp. 134f.

References

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37°56′59.95″N 22°57′40.61″E / 37.9499861°N 22.9612806°E / 37.9499861; 22.9612806