Hesperia Supplement, Volume 55Since its excavation in the 1970s, the East Field at Isthmia has been dismissed as a jumble of poorly built houses, marginal to the sanctuary proper. Except for a few small-scale excavations and a handful of studies, the site and its excavation data have sat largely neglected ever since. Now, following a reanalysis of this legacy data and a survey of the standing remains, this volume presents the first comprehensive study of the East Field’s architectural and spatial development.Using an innovative method to extract stratigraphic data from outmoded and incomplete sources, the authors disentangle the maze of walls into identifiable structures, setting these within a phased narrative connected to the site’s broader history. The results overturn decades of assumptions, revealing substantial structures central to the sanctuary, some possibly corresponding to buildings otherwise known only from inscriptions: the Stoa of Regulus, the Kataluseis of P. Licinius Priscus Iuventianus, and the final site of the Palaimon sanctuary. Additional structures document activity between the 3rd and the 5th centuries CE unattested elsewhere on the site.The East Field at Isthmia offers a radically new understanding of this neglected area of Isthmia and its relation to the sanctuary; along the way, it both encourages archaeologists to revisit long-abandoned excavation data and provides a road map for doing so.
Eric E. Poehler is Professor of Classics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Allison L. C. Emmerson is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Tulane University. Steven J. R. Ellis is Professor of Classics and Roman Archaeology at the University of Cincinnati.
ContentsPreface and AcknowledgmentsList of IllustrationsList of Tables1. Introduction to the East Field2. Approach and Methodology3. Phase 1 (Structures A–C): The Earliest Structures and Priscus’s Initial Building Program4. Phase 2 (Structures D–F): Redevelopment and Priscus’s Later Building Program5. A Stoa and Kataluseis? Reconstructing Structures A and D6. Phase 3 (Structure G): Defining the Space between Structures D and E7. Phase 4 (Structures H–N): Expansion and Maintenance of the Structure E Complex8. Phase 5 (Structures O–Q): Hydraulic Infrastructure and Cultic Activities9. Phase 6 (Structures R–X): Continued Investment in the East Field10. Phase 7 (Structure Y): Demolition in the East Field and Across the Sanctuary11. Phase 8 (Structure Z): Sporadic Postdemolition Activity12. Phase 9 (Structures AA–CC): The Last Known Building Activities13. The East Field and the Isthmian SanctuaryAppendix 1. Priscian Puzzles: The P. Licinius Priscus Iuventianus Steles, by Simon OswaldAppendix 2. StructuresAppendix 3. SurfacesAppendix 4. FeaturesAppendix 5. SuperhorizonsAppendix 6. Basket ConcordanceReferencesIndex