Corinth

Boyd’s Bible Dictionary:

(ornament). Anciently Ephyra; capital of Achaia. Destroyed by Rome, B. C. 146. Rebuilt by Julius Caesar, B. C. 46, as a Roman colony. Paul founded a church there (Acts 18:1; 20:2-3).

Concise Bible Dictionary:

Capital of the province of Achaia. The city visited by Paul was founded by Julius Cæsar about a century after the fall of a former Corinth on the same site. It was a great center of commercial traffic on the route from Rome to the East. It was also rich and very profligate. Paul on his first visit remained there eighteen months (A.D. 52-3), and from thence wrote the two epistles to the Thessalonians. A church was gathered out, to which Paul wrote two epistles. In A.D. 58 he again visited Corinth, staying three months (Acts 20:2-3), during which time he wrote the Epistle to the Romans. The Jews plotted against his life, and he left the city (Acts 18:1,11; Acts 19:1 Cor. 1:2; 2 Cor. 1:1,23; 2 Tim. 4:20). It is now a mean village, called Gortho, with only relics here and there of its former greatness.

Strong’s Dictionary of Greek Words:

Greek:
Κόρινθος
Transliteration:
Korinthos
Phonic:
kor’-in-thos
Meaning:
of uncertain derivation; Corinthus, a city of Greece
KJV Usage:
Corinth

Jackson’s Dictionary of Scripture Proper Names:

satiated

Potts’ Bible Proper Names:

Horn; top of a mountain; ornament:―a city of Greece, Acts 18:1. {Cornu; vertex montis}

Related Books and Articles: