";s:4:"text";s:2925:"The edifice with the partially restored colonnade visible today dates to the 4th century BCE; it is the third temple built at the same place. It is also one of the best-preserved temples in Greece, and it was inscribed as… It was a simple design, consisting of so-called temenos, i.e. Pausanias, a Greek geographer of the 2nd century ce, considered the temple one of the finest in the Peloponnese. Located in the forum (market place) and Facing the northern side of the town, it is the town's most important religious building and has very ancient state of origin. …as the site of the Temple of Apollo Epikourios (Epicurius; “the Helper”), built c. 450–425 bce. by the two legendary architects Trophonios and Agamedes. When was the Temple of Apollo at Corinth? The edifice with the partially restored colonnade visible today dates to the 4th century BCE; it is the third temple built at the same place. Although very little is known about this temple, Rhodes believed that it was an example of one of the earliest tiled roofs in Greece. The stylobate which measures 53.82 X 21.48 m shows some upward curvature. Built around 560 B.C.E., of local oolithic limestone on top of an imposing, rocky hill to the north of Acrocorinth, the Archaic temple was an emblem for … Destroyed by an earthquake in 373 BC, it was rebuilt for a third time in 330 BC. a sacred area, surrounded by a colonnade that was added a century later. 540 B.C. It was built there and was not moved until Corinth was destroyed. The Parthenon is a resplendent marble temple built between 447 and 432 B.C.