410 PELOPONNESUS. 
APTEMI AOCAP 
OTATEIAIOCCCJN 
EPAPOAHACTOC 
By the side of this temple there was a lath, or 
reservoir, lined with stucco, thirty feet by eight, 
with some lumacheUa columns of the Doric 
order: the foundations and part of the pave- 
ment of the temple yet exist, and these are not 
less than sixty paces in extent : we noticed 
some channels grooved in the marble, for con- 
veying water in different directions. The traces 
of buildings may be observed upon all the 
mountains which surrounded the sacred valley; 
and over all this district their remains are as 
various as their history is indeterminate. Some 
of them seem to have been small sanctuaries, 
like chapels; others appear as baths, foun- 
tains, and aqueducts. The Temple of the Cory- 
ph&an Diana is mentioned by Pausanias ' ; and 
being identified with this ruin, it may serve to 
establish a point of observation for ascertaining 
the edifices described by the same author as in 
its neighbourhood. It was upon the summit of 
(1) '*< 3* T>i **(<*. vtu !(vs, xtvfat*{ riY itftt 'A^r'tfuift, * **) 
TsXi<r(XX Iwtirirttrt It ifftan ftij/t*'. PaKSan. Corinth, c. 28. p. 175 
Lips. 1696. 
