In 146 B.C. L. Mummius took away the administration of the Isthmian Games from Corinth and awarded it to nearby Sikyon. However, shortly after its establishment as a Roman colony, the city recovered its Panhellenic festival and hosted it in its urban center for almost a century. The paper discusses how the return of the Isthmian Games provides further evidence against the throughout "Roman nature" of Corinth in its early colonial years. The restoration of the agones prompted a series of cultural operations, such as the resumption of the original pine crown as a prize, with the aim of showing the continuity with Corinth's prestigious legacy and of providing further support to the colony's claim on the Isthmian Games' agonothesia. More...