The city of Corinth was rebuilt in 29 B.C. by the Roman general and statesman Julius Caesar. After it had been destroyed in 146 B.C. during the Roman conquest of Greece, Caesar established a new Roman colony there, which became a significant administrative and commercial center in the region. The reconstruction was part of Rome's broader strategy to consolidate its control over Greece.
The city-stated burned by Rome is Corinth.
The city was Corinth
Julius Caesar is credited with rebuilding Corinth in BC and making it into a Roman colony. Rome had originally destroyed the old city of Corinth and rebuilt the city for Rome.
146 bc
Corinth, Greece, was destroyed in 146 BC during the Roman conquest of Greece. The city was sacked by the Roman general Lucius Mummius after a decisive victory over the Achaean League. Following its destruction, Corinth remained in ruins for over a century until it was rebuilt by Julius Caesar in 44 BC as a Roman colony.
From the Archaic period of the 8th to 6th centuries BC to 146 BC and the Roman conquest of Greeceafter the Battle of Corinth.
The Greek city state of Argos was just south of the major city of Corinth. It was a member of the Achaean League in 229 BC. Rome conquered it in 146 BC and it is listed by the name of Argus on ancient Roman maps.
If I understand the question correctly it was in 146 BC. The Romans detroyed the city after the siege killing all the males and selling the women and children to slavery.So technically it was not captured but destroyed. Julius Caesar refounded the city in 44 BC.
You are probably thinking of the Greek city of Corinth, which was an independent city-state until 146 BC, when it was destroyed by the Roman army. Corinth was refounded 102 years later by General Julius Caesar, and had a quite diverse population, including, eventually, a significant Christian community. It is to this community that the two epistles to the Corinthians were directed. Since that time, Corinth has been destroyed and refounded multiple times, and is currently the capital of the Greek prefecture of Corinthia. I've added some linked to Wikipedia articles with further details.
The Battle between the Greek city of Corinth and the Roman Republic.
Megara was under attack from former Dorian League allies, principally Corinth, and Athens supported it, defeating two Corinthian attacks using its old men and boys in the absence of its army on other missions.
58 years are between 30 BC and AD 30. The first thing you need to remember is that there is no year 0; the year before AD 1 is 1 BC. So the years between 30 BC and AD 30 are... 29 BC, 28 BC, 27 BC, ..., 2 BC, 1 BC, AD1, AD 2, ..., AD 27, AD 28, AD 29 29 BC through 1 BC is 29 years, and AD 1 through AD 29 is 29 years. 29 years + 29 years = 58 years