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Delphi

Delphi (/ˈdɛlf, ˈdɛlfi/;[1] Greek: Δελφοί [ðelˈfi]),[a] in legend previously called Pytho (Πυθώ), in ancient times was a sacred precinct that served as the seat of Pythia, the major oracle who was consulted about important decisions throughout the ancient classical world. The oracle had origins in prehistory and it became international in character and also fostered sentiments of Greek nationality, even though the nation of Greece was centuries away from realization. The ancient Greeks considered the centre of the world to be in Delphi, marked by the stone monument known as the omphalos (navel). The sacred precinct of Ge or Gaia was in the region of Phocis, but its management had been taken away from the Phocians, who were trying to extort money from its visitors, and had been placed in the hands of an amphictyony, or committee of persons chosen mainly from Central Greece. According to the Suda, Delphi took its name from the Delphyne, the she-serpent (drakaina) who lived there and was killed by the god Apollo (in other accounts the serpent was the male serpent (drakon) Python).[5][6]

Delphi
Δελφοί
The Athena temple complex, including the Delphic Tholos, photographed from Route 48 just above it. The background is the Pleistos River Valley. The view is looking upstream.
Delphi
Shown within Greece
LocationPhocis, Greece
Coordinates38°28′56″N 22°30′05″E / 38.4823°N 22.5013°E / 38.4823; 22.5013Coordinates: 38°28′56″N 22°30′05″E / 38.4823°N 22.5013°E / 38.4823; 22.5013
TypeRuins of an ancient sacred precinct
HeightTop of a scarp 500 metres (1,600 ft) maximum off the valley floor
History
CulturesAncient Greece
Site notes
ArchaeologistsFrench School at Athens
OwnershipHellenic Republic
ManagementMinistry of Culture and Sports
Public accessAccessible for a fee
WebsiteE. Partida (2012). "Delphi". Odysseus. Ministry of Culture and Sports, Hellenic Republic.
Official nameArchaeological Site of Delphi
TypeCultural
Criteriai, ii, iii, iv and vi
Designated1987 (12th session)
Reference no.393
RegionEurope
Delphi among the main Greek sanctuaries

The sacred precinct occupies a delineated region on the south-western slope of Mount Parnassus. It is now an extensive archaeological site, and since 1938 a part of Parnassos National Park. Adjacent to the sacred precinct is a small modern town of the same name. The precinct is recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in having had a great influence in the ancient world, as evidenced by the various monuments built there by most of the important ancient Greek city-states, demonstrating their fundamental Hellenic unity.[7]

Names

Delphi shares the same root with the Greek word for womb, δελφύς delphys.

Pytho (Πυθώ) is related to Pythia, the priestess serving as the oracle, and to Python, a serpent or dragon who lived at the site.[8] "Python" is derived from the verb πύθω (pythō),[9] "to rot".[10]

Delphi and the Delphic region

Today Delphi is a municipality of Greece as well as a modern town adjacent to the ancient precinct. The modern town was created by moving its predecessor off the sacred precinct so that the latter could be excavated by the French School of Archaeology working in conjunction with Greek authorities. The two Delphis, old and new, are located on Greek National Road 48 between Amfissa in the west and Livadeia, capital of Voiotia, in the east. The road follows the northern slope of a pass between Mount Parnassus on the north and the mountains of the Desfina Peninsula on the south. The peninsula, triangular in shape, juts into the Gulf of Corinth. The pass is entirely one river valley, that of the river Pleistos, running from east to west, forming a natural boundary across the north of the Desfina Peninsula, and providing an easy route across it.

On the east side the valley joins the north–south valley leading from Davleia to Distomo, both good-sized towns. South of Distomo the valley intersects the Bay of Antikyra, which offers no port at that location. The site is known as Paralia Distomou, "the beach of Distomo." Antikyra, the major port of Phocis, is a little down the coast of the peninsula.

On the west side the valley joins the north–south valley between Amfissa and Itea. The valley dead-ends at Amphissa. This city is more important today because a route to the Aegean side of Greece has been pushed through the mountain passes. These now strategic locations were the scenes of heavy fighting and reprisals during World War II.

On the north side of the valley junction a spur of Parnassus looming over the valley made narrower by it is the site of ancient Krisa, which once was the ruling power of the entire valley system. Both Amphissa and Krissa are mentioned in the Iliad's Catalogue of Ships.[11] It was a Mycenaean stronghold. Archaeological dates of the valley go back to the Early Helladic. Krisa itself is Middle Helladic.[12] These early dates are comparable to the earliest dates at Delphi, suggesting Delphi was appropriated and transformed by Phocians from ancient Krisa. It is believed that the ruins of Kirra, now part of the port of Itea, were the port of Krisa of the same name as it, and that etymologically Kirra comes from Krisa.[13]

Archaeology of the precinct

The end of Delphi

Most cursory accounts of Delphi include a phase they call the end of Delphi. After all, ruins are in evidence, so there must have been a time when the structures they represent were not ruined. Many give the impression that the emperor's sheriff drove up the hill with a bulldozer and a wrecking ball, or a least an army of wreckers, and went back down the hill the same day having levelled the site, and that from then on it remained uninhabited. Although such a sudden event is possible with the equipment of modern times, it did not generally happen that way in ancient times, except in unusual cases, such as the fall of Carthage, when the Romans leveled the city and sowed the bare ground with salt[dubious ] so that nothing would grow there. Even so, the city was rebuilt. Such was never the case for Delphi. It transitioned from phase to phase. There may never have been a time when the site had no inhabitants or structures, and no one was interested in living there. It had the spring and the view.

The ruins now in evidence date from the ancient classical period with some in the late antique period. In order to place them in evidence, the first excavators, the French School of Athens, had to clear away many tons of rubble. But that rubble contained the habitation levels of post-classical settlements, which were sacrificed in favor of the earlier ruins. The lack of this transitional material also contributes to the impression of a sudden ruination, which is false. History portrays Delphi as a very popular site. Once in a century or two it was burned by some interloper, and then promptly rebuilt better than before. After Hellenic society made a transition from pagan to Christian, Delphi remained just as popular as it had been. Still pagan, it often honored the Christian emperors, while they allowed it to stand. Both religions were practiced there side-by-side. Finally, however, use of the oracle fell off to such a degree that it could no longer be maintained. The other aspects went on: the Pythian games, the worship of Apollo in the temple. Regretfully the Christian emperors dealt with all the pagan sites as a loose end. Delphi made a transition to a secular site in which churches were built. Without the oracle, there was not much point in frequenting a high-altitude, out-of-the-way place. The population fell off to a small village.

The place had not ended, however. Archaeology and tourism infused it with a whole new life. It may well be frequented by just as many people as frequented it in classical days. It earns its own revenue. The geologic conditions are just as bad as they were in ancient times: faults, slippery slopes, earthquakes, rockslides, runoff. As at all major archaeological sites, the effort to maintain the ruins rivals the original effort to maintain the structures.

Built on the site that had been revered since prehistoric times, the classical site had flourished because of its popularity. After another change of religion, popularity and frequentation fell off sharply. The oracle could no longer cover operating expenses. After a line of Christian emperors, Julian, reigning 361-363 (not long), rejecting Christianity in favor of Neoplatonism, for which he is called Julian the Apostate, attempted to restore prior religions, Paganism and Judaism. He sent his physician to Delphi to rebuild the Temple of Apollo, and received an oracle for his efforts that "the speaking water has been silenced", which became known as "the last oracle" and is recorded by George Kedrenos. Timothy Gregory suggests the oracle was a request from the Delphic priesthood for imperial aid: the temple had "fallen low" and could not produce an oracle without assistance from Julian. Shortly afterward, an oracle encouraged Julian to invade Persia. There followed a surfeit of oracular activity afterward, especially in the last month of the emperor's life. Despite the earlier oracle, and initial successes, another oracle stated "no Emperor would proceed beyond [Persian capital city] Ctesiphon", and predicted Julian's "apotheosis to Olympos in a fiery chariot"; Gregory points out these oracles were truly the "last" pagan prophecies. Kedrenos notes contemporary Christian discomfort at these oracles after the "last", in claiming the Christian deity "allowed temporary reversion to the old order".[14][b]
Julian's siege of Ctesiphon indeed failed and was followed by his death in battle ten (or twelve) days later. The end of his reign also marked the end of the pagan revival project.

Excavation

 
The polygonal wall, 1902

The site was first briefly excavated in 1880 by Bernard Haussoullier (1852-1926) on behalf of the French School at Athens, of which he was a sometime member. The site was then occupied by the village of Kastri, about 100 houses, 200 people. Kastri ("fort") had been there since the destruction of the place by Theodosius I in 390. He probably left a fort to make sure it was not repopulated, however, the fort became the new village. They were mining the stone for re-use in their own buildings. British and French travelers visiting the site suspected it was ancient Delphi. Before a systematic excavation of the site could be undertaken, the village had to be relocated, but the residents resisted.

The opportunity to relocate the village occurred when it was substantially damaged by an earthquake, with villagers offered a completely new village in exchange for the old site. In 1893, the French Archaeological School removed vast quantities of soil from numerous landslides to reveal both the major buildings and structures of the sanctuary of Apollo and of the temple to Athena, the Athena Pronoia along with thousands of objects, inscriptions, and sculptures.[15]

During the Great Excavation architectural members from a fifth-century Christian basilica, were discovered that date to when Delphi was a bishopric. Other important Late Roman buildings are the Eastern Baths, the house with the peristyle, the Roman Agora, the large cistern usw. At the outskirts of the city late Roman cemeteries were located.

To the southeast of the precinct of Apollo lay the so-called Southeastern Mansion, a building with a 65-meter-long façade, spread over four levels, with four triclinia and private baths. Large storage jars kept the provisions, whereas other pottery vessels and luxury items were discovered in the rooms. Among the finds stands out a tiny leopard made of mother of pearl, possibly of Sassanian origin, on display in the ground floor gallery of the Delphi Archaeological Museum. The mansion dates to the beginning of the fifth century and functioned as a private house until 580, later however it was transformed into a potter workshop.[16] It is only then, in the beginning of the sixth century, that the city seems to decline: its size is reduced and its trade contacts seem to be drastically diminished. Local pottery production is produced in large quantities:[17] it is coarser and made of reddish clay, aiming at satisfying the needs of the inhabitants.

The Sacred Way remained the main street of the settlement, transformed, however, into a street with commercial and industrial use. Around the agora were built workshops as well as the only intra muros early Christian basilica. The domestic area spread mainly in the western part of the settlement. The houses were rather spacious and two large cisterns provided running water to them.[18]

 
Archaeological Museum of Delphi, designed by Alexandros Tombazis

Delphi Archaeological Museum

The Delphi Archaeological Museum is at the foot of the main archaeological complex, on the east side of the village, and on the north side of the main road. The museum houses artifacts associated with ancient Delphi, including the earliest known notation of a melody, the Charioteer of Delphi, Kleobis and Biton, golden treasures discovered beneath the Sacred Way, the Sphinx of Naxos, and fragments of reliefs from the Siphnian Treasury. Immediately adjacent to the exit is the inscription that mentions the Roman proconsul Gallio.

Entries to the museum and to the main complex are separate and chargeable. A reduced rate ticket gets entry to both. There is a small cafe, and a post office by the museum.

Architecture of the precinct

 
Site plan of the upper Sacred Precinct, Delphi. The outer wall that surrounds it is 190 metres (620 ft) long by 135 metres (443 ft) wide and is pierced by nine gates.[19]

Most of the ruins that survive today date from the most intense period of activity at the site in the sixth century BC.[20]

Temple of Apollo

The ruins of the Temple of Apollo that are visible today date from the fourth century BC, and are of a peripteral Doric building. It was erected by Spintharus, Xenodoros, and Agathon on the remains of an earlier temple, dated to the sixth century BC, which had been erected on the site of a seventh-century BC construction attributed in legend to the architects Trophonios and Agamedes.[21]

Ancient tradition accounted for four temples that successively occupied the site before the 548/7 BC fire, following which the Alcmaeonids built a fifth. The poet Pindar celebrated the Alcmaeonids' temple in Pythian 7.8-9 and he also provided details of the third building (Paean 8. 65–75). Other details are given by Pausanias (10.5.9-13) and the Homeric Hymn to Apollo (294 ff.). The first temple was said to have been constructed out of olive branches from Tempe. The second was made by bees out of wax and wings, but was miraculously carried off by a powerful wind and deposited among the Hyperboreans. The third, as described by Pindar, was created by the deities Hephaestus and Athena, but its architectural details included Siren-like figures or "Enchantresses", whose baneful songs eventually provoked the Olympian deities to bury the temple in the earth (according to Pausanias, it was destroyed by earthquake and fire). In Pindar's words (Paean 8.65-75, Bowra translation), addressed to the Muses:

Muses, what was its fashion, shown
By the skill in all arts
Of the hands of Hephaestus and Athena?
Of bronze the walls, and of bronze
Stood the pillars beneath,
But of gold were six Enchantresses
Who sang above the eagle.
But the sons of Cronus
Opened the earth with a thunderbolt
And hid the holiest of all things made.
Away from their children
And wives, when they hung
Their lives on the honey-hearted words.

The fourth temple was said to have been constructed from stone by Trophonius and Agamedes.[22] However, a 2019 theory gives a completely new explanation of the above myth of the four temples of Delphi.[23]

Treasuries

 
The reconstructed Treasury of the Athenians, built to commemorate their victory at the Battle of Marathon

From the entrance of the upper site, continuing up the slope on the Sacred Way almost to the Temple of Apollo, are a large number of votive statues, and numerous so-called treasuries. These were built by many of the Greek city-states to commemorate victories and to thank the oracle for her advice, which was thought to have contributed to those victories. These buildings held the offerings made to Apollo; these were frequently a "tithe" or tenth of the spoils of a battle. The most impressive is the now-restored Athenian Treasury, built to commemorate their victory at the Battle of Marathon in 490 BC.

The Siphnian Treasury was dedicated by the city of Siphnos, whose citizens gave a tithe of the yield from their silver mines until the mines came to an abrupt end when the sea flooded the workings.

One of the largest of the treasuries was that of Argos. Having built it in the late classical period, the Argives took great pride in establishing their place at Delphi amongst the other city-states. Completed in 380 BC, their treasury seems to draw inspiration mostly from the Temple of Hera located in the Argolis. However, recent analysis of the Archaic elements of the treasury suggest that its founding preceded this.

Other identifiable treasuries are those of the Sicyonians, the Boeotians, Massaliots, and the Thebans.

Altar of the Chians

Located in front of the Temple of Apollo, the main altar of the sanctuary was paid for and built by the people of Chios. It is dated to the fifth century BC by the inscription on its cornice. Made entirely of black marble, except for the base and cornice, the altar would have made a striking impression. It was restored in 1920.[15]

Stoa of the Athenians

 
View of the Athenian Treasury; the Stoa of the Athenians on the right

The stoa, or open-sided, covered porch, is placed in an approximately east–west alignment along the base of the polygonal wall retaining the terrace on which the Temple of Apollo sits. There is no archaeological suggestion of a connection to the temple. The stoa opened to the Sacred Way. The nearby presence of the Treasury of the Athenians suggests that this quarter of Delphi was used for Athenian business or politics, as stoas are generally found in market-places.

Although the architecture at Delphi is generally Doric, a plain style, in keeping with the Phocian traditions that were Doric, the Athenians did not prefer the Doric. The stoa was built in their own preferred style, the Ionic order, the capitals of the columns being a sure indicator. In the Ionic order they are floral and ornate, although not so much as the Corinthian, which is in deficit there. The remaining porch structure contains seven fluted columns, unusually carved from single pieces of stone (most columns were constructed from a series of discs joined). The inscription on the stylobate indicates that it was built by the Athenians after their naval victory over the Persians in 478 BC, to house their war trophies. At that time the Athenians and the Spartans were on the same side.

Sibyl rock

The Sibyl rock is a pulpit-like outcrop of rock between the Athenian Treasury and the Stoa of the Athenians upon the Sacred Way that leads up to the temple of Apollo in the archaeological area of Delphi. The rock is claimed to be the location from which an prehistoric Sibyl pre-dating the Pythia of Apollo sat to deliver her prophecies. Other suggestions are that the Pythia might have stood there, or an acolyte whose function was to deliver the final prophecy. The rock seems ideal for public speaking.

Theatre

 
The theatre at Delphi (as viewed near the top seats)

The ancient theatre at Delphi was built farther up the hill from the Temple of Apollo giving spectators a view of the entire sanctuary and the valley below.[24] It was originally built in the fourth century BC, but was remodeled on several occasions, particularly in 160/159 B.C. at the expenses of king Eumenes II of Pergamon and, in 67 A.D., on the occasion of emperor Nero's visit.[25]

The koilon (cavea) leans against the natural slope of the mountain whereas its eastern part overrides a little torrent that led the water of the fountain Cassotis right underneath the temple of Apollo. The orchestra was initially a full circle with a diameter measuring seven meters. The rectangular scene building ended up in two arched openings, of which the foundations are preserved today. Access to the theatre was possible through the parodoi, i.e. the side corridors. On the support walls of the parodoi are engraved large numbers of manumission inscriptions recording fictitious sales of the slaves to the deity. The koilon was divided horizontally in two zones via a corridor called diazoma. The lower zone had 27 rows of seats and the upper one only eight. Six radially arranged stairs divided the lower part of the koilon in seven tiers. The theatre could accommodate approximately 4,500 spectators.[26]

On the occasion of Nero's visit to Greece in 67 A.D. various alterations took place. The orchestra was paved and delimited by a parapet made of stone. The proscenium was replaced by a low pedestal, the pulpitum; its façade was decorated in relief with scenes from myths about Hercules. Further repairs and transformations took place in the second century A.D. Pausanias mentions that these were carried out under the auspices of Herod Atticus. In antiquity, the theatre was used for the vocal and musical contests that formed part of the programme of the Pythian Games in the late Hellenistic and Roman period.[27] The theatre was abandoned when the sanctuary declined in Late Antiquity. After its excavation and initial restoration it hosted theatrical performances during the Delphic Festivals organized by A. Sikelianos and his wife, Eva Palmer, in 1927 and in 1930. It has recently been restored again as the serious landslides posed a grave threat for its stability for decades.[28][29]

Tholos

 
The Tholos at the base of Mount Parnassus: 3 of 20 Doric columns
 
Athena Pronaia Sanctuary at Delphi

The tholos at the sanctuary of Athena Pronaea (Ἀθηνᾶ Προναία, "Athena of forethought") is a circular building that was constructed between 380 and 360 BC. It consisted of 20 Doric columns arranged with an exterior diameter of 14.76 meters, with 10 Corinthian columns in the interior.

The Tholos is located approximately a half a mile (800 m) from the main ruins at Delphi (at 38°28′49″N 22°30′28″E / 38.48016°N 22.50789°E / 38.48016; 22.50789). Three of the Doric columns have been restored, making it the most popular site at Delphi for tourists to take photographs.

The architect of the "vaulted temple at Delphi" is named by Vitruvius, in De architectura Book VII, as Theodorus Phoceus (not Theodorus of Samos, whom Vitruvius names separately).[30]

Gymnasium

 

The gymnasium, which is half a mile away from the main sanctuary, was a series of buildings used by the youth of Delphi. The building consisted of two levels: a stoa on the upper level providing open space, and a palaestra, pool, and baths on lower floor. These pools and baths were said to have magical powers, and imparted the ability to communicate directly to Apollo.[15]

Stadium

 
The mountain-top stadium at Delphi

The stadium is located farther up the hill, beyond the via sacra and the theatre. It was built in the fifth century BC, but was altered in later centuries. The last major remodelling took place in the second century AD under the patronage of Herodes Atticus when the stone seating was built and an (arched) entrance created. It could seat 6500 spectators and the track was 177 metres long and 25.5 metres wide.[31]

Hippodrome

It was at the Pythian Games that prominent political leaders, such as Cleisthenes, tyrant of Sikyon, and Hieron, tyrant of Syracuse, competed with their chariots. The hippodrome where these events took place was referred to by Pindar,[32] and this monument was sought by archaeologists for over two centuries.

Traces of it have recently been found at Gonia in the plain of Krisa in the place where the original stadium had been sited.[33]

Polygonal wall

 
Section of polygonal wall at Delphi, behind a pillar from the Athenian Stoa

A retaining wall was built to support the terrace housing the construction of the second temple of Apollo in 548 BC. Its name is taken from the polygonal masonry of which it is constructed. At a later date, from 200 BC onwards, the stones were inscribed with the manumission (libration) contracts of slaves who were consecrated to Apollo. Approximately a thousand manumissions are recorded on the wall.[34]

Castalian spring

The sacred spring of Delphi lies in the ravine of the Phaedriades. The preserved remains of two monumental fountains that received the water from the spring date to the Archaic period and the Roman, with the latter cut into the rock.

 
The Charioteer of Delphi, 478 or 474 BC, Delphi Museum

Athletic statues

Delphi is famous for its many preserved athletic statues. It is known that Olympia originally housed far more of these statues, but time brought ruin to many of them, leaving Delphi as the main site of athletic statues.[35] Kleobis and Biton, two brothers renowned for their strength, are modeled in two of the earliest known athletic statues at Delphi. The statues commemorate their feat of pulling their mother's cart several miles to the Sanctuary of Hera in the absence of oxen. The neighbors were most impressed and their mother asked Hera to grant them the greatest gift. When they entered Hera's temple, they fell into a slumber and never woke, dying at the height of their admiration, the perfect gift.[35]

The Charioteer of Delphi is another ancient relic that has withstood the centuries. It is one of the best known statues from antiquity. The charioteer has lost many features, including his chariot and his left arm, but he stands as a tribute to athletic art of antiquity.[35]

Myths regarding the origin of the precinct

 
Vulva of the Earth, Ge or Gaia, with the two Phaedriades above resembling her breasts. In this drawing the village of Castro still occupies the site. The footprint of the modern road is in the foreground. The village was thus entirely on the upper site. Below the road is the Marmoria, or "marble quarry," where the villagers mined structural stone. The picture below shows the site after the removal of the village.

A myth is a story based on belief or legends rather than known fact. Ancient Greek culture used them frequently in many different contexts. They are only known to moderns through mention in ancient Greek writings. A writer typically had access to writings at a library or private archive, unless wealthy enough to have personal copies made. All books were hand-written. Authors referred to other authors whose books they had before them, or had taken notes from. Often the source of the story was not identified, but even if it was, the source may have taken it from some other book. Sometimes authors wrote down myths related to them orally.

It is thus not possible to date myths. They could have come from any prior time. Often the date of the book relating the myth cannot be determined within centuries. A myth cannot with any certainty be attributed to any century, although the written source may be. Scholars are not entirely without dating methods, however. The content of the myth may resemble or imply circumstances of known or probable provenience. The Iliad, for example, most likely relates myths passed down from the Trojan War, a known Late Bronze Age event.

The Greeks were aided and abetted in their myth-making by the oracles in which they typically devoutly believed. When asked a question, she never gave a direct answer, but spoke in allegories with "hidden meanings" and "ambiguities," said Plutarch, priest of Apollo and historian.[36] It was then incumbent on the inquiring party to interpret them. As the prophecy was regarded as the true word of divinity, the actual meaning, if it could be known, must be historical truth. Believing this principle to be true, many of the best historians spent time trying to interpret oracular myths as actual circumstances.

Some Temple of Apollo appears in the Homeric Literature. In the Iliad, Achilles would not accept Agamemnon's peace offering even if it included all the wealth in the "stone floor" of "rocky Pytho" (I 404). In the Odyssey (θ 79) Agamemnon crosses a "stone floor" to receive a prophecy from Apollo in Pytho, the first known of proto-history.[37] Hesiod also refers to Pytho "in the hollows of Parnassus" (Theogony 498). These references imply that the earliest noted date of the oracle's existence is the eighth century BC, the probable date of composition of the Homeric works. Earlier times of existence cannot be excluded if the written poems are adaptations of earlier oral ones.

Beyond these proto-historic tidbits[c] the main myths of Delphi are given in three literary loci.[38] H. W. Parke, the Delphi scholar, complained that they are self-contradictory,[d] thus unconsciously falling into the Plutarchian epistemology, that they reflect some common, objective historic reality against which the accounts can be compared. Missing is the reality, nor can it be assumed ever to have existed. Parke asserts that there is no Apollo, no Zeus, no Hera, and certainly never was a great, serpent-like monster, and that the myths are pure Plutarchian figures of speech, meant to be aetiologies of some oracular tradition.

Homeric Hymn 3, "To Apollo", is the oldest of the three loci, dating to the seventh century BC (estimate).[e] Apollo travels about after his birth on Delos seeking a place for an oracle. He is advised by Telephus to choose Crissa "below the glade of Parnassus," which he does, and has a temple built. Killing the serpent that guards the spring. Subsequently, some Cretans from Knossos sail up on a mission to reconnoitre Pylos. Changing into a dolphin, Apollo casts himself on deck. The Cretans do not dare to remove him but sail on. Apollo guides the ship around Greece, ending back at Crisa, where the ship grounds. Apollo enters his shrine with the Cretans to be its priests, worshipping him as Delphineus, "of the dolphin."

Zeus, a Classical deity, reportedly determined the site of Delphi when he sought to find the centre of his "Grandmother Earth" (Gaia). He sent two eagles flying from the eastern and western extremities, and the path of the eagles crossed over Delphi where the omphalos, or navel of Gaia was found.[39][23]

According to Aeschylus in the prologue of the Eumenides, the oracle had origins in prehistoric times and the worship of Gaia, a view echoed by H. W. Parke, who described the evolution of beliefs associated with the site. He established that the prehistoric foundation of the oracle is described by three early writers: the author of the Homeric Hymn to Apollo, Aeschylus in the prologue to the Eumenides, and Euripides in a chorus in the Iphigeneia in Tauris. Parke goes on to say, "This version [Euripides] evidently reproduces in a sophisticated form the primitive tradition which Aeschylus for his own purposes had been at pains to contradict: the belief that Apollo came to Delphi as an invader and appropriated for himself a previously existing oracle of Earth. The slaying of the serpent is the act of conquest which secures his possession; not as in the Homeric Hymn, a merely secondary work of improvement on the site. Another difference is also noticeable. The Homeric Hymn, as we saw, implied that the method of prophecy used there was similar to that of Dodona: both Aeschylus and Euripides, writing in the fifth century, attribute to primeval times the same methods as used at Delphi in their own day. So much is implied by their allusions to tripods and prophetic seats... [he continues on p. 6] ...Another very archaic feature at Delphi also confirms the ancient associations of the place with the Earth goddess. This was the Omphalos, an egg-shaped stone which was situated in the innermost sanctuary of the temple in historic times. Classical legend asserted that it marked the 'navel' (Omphalos) or center of the Earth and explained that this spot was determined by Zeus who had released two eagles to fly from opposite sides of the earth and that they had met exactly over this place". On p. 7 he writes further, "So Delphi was originally devoted to the worship of the Earth goddess whom the Greeks called Ge, or Gaia. Themis, who is associated with her in tradition as her daughter and partner or successor, is really another manifestation of the same deity: an identity that Aeschylus recognized in another context. The worship of these two, as one or distinguished, was displaced by the introduction of Apollo. His origin has been the subject of much learned controversy: it is sufficient for our purpose to take him as the Homeric Hymn represents him – a northern intruder – and his arrival must have occurred in the dark interval between Mycenaean and Hellenic times. His conflict with Ge for the possession of the cult site was represented under the legend of his slaying the serpent.[40]

One tale of the sanctuary's discovery states that a goatherd, who grazed his flocks on Parnassus, one day observed his goats playing with great agility upon nearing a chasm in the rock; the goatherd noticing this held his head over the chasm causing the fumes to go to his brain; throwing him into a strange trance.[41]

The Homeric Hymn to Delphic Apollo recalled that the ancient name of this site had been Krisa.[42]

Others relate that the site was named Pytho (Πυθώ) and that Pythia, the priestess serving as the oracle, was chosen from their ranks by the priestesses who officiated at the temple. Apollo was said to have slain Python, a drako (a male serpent or a dragon) who lived there and protected the navel of the Earth.[8] "Python" (derived from the verb πύθω (pythō),[9] "to rot") is claimed by some to be the original name of the site in recognition of Python that Apollo defeated.[10]

The name Delphi comes from the same root as δελφύς delphys, "womb" and may indicate archaic veneration of Gaia at the site. Several other scholars discuss the likely prehistoric beliefs associated with the site.[f][g]

Apollo is connected with the site by his epithet Δελφίνιος Delphinios, "the Delphinian". The epithet is connected with dolphins (Greek δελφίς,-ῖνος) in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo (line 400), recounting the legend of how Apollo first came to Delphi in the shape of a dolphin, carrying Cretan priests on his back. The Homeric name of the oracle is Pytho (Πυθώ).[45] Another legend held that Apollo walked to Delphi from the north and stopped at Tempe, a city in Thessaly, to pick laurel (also known as bay tree) which he considered to be a sacred plant. In commemoration of this legend, the winners at the Pythian Games received a wreath of laurel picked in the temple.

Oracle of Delphi

The prophetic process

 
Coin (obol) struck at Delphi, 480 BC, obverse: Short tripod, reverse: Pellet within circle (omphalos or phiale)

Perhaps Delphi is best known for its oracle, the Pythia, or sibyl, the priestess prophesying from the tripod in the sunken adyton of the Temple of Apollo. The Pythia was known as a spokesperson for Apollo. She was a woman of blameless life chosen from the peasants of the area. Alone in an enclosed inner sanctum (Ancient Greek adyton – "do not enter") she sat on a tripod seat over an opening in the earth (the "chasm"). According to legend, when Apollo slew Python its body fell into this fissure and fumes arose from its decomposing body. Intoxicated by the vapors, the sibyl would fall into a trance, allowing Apollo to possess her spirit. In this state she prophesied. The oracle could not be consulted during the winter months, for this was traditionally the time when Apollo would live among the Hyperboreans. Dionysus would inhabit the temple during his absence.[46] Of note, release of fumes is limited in colder weather.

The time to consult Pythia for an oracle during the year was determined from astronomical and geological grounds related to the constellations of Lyra and Cygnus.[47] Similar practice was followed in other Apollo oracles too.[48]

Hydrocarbon vapors emitted from the chasm. While in a trance the Pythia "raved" – probably a form of ecstatic speech – and her ravings were "translated" by the priests of the temple into elegant hexameters. It has been speculated that the ancient writers, including Plutarch who had worked as a priest at Delphi, were correct in attributing the oracular effects to the sweet-smelling pneuma (Ancient Greek for breath, wind, or vapor) escaping from the chasm in the rock. That exhalation could have been high in the known anaesthetic and sweet-smelling ethylene or other hydrocarbons such as ethane known to produce violent trances. Although, given the limestone geology, this theory remains debatable, the authors put up a detailed answer to their critics.[49][50][51][52][53]

Ancient sources describe the priestess using “laurel” to inspire her prophecies. Several alternative plant candidates have been suggested including Cannabis, Hyoscyamus, Rhododendron, and Oleander. Harissis claims that a review of contemporary toxicological literature indicates that oleander causes symptoms similar to those shown by the Pythia, and his study of ancient texts shows that oleander was often included under the term "laurel". The Pythia may have chewed oleander leaves and inhaled their smoke prior to her oracular pronouncements and sometimes dying from the toxicity. The toxic substances of oleander resulted in symptoms similar to those of epilepsy, the “sacred disease”, which may have been seen as the possession of the Pythia by the spirit of Apollo.[54]

 
Fresco of Delphic sibyl painted by Michaelangelo at the Sistine Chapel

Influence, devastations and a temporary revival

The Delphic oracle exerted considerable influence throughout the Greek world, and she was consulted before all major undertakings including wars and the founding of colonies.[h] She also was respected by the Greek-influenced countries around the periphery of the Greek world, such as Lydia, Caria, and even Egypt.

The oracle was also known to the early Romans. Rome's seventh and last king, Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, after witnessing a snake near his palace, sent a delegation including two of his sons to consult the oracle.[56]

In 278 BC, a Thracian (Celtic) tribe raided Delphi, burned the temple, plundered the sanctuary and stole the "unquenchable fire" from the altar. During the raid, part of the temple roof collapsed.[57] The same year, the temple was severely damaged by an earthquake, thus it fell into decay and the surrounding area became impoverished. The sparse local population led to difficulties in filling the posts required. The oracle's credibility waned due to doubtful predictions.[58]

The oracle flourished again in the second century AD, during the rule of emperor Hadrian, who is believed to have visited the oracle twice and offered complete autonomy to the city.[57] By the 4th century, Delphi had acquired the status of a city.[59]

Constantine the Great looted several monuments in Eastern Mediterranean, including Delphi, to decorate his new capital, Constantinople. One of those famous items was the bronze column of Plataea (The Serpent Column; Ancient Greek: Τρικάρηνος Ὄφις, Three-headed Serpent; Turkish: Yılanlı Sütun, Serpentine Column) from the sanctuary (dated 479 BC), relocated there from Delphi in AD 324, which can still be seen today standing destroyed at a square of Istanbul (where once upon a time was the Hippodrome of Constantinople, built by Constantine; Ottoman Turkish: Atmeydanı "Horse Square") [60] with part of one of its heads kept in the Istanbul Archaeology Museums (İstanbul Arkeoloji Müzeleri).

Despite the rise of Christianity across the Roman Empire, the oracle remained a religious center throughout the fourth century, and the Pythian Games continued to be held at least until 424 AD;[59] however, the decline continued. The attempt of Emperor Julian to revive polytheism did not survive his reign.[57] Excavations have revealed a large three-aisled basilica in the city, as well as traces of a church building in the sanctuary's gymnasium.[59] The site was abandoned in the sixth or seventh centuries, although a single bishop of Delphi is attested in an episcopal list of the late eighth and early ninth centuries.[59]

Religious significance of the oracle

 
Ruins of the ancient temple of Apollo at Delphi, overlooking the valley of Phocis

Delphi became the site of a major temple to Phoebus Apollo, as well as the Pythian Games and the prehistoric oracle. Even in Roman times, hundreds of votive statues remained, described by Pliny the Younger and seen by Pausanias. Carved into the temple were three phrases: γνῶθι σεαυτόν (gnōthi seautón = "know thyself") and μηδὲν ἄγαν (mēdén ágan = "nothing in excess"), and Ἑγγύα πάρα δ'ἄτη (engýa pára d'atē = "make a pledge and mischief is nigh"),[61] In antiquity, the origin of these phrases was attributed to one or more of the Seven Sages of Greece by authors such as Plato[62] and Pausanias.[63] Additionally, according to Plutarch's essay on the meaning of the "E at Delphi"—the only literary source for the inscription—there was also inscribed at the temple a large letter E.[64] Among other things epsilon signifies the number 5. However, ancient as well as modern scholars have doubted the legitimacy of such inscriptions.[65] According to one pair of scholars, "The actual authorship of the three maxims set up on the Delphian temple may be left uncertain. Most likely they were popular proverbs, which tended later to be attributed to particular sages."[66]

According to the Homeric hymn to the Pythian Apollo, Apollo shot his first arrow as an infant that effectively slew the serpent Pytho, the son of Gaia, who guarded the spot. To atone the murder of Gaia's son, Apollo was forced to fly and spend eight years in menial service before he could return forgiven. A festival, the Septeria, was held every year, at which the whole story was represented: the slaying of the serpent, and the flight, atonement, and return of the god.[67]

The Pythian Games took place every four years to commemorate Apollo's victory.[67] Another regular Delphi festival was the "Theophania" (Θεοφάνεια), an annual festival in spring celebrating the return of Apollo from his winter quarters in Hyperborea. The culmination of the festival was a display of an image of the deities, usually hidden in the sanctuary, to worshippers.[68]

The theoxenia was held each summer, centred on a feast for "gods and ambassadors from other states". Myths indicate that Apollo killed the chthonic serpent Python guarding the Castalian Spring and named his priestess Pythia after her. Python, who had been sent by Hera, had attempted to prevent Leto, while she was pregnant with Apollo and Artemis, from giving birth.[69]

The spring at the site flowed toward the temple but disappeared beneath, creating a cleft which emitted chemical vapors that purportedly caused the oracle at Delphi to reveal her prophecies. Apollo killed Python, but had to be punished for it, since he was a child of Gaia. The shrine dedicated to Apollo was originally dedicated to Gaia and shared with Poseidon.[67] The name Pythia remained as the title of the Delphic oracle.

Erwin Rohde wrote that the Python was an earth spirit, who was conquered by Apollo, and buried under the omphalos, and that it is a case of one deity setting up a temple on the grave of another.[70] Another view holds that Apollo was a fairly recent addition to the Greek pantheon coming originally from Lydia.[citation needed] The Etruscans coming from northern Anatolia also worshipped Apollo,[71] and it may be that he was originally identical with Mesopotamian Aplu, an Akkadian title meaning "son", originally given to the plague God Nergal, son of Enlil.[citation needed] Apollo Smintheus (Greek Απόλλων Σμινθεύς), the mouse killer [72] who eliminates mice, a primary cause of disease, hence he promotes preventive medicine.

History

Occupation of the site at Delphi can be traced back to the Neolithic period with extensive occupation and use beginning in the Mycenaean period (1600–1100 BC). In Mycenaean times Krissa was a major Greek land and sea power, perhaps one of the first in Greece, if the Early Helladic date of Kirra is to be believed.[73] The ancient sources indicate that the previous name of the Gulf of Corinth was the "Krisaean Gulf."[74] Like Krisa, Corinth was a Dorian state, and Gulf of Corinth was a Dorian lake, so to speak, especially since the migration of Dorians into the Peloponnesus starting about 1000 BC. Krisa's power was broken finally by the recovered Aeolic and Attic-Ionic speaking states of southern Greece over the issue of access to Delphi. Control of it was assumed by the Amphictyonic League, an organization of states with an interest in Delphi, in the early Classical period. Krisa was destroyed for its arrogance. The gulf was given Corinth's name. Corinth by then was similar to the Ionic states: ornate and innovative, not resembling the spartan style of the Doric.

Ancient Delphi

Earlier myths[75][23] include traditions that Pythia, or the Delphic oracle, already was the site of an important oracle in the pre-classical Greek world (as early as 1400 BC) and, rededicated from about 800 BC, when it served as the major site during classical times for the worship of the god Apollo.

 
Speculative illustration of ancient Delphi by French architect Albert Tournaire

Delphi was since ancient times a place of worship for Gaia, the mother goddess connected with fertility. The town started to gain pan-Hellenic relevance as both a shrine and an oracle in the seventh century BC. Initially under the control of Phocaean settlers based in nearby Kirra (currently Itea), Delphi was reclaimed by the Athenians during the First Sacred War (597–585 BC). The conflict resulted in the consolidation of the Amphictyonic League, which had both a military and a religious function revolving around the protection of the Temple of Apollo. This shrine was destroyed by fire in 548 BC and then fell under the control of the Alcmaeonids who were banned from Athens. In 449–448 BC, the Second Sacred War (fought in the wider context of the First Peloponnesian War between the Peloponnesian League led by Sparta and the Delian-Attic League led by Athens) resulted in the Phocians gaining control of Delphi and the management of the Pythian Games.

In 356 BC, the Phocians under Philomelos captured and sacked Delphi, leading to the Third Sacred War (356–346 BC), which ended with the defeat of the former and the rise of Macedon under the reign of Philip II. This led to the Fourth Sacred War (339 BC), which culminated in the Battle of Chaeronea (338 BC) and the establishment of Macedonian rule over Greece.

In Delphi, Macedonian rule was superseded by the Aetolians in 279 BC, when a Gallic invasion was repelled, and by the Romans in 191 BC. The site was sacked by Lucius Cornelius Sulla in 86 BC, during the Mithridatic Wars, and by Nero in 66 AD. Although subsequent Roman emperors of the Flavian dynasty contributed toward to the restoration of the site, it gradually lost importance. In the course of the third century mystery cults became more popular than the traditional Greek pantheon.

Christianity, which started as yet one more mystery cult, soon gained ground, and this eventually resulted in the persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire. The anti-pagan legislation of the Flavian dynasty deprived ancient sanctuaries of their assets.[citation needed] The emperor Julian attempted to reverse this religious climate, yet his "pagan revival" was particularly short-lived. When the doctor Oreibasius visited the oracle of Delphi, in order to question the fate of paganism, he received a pessimistic answer:

Εἴπατε τῷ βασιλεῖ, χαμαὶ πέσε δαίδαλος αὐλά,

οὐκέτι Φοῖβος ἔχει καλύβην, οὐ μάντιδα δάφνην,

οὐ παγὰν λαλέουσαν, ἀπέσβετο καὶ λάλον ὕδωρ.

[Tell the king that the flute has fallen to the ground. Phoebus does not have a home any more, neither an oracular laurel, nor a speaking fountain, because the talking water has dried out.]

It was shut down during the persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire by Theodosius I in 381 AD.[76]

Amphictyonic Council

The Amphictyonic Council was a council of representatives from six Greek tribes who controlled Delphi and also the quadrennial Pythian Games. They met biannually and came from Thessaly and central Greece. Over time, the town of Delphi gained more control of itself and the council lost much of its influence.

The sacred precinct in the Iron Age

 
Section of the frieze from the Treasury of the Siphnians, now in the museum

Excavation at Delphi, which was a post-Mycenaean settlement of the late ninth century, has uncovered artifacts increasing steadily in volume beginning with the last quarter of the eighth century BC. Pottery and bronze as well as tripod dedications continue in a steady stream, in contrast to Olympia. Neither the range of objects nor the presence of prestigious dedications proves that Delphi was a focus of attention for a wide range of worshippers, but the large quantity of valuable goods, found in no other mainland sanctuary, encourages that view.

Apollo's sacred precinct in Delphi was a Panhellenic Sanctuary, where every four years, starting in 586 BC[77] athletes from all over the Greek world competed in the Pythian Games, one of the four Panhellenic Games, precursors of the Modern Olympics. The victors at Delphi were presented with a laurel crown (stephanos) that was ceremonially cut from a tree by a boy who re-enacted the slaying of the Python.[77] (These competitions are also called stephantic games, after the crown.) Delphi was set apart from the other games sites because it hosted the mousikos agon, musical competitions.[10]

These Pythian Games rank second among the four stephantic games chronologically and in importance.[77] These games, however, were different from the games at Olympia in that they were not of such vast importance to the city of Delphi as the games at Olympia were to the area surrounding Olympia. Delphi would have been a renowned city regardless of whether it hosted these games; it had other attractions that led to it being labeled the "omphalos" (navel) of the earth, in other words, the centre of the world.[77][78]

 
Cyriacus of Ancona, first Westerner to describe the remains in Delphi in 1436
 
The Society of Dilettanti organized a study expedition to Delphi in 1766

In the inner hestia (hearth) of the Temple of Apollo, an eternal flame burned. After the battle of Plataea, the Greek cities extinguished their fires and brought new fire from the hearth of Greece, at Delphi; in the foundation stories of several Greek colonies, the founding colonists were first dedicated at Delphi.[79]

Abandonment and rediscovery

The Ottomans finalized their domination over Phocis and Delphi in about 1410 AD. Delphi itself remained almost uninhabited for centuries. It seems that one of the first buildings of the early modern era was the monastery of the Dormition of Mary or of Panagia (the Mother of God) built above the ancient gymnasium at Delphi. It must have been toward the end of the fifteenth or in the sixteenth century that a settlement started forming there, which eventually ended up forming the village of Kastri.

Ottoman Delphi gradually began to be investigated. The first Westerner to describe the remains in Delphi was Cyriacus of Ancona, a fifteenth-century merchant turned diplomat and antiquarian, considered the founding father of modern classical archeology.[80] He visited Delphi in March 1436 and remained there for six days. He recorded all the visible archaeological remains based on Pausanias for identification. He described the stadium and the theatre at that date as well as some freestanding pieces of sculpture. He also recorded several inscriptions, most of which are now lost. His identifications, however, were not always correct: for example he described a round building he saw as the temple of Apollo while this was simply the base of the Argives' ex-voto. A severe earthquake in 1500 caused much damage.

In 1766, an English expedition funded by the Society of Dilettanti included the Oxford epigraphist Richard Chandler, the architect Nicholas Revett, and the painter William Pars. Their studies were published in 1769 under the title Ionian Antiquities,[81] followed by a collection of inscriptions,[82] and two travel books, one about Asia Minor (1775),[83] and one about Greece (1776).[84] Apart from the antiquities, they also related some vivid descriptions of daily life in Kastri, such as the crude behaviour of the Turco-Albanians who guarded the mountain passes.

In 1805 Edward Dodwell visited Delphi, accompanied by the painter Simone Pomardi.[85] Lord Byron visited in 1809, accompanied by his friend John Cam Hobhouse:

Yet there I've wandered by the vaulted rill;
Yes! Sighed o'er Delphi's long deserted shrine,
where, save that feeble fountain, all is still.

He carved his name on the same column in the gymnasium as Lord Aberdeen, later Prime Minister, who had visited a few years before. Proper excavation did not start until the late nineteenth century (see "Excavations" section) after the village had moved.

Delphi in later art

 
Nocolas' Gerbel' fanciful Delphic castle

From the sixteenth century onward, woodcuts of Delphi began to appear in printed maps and books. The earliest depictions of Delphi were totally imaginary; for example, those created by Nikolaus Gerbel, who published in 1545 a text based on the map of Greece by N. Sofianos. The ancient sanctuary was depicted as a fortified city.[86]

 
View of Delphi with Sacrificial Procession by Claude Lorrain

The first travelers with archaeological interests, apart from the precursor Cyriacus of Ancona, were the British George Wheler and the French Jacob Spon, who visited Greece in a joint expedition in 1675–1676. They published their impressions separately. In Wheler's "Journey into Greece", published in 1682, a sketch of the region of Delphi appeared, where the settlement of Kastri and some ruins were depicted. The illustrations in Spon's publication "Voyage d'Italie, de Dalmatie, de Grèce et du Levant, 1678" are considered original and groundbreaking.

Travelers continued to visit Delphi throughout the nineteenth century and published their books which contained diaries, sketches, and views of the site, as well as pictures of coins. The illustrations often reflected the spirit of romanticism, as evident by the works of Otto Magnus von Stackelberg, where, apart from the landscapes (La Grèce. Vues pittoresques et topographiques, Paris 1834) are depicted also human types (Costumes et usages des peuples de la Grèce moderne dessinés sur les lieux, Paris 1828). The philhellene painter W. Williams has comprised the landscape of Delphi in his themes (1829). Influential personalities such as F.Ch.-H.-L. Pouqueville, W.M. Leake, Chr. Wordsworth and Lord Byron are amongst the most important visitors of Delphi.

 
Delphi by Edward Lear features the Phaedriades

After the foundation of the modern Greek state, the press became also interested in these travelers. Thus "Ephemeris" writes (17 March 1889): In the Revues des Deux Mondes Paul Lefaivre published his memoirs from an excursion to Delphi. The French author relates in a charming style his adventures on the road, praising particularly the ability of an old woman to put back in place the dislocated arm of one of his foreign traveling companions, who had fallen off the horse. "In Arachova the Greek type is preserved intact. The men are rather athletes than farmers, built for running and wrestling, particularly elegant and slender under their mountain gear." Only briefly does he refer to the antiquities of Delphi, but he refers to a pelasgian wall 80 meters long, "on which innumerable inscriptions are carved, decrees, conventions, manumissions."[citation needed]

 
Itea from Delphi (1925) by Willoughby Vera - Itea is a town located in Greece

Gradually the first travelling guides appeared. The revolutionary "pocket" books invented by Karl Baedeker, accompanied by maps useful for visiting archaeological sites such as Delphi (1894) and the informed plans, the guides became practical and popular. The photographic lens revolutionized the way of depicting the landscape and the antiquities, particularly from 1893 onward, when the systematic excavations of the French Archaeological School started. However, artists such as Vera Willoughby, continued to be inspired by the landscape.[citation needed]

Delphic themes inspired several graphic artists. Besides the landscape, Pythia and Sibylla become illustration subjects even on Tarot cards.[87] A famous example constitutes Michelangelo's Delphic Sibyl (1509),[88][89][90] the nineteenth-century German engraving, Oracle of Apollo at Delphi, as well as the recent ink on paper drawing, "The Oracle of Delphi" (2013) by M. Lind.[91] Modern artists are inspired also by the Delphic Maxims. Examples of such works are displayed in the "Sculpture park of the European Cultural Center of Delphi" and in exhibitions taking place at the Archaeological Museum of Delphi.[citation needed]

Delphi in later literature

Delphi inspired literature as well. In 1814 W. Haygarth, friend of Lord Byron, refers to Delphi in his work "Greece, a Poem". In 1888 Charles Marie René Leconte de Lisle published his lyric drama L’Apollonide, accompanied by music by Franz Servais. More recent French authors used Delphi as a source of inspiration such as Yves Bonnefoy (Delphes du second jour) or Jean Sullivan (nickname of Joseph Lemarchand) in L'Obsession de Delphes (1967), but also Rob MacGregor's Indiana Jones and the Peril at Delphi (1991).

The presence of Delphi in Greek literature is very intense. Poets such as Kostis Palamas (The Delphic Hymn, 1894), Kostas Karyotakis (Delphic festival, 1927), Nikephoros Vrettakos (return from Delphi, 1957), Yannis Ritsos (Delphi, 1961–62) and Kiki Dimoula (Gas omphalos and Appropriate terrain 1988), to mention only the most renowned ones. Angelos Sikelianos wrote The Dedication (of the Delphic speech) (1927), the Delphic Hymn (1927) and the tragedy Sibylla (1940), whereas in the context of the Delphic idea and the Delphic festivals he published an essay entitled "The Delphic union" (1930). The nobelist George Seferis wrote an essay under the title "Delphi", in the book "Dokimes".[92]

The importance of Delphi for the Greeks is significant. The site has been recorded on the collective memory and have been expressed through tradition. Nikolaos Politis, the famous Greek ethnographer, in his Studies on the life and language of the Greek people - part A, offers two examples from Delphi:

a) the priest of Apollo (176)

When Christ was born a priest of Apollo was sacrificing below the monastery of Panayia, on the road of Livadeia, on a site called Logari. Suddenly he abandoned the sacrifice and says to the people: "in this moment was born the son of God, who will be very powerful, like Apollo, but then Apollo will beat him". He didn't have time to finish his speech and a thunder came down and burnt him, opening the rock nearby into two. [p. 99][citation needed]

b)The Mylords (108)

The Mylords are not Christians, because nobody ever saw them cross themselves. They originate from the old pagan inhabitants of Delphi who kept their property in castle called Adelphi, named after the two brother princes who built it. When Christ and his mother came to the site, and all people around converted to Christianity they thought that they should better leave; thus the Mylords left for the West and took all their belongings with them. The Mylords come here now and worship these stones. [p. 59][citation needed]

Gallery

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ In English, the name Delphi is pronounced either as /ˈdɛlf/ or, in a more Greek-like manner, as /ˈdɛlf/. The bottom line on the etymology is that Delphoi is related to delphus, "womb," which is consistent with the omphalos stone there being considered the "navel" of the universe and the site being the uterus of Earth. The delphis, or "dolphin" connection, is an accidental result of the dolpins being named from their uterus-like appearance. The full etymology is to be found in Frisk.[2] The inscriptional variants, Dalphoi, Dolphoi, Derphoi,[3] might appear to be dialects, especially Dalphoi, usually taken as Phocian, as the Phocians spoke Doric. Frisk labels them as secondary developments, including the apparent Doric original a in Dalphoi. It could well be Phocian, but was not originally Doric. The true dialect form, Aeolic Belphoi, with Delphoi, must be reflexes of a Bronze Age *Gwelphoi, which does not have an original "a."[4] Frisk's Proto-Indoeuropean is *gwelbh-u-, with a -u- extension. Without the extension there is no relation between Delphoi and delphus. However, Frisk, a major Indo-Europeanist, cites some parallels of -woi- to -oi- in other words. The evidence from mythology adds strength to his hypothesis. Without the w, Delphoi is not related to Delphus, but only seems so. The etymology of dolphin is fairly standard.
  2. ^ The "speaking water" is much criticised because it is the Pythia that speaks, not the water. However, a standard feature of oracular response from Apollo is the requirement that the priestess drink from a spring of fresh water, considered sacred. It is certain that the spring captured at the chasm was piped to the adyton in the temple.
  3. ^ Those who argue for an entirely literary manufacture of the poems do not recognize any proto-history in them. The prevalent archaeological view is that with regard to geographic detail they are in fact mainly proto-historic.
  4. ^ "All three versions, instead of being simple and traditional, are already selective and tendentious. They disagree with each other..."
  5. ^ The poem has two parts, "To Delian Apollo" and "To Pythian Apollo." The Pytho myth is only in the latter.
  6. ^ Such was its prestige that most Hellenes after 500 BCE placed its foundation in the earliest days of the world: before Apollo took possession, they said, Ge (Earth) (Gaia) and her daughter Themis had spoken oracles at Pytho. Such has been the strength of the tradition that many historians and others have accepted as historical fact the ancient statement that Ge and Themis spoke oracles before it became Apollo's establishment, yet nothing but the myth supports this statement. In the earliest account known of the Delphic oracle's beginnings, the story found in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo (281–374), there was no oracle before Apollo came and killed the great she-dragon, Pytho's only inhabitant. This was apparently the Delphic myth of the sixth century.[43]
  7. ^ The earth is the abode of the dead, therefore the earth-deity has power over the ghostly world: the shapes of dreams, which often foreshadowed the future, were supposed to ascend from the world below, therefore the earth-deity might acquire an oracular function, especially through the process of incubation, in which the consultant slept in a holy shrine with his ear upon the ground. That such conceptions attached to Gaia is shown by the records of her cults at Delphi, Athens, and Aegae. A recently discovered inscription speaks of a temple of Ge at Delphi... As regards Gaia, we also can accept it. It is confirmed by certain features in the latter Delphic divination, and also by the story of the Python.[44]
  8. ^ Because the founding of the city was for the Greeks, as it had been for earlier cultures, primarily a religious act, Delphi naturally assumed charge of the new foundations; and especially in the early period of colonization, the Pythian Apollo gave specific advice that dispatched new colonies in every direction, under the aegis of Apollo. Few cities would undertake such an expedition without consulting the oracle. Thus at a moment when the growth of population might have led to congestion within the city, to random emigration, or to conflicts for arable land in the more densely populated regions, Delphi, willy-nilly, faced the problem and conducted a program of organized dispersal.[55]

Citations

  1. ^ Wells, John C. (2000) [1990]. Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (new ed.). Harlow, England: Longman. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-582-36467-7.
  2. ^ Frisk, Hjalmar (1960). "δελφίς, Δελφοί, δελφύς". Griechisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch. Vol. Band I. Heidelberg: Carl Winter.
  3. ^ Also given in Henry George Liddell; Robert Scott; Henry Stuart Jones (1940). "Δελφοί". A Greek-English Lexicon. Perseus Digital Library.
  4. ^ Alice Mouton; Ian Rutherford; Ilya Yakubovich (2013). Luwian Identities: Culture, Language and Religion Between Anatolia and the Aegean. Leiden: Brill. p. 66.
  5. ^ "Suda, pi,3137".
  6. ^ "Suda, delta,210".
  7. ^ "Archaeological Site of Delphi". World Heritage Convention. United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  8. ^ a b Konstaninou, Ioanna "Delphi: the Oracle and its Role in the Political and Social Life of the Ancient Greeks" (Hannibal Publishing House, Athens)
  9. ^ a b LSJ s.v. πύθω.
  10. ^ a b c Miller 2004, p. 95.
  11. ^ Kase 1970, pp. 1–2
  12. ^ Kase 1970, pp. 4–5
  13. ^ Kase 1970, p. 5
  14. ^ Gregory, Timothy E. (1983). "Julian and the last oracle at Delphi". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 24 (4).
  15. ^ a b c Delphi 2005-04-01 at the Wayback Machine, Hellenic Ministry of Culture.
  16. ^ Petrides, P., 1997, «Delphes dans l’Antiquité tardive : première approche topographique et céramologique», BCH 121, 681-695
  17. ^ Petrides, P., 2003, «Αteliers de potiers protobyzantins à Delphes », in Χ. ΜΠΑΚΙΡΤΖΗΣ (ed.), 7ο Διεθνές Συνέδριο Μεσαιωνικής Κεραμικής της Μεσογείου, Θεσσαλονίκη 11-16 Οκτωβρίου 1999, Πρακτικά, Αθήνα, 443-446
  18. ^ Petrides, P., 2005, «Un exemple d’architecture civile en Grèce: les maisons protobyzantines de Delphes (IVe–VIIe s.)», Mélanges Jean-Pierre Sodini, Travaux et Mémoires 15, Paris, pp. 193-204
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  36. ^ Harissis 2019, p. 89
  37. ^ Lloyd-Jones 1976, p. 60
  38. ^ Parke 1939, p. 6
  39. ^ Graves, Robert (1993), "The Greek Myths: Complete Edition" (Penguin, Harmondsworth)
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  41. ^ William Godwin (1876). Lives of the Necromancers. London, F. J. Mason. p. 11.
  42. ^ Hymn to Pythian Apollo, l. 254–74: Telphousa recommends to Apollo to build his oracle temple at the site of "Krisa below the glades of Parnassus".
  43. ^ Fontenrose, Joseph (1978). The Delphic Oracle: Its Responses and Operations, with a Catalogue of Responses, pp. 3–4.
  44. ^ Farnell, Lewis Richard, The Cults of the Greek States, v. III, pp. 8–10, onwards.
  45. ^ Odyssey, VIII, 80
  46. ^ See e.g. Fearn 2007, p. 182
  47. ^ Liritzis, I.; Castro, B. (2013). "Delphi and Cosmovision: Apollo's absence at the land of the hyperboreans and the time for consulting the oracle". Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage. 16 (2): 184. Bibcode:2013JAHH...16..184L.
  48. ^ Castro, Belen; Liritzis, Ioannis; Nyquist, Anne (2015). "Oracular Functioning And Architecture of Five Ancient Apollo Temples Through Archaeoastronomy: Novel Approach And Interpretation". Interpretation Nexus Network Journal, Architecture & Mathematics. 18 (2): 373. doi:10.1007/s00004-015-0276-2.
  49. ^ Spiller, Henry A.; Hale, John R.; de Boer, Jelle Z. (2002). "The Delphic Oracle: A Multidisciplinary Defense of the Gaseous Vent Theory" (PDF). Clinical Toxicology. 40 (2): 189–196. doi:10.1081/clt-120004410. PMID 12126193. S2CID 38994427. (PDF) from the original on 2016-11-28.
  50. ^ John Roach (14 August 2001). "Delphic Oracle's Lips May Have Been Loosened by Gas Vapors". National Geographic. Retrieved 8 March 2007.
  51. ^ Spiller, Henry; de Boer, Jella; Hale, John R.; Chanton, Jeffery (2008). "Gaseous emissions at the site of the Delphic Oracle: Assessing the ancient evidence". Clinical Toxicology. 46 (5): 487–488. doi:10.1080/15563650701477803. PMID 18568810. S2CID 12441885.
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Citation references

  • Broad, William J. The Oracle: Ancient Delphi and the Science Behind its Lost Secrets, New York : Penguin, 2006. ISBN 1-59-420081-5.
  • Burkert, Walter (1985). Greek Religion.
  • Connelly, Joan Breton, Portrait of a Priestess: Women and Ritual in Ancient Greece, Princeton University Press, 2007. ISBN 0691127468
  • Call of Duty: Black Ops 4 (2018) "Ancient Evil"
  • Dempsey, T., Reverend, The Delphic oracle, its early history, influence and fall, Oxford: B.H. Blackwell, 1918.
  • Castro Belen, Liritzis Ioannis and Nyquist Anne (2015) Oracular Functioning And Architecture of Five Ancient Apollo Temples Through Archaeastronomy: Novel Approach And Interpretation Nexus Network Journal, Architecture & Mathematics, 18(2), 373-395 (DOI:10.1007/s00004-015-0276-2)
  • Farnell, Lewis Richard, The Cults of the Greek States, in five volumes, Clarendon Press, 1896–1909. (Cf. especially, volume III and volume IV on the Pythoness and Delphi).
  • Fearn, David (2007). Bacchylides: Politics, Performance, Poetic Tradition. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199215508.
  • Fontenrose, Joseph Eddy, The Delphic oracle, its responses and operations, with a catalogue of responses, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1978. ISBN 0520033604
  • Fontenrose, Joseph Eddy, Python; a study of Delphic myth and its origins, New York, Biblio & Tannen, 1974. ISBN 081960285X
  • Goodrich, Norma Lorre, Priestesses, New York: F. Watts, 1989. ISBN 0531151131
  • Guthrie, William Keith Chambers, The Greeks and their Gods, 1955.
  • Hall, Manly Palmer, The Secret Teachings of All Ages, 1928. Ch. 14 cf. Greek Oracles, www,
  • Harissis H. 2015. “A Bittersweet Story: The True Nature of the Laurel of the Oracle of Delphi” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine. Volume 57, Number 3, Summer 2014, pp. 295-298.
  • Harissis, H. (2019). "Pindar's Paean 8 and the birth of the myth of the first temples of Delphi". Acta Classica: Proceedings of the Classical Association of South Africa. 62 (1): 78–123.
  • Herodotus, The Histories
  • Homeric Hymn to Pythian Apollo
  • Kase, Edward W. (1970). A Study of the Role of Krisa in the Mycenaean Era (Master's Thesis). Loyola University. Docket 2467.
  • Liritzis, I; Castro, Β (2013). "Delphi and Cosmovision: Apollo's absence at the land of the hyperboreans and the time for consulting the oracle". Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage. 16 (2): 184–206. Bibcode:2013JAHH...16..184L.
  • Lloyd-Jones, Hugh (1976). "The Delphic Oracle". Greece & Rome. 23 (1): 60–73. doi:10.1017/S0017383500018283. S2CID 162187662.
  • Manas, John Helen, Divination, ancient and modern, New York, Pythagorean Society, 1947.
  • Miller, Stephen G. (2004). Ancient Greek Athletics. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300100839.
  • Parke, Herbert William (1939). A history of the Delphic oracle. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
  • Plutarch "Lives"
  • Rohde, Erwin, Psyche, 1925.
  • Seyffert, Oskar, "Dictionary of Classical Antiquities", London: W. Glaisher, 1895.
  • Spiller, Henry A., John R. Hale, and Jelle Z. de Boer. "The Delphic Oracle: A Multidisciplinary Defense of the Gaseous Vent Theory." Clinical Toxicology 40.2 (2000) 189–196.
  • West, Martin Litchfield, The Orphic Poems, 1983. ISBN 0-19-814854-2.

Further reading

  • Adornato, G (2008). "Delphic Enigmas? The Γέλας ἀνάσσων, Polyzalos, and the Charioteer Statue". American Journal of Archaeology. 112 (1): 29–55. doi:10.3764/aja.112.1.29. S2CID 157508659.
  • Davies, J. K. (1998). Finance, Administrations, and Realpolitik: The Case of Fourth-Century Delphi. In Modus Operandi: Essays in Honour of Geoffrey Rickman. Edited by M. Austin, J. Harries, and C. Smith, 1–14. London: Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, Suppl. 71.
  • Davies, John. (2007). "The Origins of the Festivals, especially Delphi and the Pythia." In Pindar’s Poetry, Patrons, and Festivals: From Archaic Greece to the Roman Empire. Edited by Simon Hornblower and Catherine Morgan, 47–69. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
  • Kindt, Julia. (2016). Revisiting Delphi: Religion and Storytelling in Ancient Greece. Cambridge Classical Studies. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Maurizio, Lisa (1997). "Delphic Oracles as Oral Performances: Authenticity and Historical Evidence". Classical Antiquity. 16 (2): 308–334. doi:10.2307/25011067. JSTOR 25011067.
  • McInerney, Jeremy (2011). "Delphi and Phokis: A Network Theory Approach". Pallas. 87 (87): 95–106. doi:10.4000/pallas.1948.
  • McInerney, Jeremy (1997). "Parnassus, Delphi, and the Thyiades". Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies. 38 (3): 263–284.
  • Morgan, Catherine. (1990). Athletes and Oracles. The Transformation of Olympia and Delphi in the Eighth Century BC. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Partida, Elena C. (2002). The Treasuries at Delphi: An Architectural Study. Jonsered, Denmark: Paul Åströms.
  • Scott, Michael, Delphi: A History of the Center of the Ancient World (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2014). ISBN 978-0-691-15081-9
  • Scott, Michael. (2010). Delphi and Olympia: The Spatial Politics of Panhellenism in the Archaic and Classical Periods. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Temple, Robert K.G., "Fables, Riddles, and Mysteries of Delphi", Proceedings of 4th Philosophical Meeting on Contemporary Problems, No 4, 1999 (Athens, Greece) In Greek and English.
  • Weir, Robert G. (2004). Roman Delphi and its Pythian games. BAR Series 1306. Oxford: Hadrian.

5th-century evidence

  • Petrides, P., 2010, La céramique protobyzantine de Delphes. Une production et son contexte, École française d’Athènes, Fouilles de Delphes V, Monuments figurés 4, Paris – Athènes.
  • Petrides, P., Déroche, V., Badie, A., 2014,Delphes de l’Antiquité tardive. Secteur au Sud-est du Péribole, École française d’Athènes, Fouilles de Delphes II, Topographie et Architecture 15, Paris-Athènes.
  • Petrides, P., 1997, «Delphes dans l’Antiquité tardive : première approche topographique et céramologique», BCH 121, pp. 681–695.
  • Petrides, P., 2003, «Αteliers de potiers protobyzantins à Delphes », in Χ. ΜΠΑΚΙΡΤΖΗΣ (ed.), 7ο Διεθνές Συνέδριο Μεσαιωνικής Κεραμικής της Μεσογείου, Θεσσαλονίκη 11-16 Οκτωβρίου 1999, Πρακτικά, Αθήνα, pp. 443–446.
  • Petrides, P., 2005, «Un exemple d’architecture civile en Grèce : les maisons protobyzantines de Delphes (IVe–VIIe s.)», Mélanges Jean-Pierre Sodini, Travaux et Mémoires 15, Paris, pp. 193–204.
  • Petrides, P., Demou, J., 2011, « La redécouverte de Delphes protobyzantine », Pallas 87, pp. 267–281.

External links

delphi, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, Δελφοί, ðelˈfi, legend, previously, called, pytho, Πυθώ, ancient, times, sacred, precinct, that, served, seat, pythia, major, oracle, consulted, about, important, decisions, throughout, ancient, classical, world, ora. For other uses see Delphi disambiguation Delphi ˈ d ɛ l f aɪ ˈ d ɛ l f i 1 Greek Delfoi delˈfi a in legend previously called Pytho Py8w in ancient times was a sacred precinct that served as the seat of Pythia the major oracle who was consulted about important decisions throughout the ancient classical world The oracle had origins in prehistory and it became international in character and also fostered sentiments of Greek nationality even though the nation of Greece was centuries away from realization The ancient Greeks considered the centre of the world to be in Delphi marked by the stone monument known as the omphalos navel The sacred precinct of Ge or Gaia was in the region of Phocis but its management had been taken away from the Phocians who were trying to extort money from its visitors and had been placed in the hands of an amphictyony or committee of persons chosen mainly from Central Greece According to the Suda Delphi took its name from the Delphyne the she serpent drakaina who lived there and was killed by the god Apollo in other accounts the serpent was the male serpent drakon Python 5 6 DelphiDelfoiThe Athena temple complex including the Delphic Tholos photographed from Route 48 just above it The background is the Pleistos River Valley The view is looking upstream DelphiShown within GreeceLocationPhocis GreeceCoordinates38 28 56 N 22 30 05 E 38 4823 N 22 5013 E 38 4823 22 5013 Coordinates 38 28 56 N 22 30 05 E 38 4823 N 22 5013 E 38 4823 22 5013TypeRuins of an ancient sacred precinctHeightTop of a scarp 500 metres 1 600 ft maximum off the valley floorHistoryCulturesAncient GreeceSite notesArchaeologistsFrench School at AthensOwnershipHellenic RepublicManagementMinistry of Culture and SportsPublic accessAccessible for a feeWebsiteE Partida 2012 Delphi Odysseus Ministry of Culture and Sports Hellenic Republic UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameArchaeological Site of DelphiTypeCulturalCriteriai ii iii iv and viDesignated1987 12th session Reference no 393RegionEuropeDelphi among the main Greek sanctuaries The sacred precinct occupies a delineated region on the south western slope of Mount Parnassus It is now an extensive archaeological site and since 1938 a part of Parnassos National Park Adjacent to the sacred precinct is a small modern town of the same name The precinct is recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in having had a great influence in the ancient world as evidenced by the various monuments built there by most of the important ancient Greek city states demonstrating their fundamental Hellenic unity 7 Contents 1 Names 2 Delphi and the Delphic region 3 Archaeology of the precinct 3 1 The end of Delphi 3 2 Excavation 3 3 Delphi Archaeological Museum 4 Architecture of the precinct 4 1 Temple of Apollo 4 2 Treasuries 4 3 Altar of the Chians 4 4 Stoa of the Athenians 4 5 Sibyl rock 4 6 Theatre 4 7 Tholos 4 8 Gymnasium 4 9 Stadium 4 10 Hippodrome 4 11 Polygonal wall 4 12 Castalian spring 4 13 Athletic statues 5 Myths regarding the origin of the precinct 6 Oracle of Delphi 6 1 The prophetic process 6 2 Influence devastations and a temporary revival 6 3 Religious significance of the oracle 7 History 7 1 Ancient Delphi 7 2 Amphictyonic Council 7 3 The sacred precinct in the Iron Age 7 4 Abandonment and rediscovery 8 Delphi in later art 9 Delphi in later literature 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 Footnotes 13 Citations 14 Citation references 15 Further reading 15 1 5th century evidence 16 External linksNames EditDelphi shares the same root with the Greek word for womb delfys delphys Pytho Py8w is related to Pythia the priestess serving as the oracle and to Python a serpent or dragon who lived at the site 8 Python is derived from the verb py8w pythō 9 to rot 10 Delphi and the Delphic region EditToday Delphi is a municipality of Greece as well as a modern town adjacent to the ancient precinct The modern town was created by moving its predecessor off the sacred precinct so that the latter could be excavated by the French School of Archaeology working in conjunction with Greek authorities The two Delphis old and new are located on Greek National Road 48 between Amfissa in the west and Livadeia capital of Voiotia in the east The road follows the northern slope of a pass between Mount Parnassus on the north and the mountains of the Desfina Peninsula on the south The peninsula triangular in shape juts into the Gulf of Corinth The pass is entirely one river valley that of the river Pleistos running from east to west forming a natural boundary across the north of the Desfina Peninsula and providing an easy route across it On the east side the valley joins the north south valley leading from Davleia to Distomo both good sized towns South of Distomo the valley intersects the Bay of Antikyra which offers no port at that location The site is known as Paralia Distomou the beach of Distomo Antikyra the major port of Phocis is a little down the coast of the peninsula On the west side the valley joins the north south valley between Amfissa and Itea The valley dead ends at Amphissa This city is more important today because a route to the Aegean side of Greece has been pushed through the mountain passes These now strategic locations were the scenes of heavy fighting and reprisals during World War II On the north side of the valley junction a spur of Parnassus looming over the valley made narrower by it is the site of ancient Krisa which once was the ruling power of the entire valley system Both Amphissa and Krissa are mentioned in the Iliad s Catalogue of Ships 11 It was a Mycenaean stronghold Archaeological dates of the valley go back to the Early Helladic Krisa itself is Middle Helladic 12 These early dates are comparable to the earliest dates at Delphi suggesting Delphi was appropriated and transformed by Phocians from ancient Krisa It is believed that the ruins of Kirra now part of the port of Itea were the port of Krisa of the same name as it and that etymologically Kirra comes from Krisa 13 Archaeology of the precinct EditThe end of Delphi Edit Most cursory accounts of Delphi include a phase they call the end of Delphi After all ruins are in evidence so there must have been a time when the structures they represent were not ruined Many give the impression that the emperor s sheriff drove up the hill with a bulldozer and a wrecking ball or a least an army of wreckers and went back down the hill the same day having levelled the site and that from then on it remained uninhabited Although such a sudden event is possible with the equipment of modern times it did not generally happen that way in ancient times except in unusual cases such as the fall of Carthage when the Romans leveled the city and sowed the bare ground with salt dubious discuss so that nothing would grow there Even so the city was rebuilt Such was never the case for Delphi It transitioned from phase to phase There may never have been a time when the site had no inhabitants or structures and no one was interested in living there It had the spring and the view The ruins now in evidence date from the ancient classical period with some in the late antique period In order to place them in evidence the first excavators the French School of Athens had to clear away many tons of rubble But that rubble contained the habitation levels of post classical settlements which were sacrificed in favor of the earlier ruins The lack of this transitional material also contributes to the impression of a sudden ruination which is false History portrays Delphi as a very popular site Once in a century or two it was burned by some interloper and then promptly rebuilt better than before After Hellenic society made a transition from pagan to Christian Delphi remained just as popular as it had been Still pagan it often honored the Christian emperors while they allowed it to stand Both religions were practiced there side by side Finally however use of the oracle fell off to such a degree that it could no longer be maintained The other aspects went on the Pythian games the worship of Apollo in the temple Regretfully the Christian emperors dealt with all the pagan sites as a loose end Delphi made a transition to a secular site in which churches were built Without the oracle there was not much point in frequenting a high altitude out of the way place The population fell off to a small village The place had not ended however Archaeology and tourism infused it with a whole new life It may well be frequented by just as many people as frequented it in classical days It earns its own revenue The geologic conditions are just as bad as they were in ancient times faults slippery slopes earthquakes rockslides runoff As at all major archaeological sites the effort to maintain the ruins rivals the original effort to maintain the structures Built on the site that had been revered since prehistoric times the classical site had flourished because of its popularity After another change of religion popularity and frequentation fell off sharply The oracle could no longer cover operating expenses After a line of Christian emperors Julian reigning 361 363 not long rejecting Christianity in favor of Neoplatonism for which he is called Julian the Apostate attempted to restore prior religions Paganism and Judaism He sent his physician to Delphi to rebuild the Temple of Apollo and received an oracle for his efforts that the speaking water has been silenced which became known as the last oracle and is recorded by George Kedrenos Timothy Gregory suggests the oracle was a request from the Delphic priesthood for imperial aid the temple had fallen low and could not produce an oracle without assistance from Julian Shortly afterward an oracle encouraged Julian to invade Persia There followed a surfeit of oracular activity afterward especially in the last month of the emperor s life Despite the earlier oracle and initial successes another oracle stated no Emperor would proceed beyond Persian capital city Ctesiphon and predicted Julian s apotheosis to Olympos in a fiery chariot Gregory points out these oracles were truly the last pagan prophecies Kedrenos notes contemporary Christian discomfort at these oracles after the last in claiming the Christian deity allowed temporary reversion to the old order 14 b Julian s siege of Ctesiphon indeed failed and was followed by his death in battle ten or twelve days later The end of his reign also marked the end of the pagan revival project Excavation Edit Main article Excavations at Delphi The polygonal wall 1902 The site was first briefly excavated in 1880 by Bernard Haussoullier 1852 1926 on behalf of the French School at Athens of which he was a sometime member The site was then occupied by the village of Kastri about 100 houses 200 people Kastri fort had been there since the destruction of the place by Theodosius I in 390 He probably left a fort to make sure it was not repopulated however the fort became the new village They were mining the stone for re use in their own buildings British and French travelers visiting the site suspected it was ancient Delphi Before a systematic excavation of the site could be undertaken the village had to be relocated but the residents resisted The opportunity to relocate the village occurred when it was substantially damaged by an earthquake with villagers offered a completely new village in exchange for the old site In 1893 the French Archaeological School removed vast quantities of soil from numerous landslides to reveal both the major buildings and structures of the sanctuary of Apollo and of the temple to Athena the Athena Pronoia along with thousands of objects inscriptions and sculptures 15 During the Great Excavation architectural members from a fifth century Christian basilica were discovered that date to when Delphi was a bishopric Other important Late Roman buildings are the Eastern Baths the house with the peristyle the Roman Agora the large cistern usw At the outskirts of the city late Roman cemeteries were located To the southeast of the precinct of Apollo lay the so called Southeastern Mansion a building with a 65 meter long facade spread over four levels with four triclinia and private baths Large storage jars kept the provisions whereas other pottery vessels and luxury items were discovered in the rooms Among the finds stands out a tiny leopard made of mother of pearl possibly of Sassanian origin on display in the ground floor gallery of the Delphi Archaeological Museum The mansion dates to the beginning of the fifth century and functioned as a private house until 580 later however it was transformed into a potter workshop 16 It is only then in the beginning of the sixth century that the city seems to decline its size is reduced and its trade contacts seem to be drastically diminished Local pottery production is produced in large quantities 17 it is coarser and made of reddish clay aiming at satisfying the needs of the inhabitants The Sacred Way remained the main street of the settlement transformed however into a street with commercial and industrial use Around the agora were built workshops as well as the only intra muros early Christian basilica The domestic area spread mainly in the western part of the settlement The houses were rather spacious and two large cisterns provided running water to them 18 Archaeological Museum of Delphi designed by Alexandros Tombazis Delphi Archaeological Museum Edit Main article Delphi Archaeological Museum The Delphi Archaeological Museum is at the foot of the main archaeological complex on the east side of the village and on the north side of the main road The museum houses artifacts associated with ancient Delphi including the earliest known notation of a melody the Charioteer of Delphi Kleobis and Biton golden treasures discovered beneath the Sacred Way the Sphinx of Naxos and fragments of reliefs from the Siphnian Treasury Immediately adjacent to the exit is the inscription that mentions the Roman proconsul Gallio Entries to the museum and to the main complex are separate and chargeable A reduced rate ticket gets entry to both There is a small cafe and a post office by the museum Architecture of the precinct Edit Site plan of the upper Sacred Precinct Delphi The outer wall that surrounds it is 190 metres 620 ft long by 135 metres 443 ft wide and is pierced by nine gates 19 Most of the ruins that survive today date from the most intense period of activity at the site in the sixth century BC 20 Temple of Apollo Edit Main article Temple of Apollo Delphi The ruins of the Temple of Apollo that are visible today date from the fourth century BC and are of a peripteral Doric building It was erected by Spintharus Xenodoros and Agathon on the remains of an earlier temple dated to the sixth century BC which had been erected on the site of a seventh century BC construction attributed in legend to the architects Trophonios and Agamedes 21 Ancient tradition accounted for four temples that successively occupied the site before the 548 7 BC fire following which the Alcmaeonids built a fifth The poet Pindar celebrated the Alcmaeonids temple in Pythian 7 8 9 and he also provided details of the third building Paean 8 65 75 Other details are given by Pausanias 10 5 9 13 and the Homeric Hymn to Apollo 294 ff The first temple was said to have been constructed out of olive branches from Tempe The second was made by bees out of wax and wings but was miraculously carried off by a powerful wind and deposited among the Hyperboreans The third as described by Pindar was created by the deities Hephaestus and Athena but its architectural details included Siren like figures or Enchantresses whose baneful songs eventually provoked the Olympian deities to bury the temple in the earth according to Pausanias it was destroyed by earthquake and fire In Pindar s words Paean 8 65 75 Bowra translation addressed to the Muses Muses what was its fashion shown By the skill in all arts Of the hands of Hephaestus and Athena Of bronze the walls and of bronze Stood the pillars beneath But of gold were six Enchantresses Who sang above the eagle But the sons of Cronus Opened the earth with a thunderbolt And hid the holiest of all things made Away from their children And wives when they hung Their lives on the honey hearted words dd dd dd The fourth temple was said to have been constructed from stone by Trophonius and Agamedes 22 However a 2019 theory gives a completely new explanation of the above myth of the four temples of Delphi 23 Treasuries Edit The reconstructed Treasury of the Athenians built to commemorate their victory at the Battle of Marathon Main articles Athenian Treasury Boeotian Treasury Cnidian Treasury Sicyonian Treasury Siphnian Treasury Theban Treasury Treasury of the Acanthians and Treasury of the Massaliots Delphi From the entrance of the upper site continuing up the slope on the Sacred Way almost to the Temple of Apollo are a large number of votive statues and numerous so called treasuries These were built by many of the Greek city states to commemorate victories and to thank the oracle for her advice which was thought to have contributed to those victories These buildings held the offerings made to Apollo these were frequently a tithe or tenth of the spoils of a battle The most impressive is the now restored Athenian Treasury built to commemorate their victory at the Battle of Marathon in 490 BC The Siphnian Treasury was dedicated by the city of Siphnos whose citizens gave a tithe of the yield from their silver mines until the mines came to an abrupt end when the sea flooded the workings One of the largest of the treasuries was that of Argos Having built it in the late classical period the Argives took great pride in establishing their place at Delphi amongst the other city states Completed in 380 BC their treasury seems to draw inspiration mostly from the Temple of Hera located in the Argolis However recent analysis of the Archaic elements of the treasury suggest that its founding preceded this Other identifiable treasuries are those of the Sicyonians the Boeotians Massaliots and the Thebans Boeotians Cnidians Sicyonians SiphniansAltar of the Chians Edit Main article Altar of the Chians Located in front of the Temple of Apollo the main altar of the sanctuary was paid for and built by the people of Chios It is dated to the fifth century BC by the inscription on its cornice Made entirely of black marble except for the base and cornice the altar would have made a striking impression It was restored in 1920 15 Ancient Greek inscription at the altar naming Chios XIOIS Stoa of the Athenians Edit Main article Stoa of the Athenians View of the Athenian Treasury the Stoa of the Athenians on the right The stoa or open sided covered porch is placed in an approximately east west alignment along the base of the polygonal wall retaining the terrace on which the Temple of Apollo sits There is no archaeological suggestion of a connection to the temple The stoa opened to the Sacred Way The nearby presence of the Treasury of the Athenians suggests that this quarter of Delphi was used for Athenian business or politics as stoas are generally found in market places Although the architecture at Delphi is generally Doric a plain style in keeping with the Phocian traditions that were Doric the Athenians did not prefer the Doric The stoa was built in their own preferred style the Ionic order the capitals of the columns being a sure indicator In the Ionic order they are floral and ornate although not so much as the Corinthian which is in deficit there The remaining porch structure contains seven fluted columns unusually carved from single pieces of stone most columns were constructed from a series of discs joined The inscription on the stylobate indicates that it was built by the Athenians after their naval victory over the Persians in 478 BC to house their war trophies At that time the Athenians and the Spartans were on the same side Sibyl rock Edit Main article Sibyl rock The Sibyl rock is a pulpit like outcrop of rock between the Athenian Treasury and the Stoa of the Athenians upon the Sacred Way that leads up to the temple of Apollo in the archaeological area of Delphi The rock is claimed to be the location from which an prehistoric Sibyl pre dating the Pythia of Apollo sat to deliver her prophecies Other suggestions are that the Pythia might have stood there or an acolyte whose function was to deliver the final prophecy The rock seems ideal for public speaking Theatre Edit The theatre at Delphi as viewed near the top seats The ancient theatre at Delphi was built farther up the hill from the Temple of Apollo giving spectators a view of the entire sanctuary and the valley below 24 It was originally built in the fourth century BC but was remodeled on several occasions particularly in 160 159 B C at the expenses of king Eumenes II of Pergamon and in 67 A D on the occasion of emperor Nero s visit 25 The koilon cavea leans against the natural slope of the mountain whereas its eastern part overrides a little torrent that led the water of the fountain Cassotis right underneath the temple of Apollo The orchestra was initially a full circle with a diameter measuring seven meters The rectangular scene building ended up in two arched openings of which the foundations are preserved today Access to the theatre was possible through the parodoi i e the side corridors On the support walls of the parodoi are engraved large numbers of manumission inscriptions recording fictitious sales of the slaves to the deity The koilon was divided horizontally in two zones via a corridor called diazoma The lower zone had 27 rows of seats and the upper one only eight Six radially arranged stairs divided the lower part of the koilon in seven tiers The theatre could accommodate approximately 4 500 spectators 26 On the occasion of Nero s visit to Greece in 67 A D various alterations took place The orchestra was paved and delimited by a parapet made of stone The proscenium was replaced by a low pedestal the pulpitum its facade was decorated in relief with scenes from myths about Hercules Further repairs and transformations took place in the second century A D Pausanias mentions that these were carried out under the auspices of Herod Atticus In antiquity the theatre was used for the vocal and musical contests that formed part of the programme of the Pythian Games in the late Hellenistic and Roman period 27 The theatre was abandoned when the sanctuary declined in Late Antiquity After its excavation and initial restoration it hosted theatrical performances during the Delphic Festivals organized by A Sikelianos and his wife Eva Palmer in 1927 and in 1930 It has recently been restored again as the serious landslides posed a grave threat for its stability for decades 28 29 Tholos Edit The Tholos at the base of Mount Parnassus 3 of 20 Doric columns Athena Pronaia Sanctuary at Delphi Main article Tholos of Delphi The tholos at the sanctuary of Athena Pronaea Ἀ8hnᾶ Pronaia Athena of forethought is a circular building that was constructed between 380 and 360 BC It consisted of 20 Doric columns arranged with an exterior diameter of 14 76 meters with 10 Corinthian columns in the interior The Tholos is located approximately a half a mile 800 m from the main ruins at Delphi at 38 28 49 N 22 30 28 E 38 48016 N 22 50789 E 38 48016 22 50789 Three of the Doric columns have been restored making it the most popular site at Delphi for tourists to take photographs The architect of the vaulted temple at Delphi is named by Vitruvius in De architectura Book VII as Theodorus Phoceus not Theodorus of Samos whom Vitruvius names separately 30 Gymnasium Edit Main article Gymnasium at Delphi The ancient Gymnasium at Delphi The gymnasium which is half a mile away from the main sanctuary was a series of buildings used by the youth of Delphi The building consisted of two levels a stoa on the upper level providing open space and a palaestra pool and baths on lower floor These pools and baths were said to have magical powers and imparted the ability to communicate directly to Apollo 15 Stadium Edit Main article Stadium of Delphi The mountain top stadium at Delphi The stadium is located farther up the hill beyond the via sacra and the theatre It was built in the fifth century BC but was altered in later centuries The last major remodelling took place in the second century AD under the patronage of Herodes Atticus when the stone seating was built and an arched entrance created It could seat 6500 spectators and the track was 177 metres long and 25 5 metres wide 31 Hippodrome Edit It was at the Pythian Games that prominent political leaders such as Cleisthenes tyrant of Sikyon and Hieron tyrant of Syracuse competed with their chariots The hippodrome where these events took place was referred to by Pindar 32 and this monument was sought by archaeologists for over two centuries Traces of it have recently been found at Gonia in the plain of Krisa in the place where the original stadium had been sited 33 Polygonal wall Edit Section of polygonal wall at Delphi behind a pillar from the Athenian Stoa A retaining wall was built to support the terrace housing the construction of the second temple of Apollo in 548 BC Its name is taken from the polygonal masonry of which it is constructed At a later date from 200 BC onwards the stones were inscribed with the manumission libration contracts of slaves who were consecrated to Apollo Approximately a thousand manumissions are recorded on the wall 34 Castalian spring Edit Main article Castalian Spring See also Castalia The sacred spring of Delphi lies in the ravine of the Phaedriades The preserved remains of two monumental fountains that received the water from the spring date to the Archaic period and the Roman with the latter cut into the rock The Charioteer of Delphi 478 or 474 BC Delphi Museum Athletic statues Edit Delphi is famous for its many preserved athletic statues It is known that Olympia originally housed far more of these statues but time brought ruin to many of them leaving Delphi as the main site of athletic statues 35 Kleobis and Biton two brothers renowned for their strength are modeled in two of the earliest known athletic statues at Delphi The statues commemorate their feat of pulling their mother s cart several miles to the Sanctuary of Hera in the absence of oxen The neighbors were most impressed and their mother asked Hera to grant them the greatest gift When they entered Hera s temple they fell into a slumber and never woke dying at the height of their admiration the perfect gift 35 The Charioteer of Delphi is another ancient relic that has withstood the centuries It is one of the best known statues from antiquity The charioteer has lost many features including his chariot and his left arm but he stands as a tribute to athletic art of antiquity 35 Myths regarding the origin of the precinct Edit Vulva of the Earth Ge or Gaia with the two Phaedriades above resembling her breasts In this drawing the village of Castro still occupies the site The footprint of the modern road is in the foreground The village was thus entirely on the upper site Below the road is the Marmoria or marble quarry where the villagers mined structural stone The picture below shows the site after the removal of the village A myth is a story based on belief or legends rather than known fact Ancient Greek culture used them frequently in many different contexts They are only known to moderns through mention in ancient Greek writings A writer typically had access to writings at a library or private archive unless wealthy enough to have personal copies made All books were hand written Authors referred to other authors whose books they had before them or had taken notes from Often the source of the story was not identified but even if it was the source may have taken it from some other book Sometimes authors wrote down myths related to them orally It is thus not possible to date myths They could have come from any prior time Often the date of the book relating the myth cannot be determined within centuries A myth cannot with any certainty be attributed to any century although the written source may be Scholars are not entirely without dating methods however The content of the myth may resemble or imply circumstances of known or probable provenience The Iliad for example most likely relates myths passed down from the Trojan War a known Late Bronze Age event The Greeks were aided and abetted in their myth making by the oracles in which they typically devoutly believed When asked a question she never gave a direct answer but spoke in allegories with hidden meanings and ambiguities said Plutarch priest of Apollo and historian 36 It was then incumbent on the inquiring party to interpret them As the prophecy was regarded as the true word of divinity the actual meaning if it could be known must be historical truth Believing this principle to be true many of the best historians spent time trying to interpret oracular myths as actual circumstances Some Temple of Apollo appears in the Homeric Literature In the Iliad Achilles would not accept Agamemnon s peace offering even if it included all the wealth in the stone floor of rocky Pytho I 404 In the Odyssey 8 79 Agamemnon crosses a stone floor to receive a prophecy from Apollo in Pytho the first known of proto history 37 Hesiod also refers to Pytho in the hollows of Parnassus Theogony 498 These references imply that the earliest noted date of the oracle s existence is the eighth century BC the probable date of composition of the Homeric works Earlier times of existence cannot be excluded if the written poems are adaptations of earlier oral ones Beyond these proto historic tidbits c the main myths of Delphi are given in three literary loci 38 H W Parke the Delphi scholar complained that they are self contradictory d thus unconsciously falling into the Plutarchian epistemology that they reflect some common objective historic reality against which the accounts can be compared Missing is the reality nor can it be assumed ever to have existed Parke asserts that there is no Apollo no Zeus no Hera and certainly never was a great serpent like monster and that the myths are pure Plutarchian figures of speech meant to be aetiologies of some oracular tradition Homeric Hymn 3 To Apollo is the oldest of the three loci dating to the seventh century BC estimate e Apollo travels about after his birth on Delos seeking a place for an oracle He is advised by Telephus to choose Crissa below the glade of Parnassus which he does and has a temple built Killing the serpent that guards the spring Subsequently some Cretans from Knossos sail up on a mission to reconnoitre Pylos Changing into a dolphin Apollo casts himself on deck The Cretans do not dare to remove him but sail on Apollo guides the ship around Greece ending back at Crisa where the ship grounds Apollo enters his shrine with the Cretans to be its priests worshipping him as Delphineus of the dolphin Zeus a Classical deity reportedly determined the site of Delphi when he sought to find the centre of his Grandmother Earth Gaia He sent two eagles flying from the eastern and western extremities and the path of the eagles crossed over Delphi where the omphalos or navel of Gaia was found 39 23 According to Aeschylus in the prologue of the Eumenides the oracle had origins in prehistoric times and the worship of Gaia a view echoed by H W Parke who described the evolution of beliefs associated with the site He established that the prehistoric foundation of the oracle is described by three early writers the author of the Homeric Hymn to Apollo Aeschylus in the prologue to the Eumenides and Euripides in a chorus in the Iphigeneia in Tauris Parke goes on to say This version Euripides evidently reproduces in a sophisticated form the primitive tradition which Aeschylus for his own purposes had been at pains to contradict the belief that Apollo came to Delphi as an invader and appropriated for himself a previously existing oracle of Earth The slaying of the serpent is the act of conquest which secures his possession not as in the Homeric Hymn a merely secondary work of improvement on the site Another difference is also noticeable The Homeric Hymn as we saw implied that the method of prophecy used there was similar to that of Dodona both Aeschylus and Euripides writing in the fifth century attribute to primeval times the same methods as used at Delphi in their own day So much is implied by their allusions to tripods and prophetic seats he continues on p 6 Another very archaic feature at Delphi also confirms the ancient associations of the place with the Earth goddess This was the Omphalos an egg shaped stone which was situated in the innermost sanctuary of the temple in historic times Classical legend asserted that it marked the navel Omphalos or center of the Earth and explained that this spot was determined by Zeus who had released two eagles to fly from opposite sides of the earth and that they had met exactly over this place On p 7 he writes further So Delphi was originally devoted to the worship of the Earth goddess whom the Greeks called Ge or Gaia Themis who is associated with her in tradition as her daughter and partner or successor is really another manifestation of the same deity an identity that Aeschylus recognized in another context The worship of these two as one or distinguished was displaced by the introduction of Apollo His origin has been the subject of much learned controversy it is sufficient for our purpose to take him as the Homeric Hymn represents him a northern intruder and his arrival must have occurred in the dark interval between Mycenaean and Hellenic times His conflict with Ge for the possession of the cult site was represented under the legend of his slaying the serpent 40 One tale of the sanctuary s discovery states that a goatherd who grazed his flocks on Parnassus one day observed his goats playing with great agility upon nearing a chasm in the rock the goatherd noticing this held his head over the chasm causing the fumes to go to his brain throwing him into a strange trance 41 The Homeric Hymn to Delphic Apollo recalled that the ancient name of this site had been Krisa 42 Others relate that the site was named Pytho Py8w and that Pythia the priestess serving as the oracle was chosen from their ranks by the priestesses who officiated at the temple Apollo was said to have slain Python a drako a male serpent or a dragon who lived there and protected the navel of the Earth 8 Python derived from the verb py8w pythō 9 to rot is claimed by some to be the original name of the site in recognition of Python that Apollo defeated 10 The name Delphi comes from the same root as delfys delphys womb and may indicate archaic veneration of Gaia at the site Several other scholars discuss the likely prehistoric beliefs associated with the site f g Apollo is connected with the site by his epithet Delfinios Delphinios the Delphinian The epithet is connected with dolphins Greek delfis ῖnos in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo line 400 recounting the legend of how Apollo first came to Delphi in the shape of a dolphin carrying Cretan priests on his back The Homeric name of the oracle is Pytho Py8w 45 Another legend held that Apollo walked to Delphi from the north and stopped at Tempe a city in Thessaly to pick laurel also known as bay tree which he considered to be a sacred plant In commemoration of this legend the winners at the Pythian Games received a wreath of laurel picked in the temple Oracle of Delphi EditThe prophetic process Edit Main articles Pythia and Delphic Sibyl Coin obol struck at Delphi 480 BC obverse Short tripod reverse Pellet within circle omphalos or phiale Perhaps Delphi is best known for its oracle the Pythia or sibyl the priestess prophesying from the tripod in the sunken adyton of the Temple of Apollo The Pythia was known as a spokesperson for Apollo She was a woman of blameless life chosen from the peasants of the area Alone in an enclosed inner sanctum Ancient Greek adyton do not enter she sat on a tripod seat over an opening in the earth the chasm According to legend when Apollo slew Python its body fell into this fissure and fumes arose from its decomposing body Intoxicated by the vapors the sibyl would fall into a trance allowing Apollo to possess her spirit In this state she prophesied The oracle could not be consulted during the winter months for this was traditionally the time when Apollo would live among the Hyperboreans Dionysus would inhabit the temple during his absence 46 Of note release of fumes is limited in colder weather The time to consult Pythia for an oracle during the year was determined from astronomical and geological grounds related to the constellations of Lyra and Cygnus 47 Similar practice was followed in other Apollo oracles too 48 Hydrocarbon vapors emitted from the chasm While in a trance the Pythia raved probably a form of ecstatic speech and her ravings were translated by the priests of the temple into elegant hexameters It has been speculated that the ancient writers including Plutarch who had worked as a priest at Delphi were correct in attributing the oracular effects to the sweet smelling pneuma Ancient Greek for breath wind or vapor escaping from the chasm in the rock That exhalation could have been high in the known anaesthetic and sweet smelling ethylene or other hydrocarbons such as ethane known to produce violent trances Although given the limestone geology this theory remains debatable the authors put up a detailed answer to their critics 49 50 51 52 53 Ancient sources describe the priestess using laurel to inspire her prophecies Several alternative plant candidates have been suggested including Cannabis Hyoscyamus Rhododendron and Oleander Harissis claims that a review of contemporary toxicological literature indicates that oleander causes symptoms similar to those shown by the Pythia and his study of ancient texts shows that oleander was often included under the term laurel The Pythia may have chewed oleander leaves and inhaled their smoke prior to her oracular pronouncements and sometimes dying from the toxicity The toxic substances of oleander resulted in symptoms similar to those of epilepsy the sacred disease which may have been seen as the possession of the Pythia by the spirit of Apollo 54 Fresco of Delphic sibyl painted by Michaelangelo at the Sistine Chapel Influence devastations and a temporary revival Edit The Delphic oracle exerted considerable influence throughout the Greek world and she was consulted before all major undertakings including wars and the founding of colonies h She also was respected by the Greek influenced countries around the periphery of the Greek world such as Lydia Caria and even Egypt The oracle was also known to the early Romans Rome s seventh and last king Lucius Tarquinius Superbus after witnessing a snake near his palace sent a delegation including two of his sons to consult the oracle 56 In 278 BC a Thracian Celtic tribe raided Delphi burned the temple plundered the sanctuary and stole the unquenchable fire from the altar During the raid part of the temple roof collapsed 57 The same year the temple was severely damaged by an earthquake thus it fell into decay and the surrounding area became impoverished The sparse local population led to difficulties in filling the posts required The oracle s credibility waned due to doubtful predictions 58 The oracle flourished again in the second century AD during the rule of emperor Hadrian who is believed to have visited the oracle twice and offered complete autonomy to the city 57 By the 4th century Delphi had acquired the status of a city 59 Constantine the Great looted several monuments in Eastern Mediterranean including Delphi to decorate his new capital Constantinople One of those famous items was the bronze column of Plataea The Serpent Column Ancient Greek Trikarhnos Ὄfis Three headed Serpent Turkish Yilanli Sutun Serpentine Column from the sanctuary dated 479 BC relocated there from Delphi in AD 324 which can still be seen today standing destroyed at a square of Istanbul where once upon a time was the Hippodrome of Constantinople built by Constantine Ottoman Turkish Atmeydani Horse Square 60 with part of one of its heads kept in the Istanbul Archaeology Museums Istanbul Arkeoloji Muzeleri Despite the rise of Christianity across the Roman Empire the oracle remained a religious center throughout the fourth century and the Pythian Games continued to be held at least until 424 AD 59 however the decline continued The attempt of Emperor Julian to revive polytheism did not survive his reign 57 Excavations have revealed a large three aisled basilica in the city as well as traces of a church building in the sanctuary s gymnasium 59 The site was abandoned in the sixth or seventh centuries although a single bishop of Delphi is attested in an episcopal list of the late eighth and early ninth centuries 59 Religious significance of the oracle Edit Ruins of the ancient temple of Apollo at Delphi overlooking the valley of Phocis Delphi became the site of a major temple to Phoebus Apollo as well as the Pythian Games and the prehistoric oracle Even in Roman times hundreds of votive statues remained described by Pliny the Younger and seen by Pausanias Carved into the temple were three phrases gnῶ8i seayton gnōthi seauton know thyself and mhdὲn ἄgan meden agan nothing in excess and Ἑggya para d ἄth engya para d ate make a pledge and mischief is nigh 61 In antiquity the origin of these phrases was attributed to one or more of the Seven Sages of Greece by authors such as Plato 62 and Pausanias 63 Additionally according to Plutarch s essay on the meaning of the E at Delphi the only literary source for the inscription there was also inscribed at the temple a large letter E 64 Among other things epsilon signifies the number 5 However ancient as well as modern scholars have doubted the legitimacy of such inscriptions 65 According to one pair of scholars The actual authorship of the three maxims set up on the Delphian temple may be left uncertain Most likely they were popular proverbs which tended later to be attributed to particular sages 66 According to the Homeric hymn to the Pythian Apollo Apollo shot his first arrow as an infant that effectively slew the serpent Pytho the son of Gaia who guarded the spot To atone the murder of Gaia s son Apollo was forced to fly and spend eight years in menial service before he could return forgiven A festival the Septeria was held every year at which the whole story was represented the slaying of the serpent and the flight atonement and return of the god 67 The Pythian Games took place every four years to commemorate Apollo s victory 67 Another regular Delphi festival was the Theophania 8eofaneia an annual festival in spring celebrating the return of Apollo from his winter quarters in Hyperborea The culmination of the festival was a display of an image of the deities usually hidden in the sanctuary to worshippers 68 The theoxenia was held each summer centred on a feast for gods and ambassadors from other states Myths indicate that Apollo killed the chthonic serpent Python guarding the Castalian Spring and named his priestess Pythia after her Python who had been sent by Hera had attempted to prevent Leto while she was pregnant with Apollo and Artemis from giving birth 69 The spring at the site flowed toward the temple but disappeared beneath creating a cleft which emitted chemical vapors that purportedly caused the oracle at Delphi to reveal her prophecies Apollo killed Python but had to be punished for it since he was a child of Gaia The shrine dedicated to Apollo was originally dedicated to Gaia and shared with Poseidon 67 The name Pythia remained as the title of the Delphic oracle Erwin Rohde wrote that the Python was an earth spirit who was conquered by Apollo and buried under the omphalos and that it is a case of one deity setting up a temple on the grave of another 70 Another view holds that Apollo was a fairly recent addition to the Greek pantheon coming originally from Lydia citation needed The Etruscans coming from northern Anatolia also worshipped Apollo 71 and it may be that he was originally identical with Mesopotamian Aplu an Akkadian title meaning son originally given to the plague God Nergal son of Enlil citation needed Apollo Smintheus Greek Apollwn Smin8eys the mouse killer 72 who eliminates mice a primary cause of disease hence he promotes preventive medicine History EditOccupation of the site at Delphi can be traced back to the Neolithic period with extensive occupation and use beginning in the Mycenaean period 1600 1100 BC In Mycenaean times Krissa was a major Greek land and sea power perhaps one of the first in Greece if the Early Helladic date of Kirra is to be believed 73 The ancient sources indicate that the previous name of the Gulf of Corinth was the Krisaean Gulf 74 Like Krisa Corinth was a Dorian state and Gulf of Corinth was a Dorian lake so to speak especially since the migration of Dorians into the Peloponnesus starting about 1000 BC Krisa s power was broken finally by the recovered Aeolic and Attic Ionic speaking states of southern Greece over the issue of access to Delphi Control of it was assumed by the Amphictyonic League an organization of states with an interest in Delphi in the early Classical period Krisa was destroyed for its arrogance The gulf was given Corinth s name Corinth by then was similar to the Ionic states ornate and innovative not resembling the spartan style of the Doric Ancient Delphi Edit Earlier myths 75 23 include traditions that Pythia or the Delphic oracle already was the site of an important oracle in the pre classical Greek world as early as 1400 BC and rededicated from about 800 BC when it served as the major site during classical times for the worship of the god Apollo Speculative illustration of ancient Delphi by French architect Albert Tournaire Delphi was since ancient times a place of worship for Gaia the mother goddess connected with fertility The town started to gain pan Hellenic relevance as both a shrine and an oracle in the seventh century BC Initially under the control of Phocaean settlers based in nearby Kirra currently Itea Delphi was reclaimed by the Athenians during the First Sacred War 597 585 BC The conflict resulted in the consolidation of the Amphictyonic League which had both a military and a religious function revolving around the protection of the Temple of Apollo This shrine was destroyed by fire in 548 BC and then fell under the control of the Alcmaeonids who were banned from Athens In 449 448 BC the Second Sacred War fought in the wider context of the First Peloponnesian War between the Peloponnesian League led by Sparta and the Delian Attic League led by Athens resulted in the Phocians gaining control of Delphi and the management of the Pythian Games In 356 BC the Phocians under Philomelos captured and sacked Delphi leading to the Third Sacred War 356 346 BC which ended with the defeat of the former and the rise of Macedon under the reign of Philip II This led to the Fourth Sacred War 339 BC which culminated in the Battle of Chaeronea 338 BC and the establishment of Macedonian rule over Greece In Delphi Macedonian rule was superseded by the Aetolians in 279 BC when a Gallic invasion was repelled and by the Romans in 191 BC The site was sacked by Lucius Cornelius Sulla in 86 BC during the Mithridatic Wars and by Nero in 66 AD Although subsequent Roman emperors of the Flavian dynasty contributed toward to the restoration of the site it gradually lost importance In the course of the third century mystery cults became more popular than the traditional Greek pantheon Christianity which started as yet one more mystery cult soon gained ground and this eventually resulted in the persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire The anti pagan legislation of the Flavian dynasty deprived ancient sanctuaries of their assets citation needed The emperor Julian attempted to reverse this religious climate yet his pagan revival was particularly short lived When the doctor Oreibasius visited the oracle of Delphi in order to question the fate of paganism he received a pessimistic answer Eἴpate tῷ basileῖ xamaὶ pese daidalos aὐla oὐketi Foῖbos ἔxei kalybhn oὐ mantida dafnhn oὐ pagὰn laleoysan ἀpesbeto kaὶ lalon ὕdwr Tell the king that the flute has fallen to the ground Phoebus does not have a home any more neither an oracular laurel nor a speaking fountain because the talking water has dried out It was shut down during the persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire by Theodosius I in 381 AD 76 Amphictyonic Council Edit The Amphictyonic Council was a council of representatives from six Greek tribes who controlled Delphi and also the quadrennial Pythian Games They met biannually and came from Thessaly and central Greece Over time the town of Delphi gained more control of itself and the council lost much of its influence The sacred precinct in the Iron Age Edit Section of the frieze from the Treasury of the Siphnians now in the museum Excavation at Delphi which was a post Mycenaean settlement of the late ninth century has uncovered artifacts increasing steadily in volume beginning with the last quarter of the eighth century BC Pottery and bronze as well as tripod dedications continue in a steady stream in contrast to Olympia Neither the range of objects nor the presence of prestigious dedications proves that Delphi was a focus of attention for a wide range of worshippers but the large quantity of valuable goods found in no other mainland sanctuary encourages that view Apollo s sacred precinct in Delphi was a Panhellenic Sanctuary where every four years starting in 586 BC 77 athletes from all over the Greek world competed in the Pythian Games one of the four Panhellenic Games precursors of the Modern Olympics The victors at Delphi were presented with a laurel crown stephanos that was ceremonially cut from a tree by a boy who re enacted the slaying of the Python 77 These competitions are also called stephantic games after the crown Delphi was set apart from the other games sites because it hosted the mousikos agon musical competitions 10 These Pythian Games rank second among the four stephantic games chronologically and in importance 77 These games however were different from the games at Olympia in that they were not of such vast importance to the city of Delphi as the games at Olympia were to the area surrounding Olympia Delphi would have been a renowned city regardless of whether it hosted these games it had other attractions that led to it being labeled the omphalos navel of the earth in other words the centre of the world 77 78 Cyriacus of Ancona first Westerner to describe the remains in Delphi in 1436 The Society of Dilettanti organized a study expedition to Delphi in 1766 In the inner hestia hearth of the Temple of Apollo an eternal flame burned After the battle of Plataea the Greek cities extinguished their fires and brought new fire from the hearth of Greece at Delphi in the foundation stories of several Greek colonies the founding colonists were first dedicated at Delphi 79 Abandonment and rediscovery Edit The Ottomans finalized their domination over Phocis and Delphi in about 1410 AD Delphi itself remained almost uninhabited for centuries It seems that one of the first buildings of the early modern era was the monastery of the Dormition of Mary or of Panagia the Mother of God built above the ancient gymnasium at Delphi It must have been toward the end of the fifteenth or in the sixteenth century that a settlement started forming there which eventually ended up forming the village of Kastri Ottoman Delphi gradually began to be investigated The first Westerner to describe the remains in Delphi was Cyriacus of Ancona a fifteenth century merchant turned diplomat and antiquarian considered the founding father of modern classical archeology 80 He visited Delphi in March 1436 and remained there for six days He recorded all the visible archaeological remains based on Pausanias for identification He described the stadium and the theatre at that date as well as some freestanding pieces of sculpture He also recorded several inscriptions most of which are now lost His identifications however were not always correct for example he described a round building he saw as the temple of Apollo while this was simply the base of the Argives ex voto A severe earthquake in 1500 caused much damage In 1766 an English expedition funded by the Society of Dilettanti included the Oxford epigraphist Richard Chandler the architect Nicholas Revett and the painter William Pars Their studies were published in 1769 under the title Ionian Antiquities 81 followed by a collection of inscriptions 82 and two travel books one about Asia Minor 1775 83 and one about Greece 1776 84 Apart from the antiquities they also related some vivid descriptions of daily life in Kastri such as the crude behaviour of the Turco Albanians who guarded the mountain passes In 1805 Edward Dodwell visited Delphi accompanied by the painter Simone Pomardi 85 Lord Byron visited in 1809 accompanied by his friend John Cam Hobhouse Yet there I ve wandered by the vaulted rill Yes Sighed o er Delphi s long deserted shrine where save that feeble fountain all is still He carved his name on the same column in the gymnasium as Lord Aberdeen later Prime Minister who had visited a few years before Proper excavation did not start until the late nineteenth century see Excavations section after the village had moved Delphi in later art Edit Nocolas Gerbel fanciful Delphic castle From the sixteenth century onward woodcuts of Delphi began to appear in printed maps and books The earliest depictions of Delphi were totally imaginary for example those created by Nikolaus Gerbel who published in 1545 a text based on the map of Greece by N Sofianos The ancient sanctuary was depicted as a fortified city 86 View of Delphi with Sacrificial Procession by Claude Lorrain The first travelers with archaeological interests apart from the precursor Cyriacus of Ancona were the British George Wheler and the French Jacob Spon who visited Greece in a joint expedition in 1675 1676 They published their impressions separately In Wheler s Journey into Greece published in 1682 a sketch of the region of Delphi appeared where the settlement of Kastri and some ruins were depicted The illustrations in Spon s publication Voyage d Italie de Dalmatie de Grece et du Levant 1678 are considered original and groundbreaking Travelers continued to visit Delphi throughout the nineteenth century and published their books which contained diaries sketches and views of the site as well as pictures of coins The illustrations often reflected the spirit of romanticism as evident by the works of Otto Magnus von Stackelberg where apart from the landscapes La Grece Vues pittoresques et topographiques Paris 1834 are depicted also human types Costumes et usages des peuples de la Grece moderne dessines sur les lieux Paris 1828 The philhellene painter W Williams has comprised the landscape of Delphi in his themes 1829 Influential personalities such as F Ch H L Pouqueville W M Leake Chr Wordsworth and Lord Byron are amongst the most important visitors of Delphi Delphi by Edward Lear features the Phaedriades After the foundation of the modern Greek state the press became also interested in these travelers Thus Ephemeris writes 17 March 1889 In the Revues des Deux Mondes Paul Lefaivre published his memoirs from an excursion to Delphi The French author relates in a charming style his adventures on the road praising particularly the ability of an old woman to put back in place the dislocated arm of one of his foreign traveling companions who had fallen off the horse In Arachova the Greek type is preserved intact The men are rather athletes than farmers built for running and wrestling particularly elegant and slender under their mountain gear Only briefly does he refer to the antiquities of Delphi but he refers to a pelasgian wall 80 meters long on which innumerable inscriptions are carved decrees conventions manumissions citation needed Itea from Delphi 1925 by Willoughby Vera Itea is a town located in Greece Gradually the first travelling guides appeared The revolutionary pocket books invented by Karl Baedeker accompanied by maps useful for visiting archaeological sites such as Delphi 1894 and the informed plans the guides became practical and popular The photographic lens revolutionized the way of depicting the landscape and the antiquities particularly from 1893 onward when the systematic excavations of the French Archaeological School started However artists such as Vera Willoughby continued to be inspired by the landscape citation needed Delphic themes inspired several graphic artists Besides the landscape Pythia and Sibylla become illustration subjects even on Tarot cards 87 A famous example constitutes Michelangelo s Delphic Sibyl 1509 88 89 90 the nineteenth century German engraving Oracle of Apollo at Delphi as well as the recent ink on paper drawing The Oracle of Delphi 2013 by M Lind 91 Modern artists are inspired also by the Delphic Maxims Examples of such works are displayed in the Sculpture park of the European Cultural Center of Delphi and in exhibitions taking place at the Archaeological Museum of Delphi citation needed Delphi in later literature EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Delphi inspired literature as well In 1814 W Haygarth friend of Lord Byron refers to Delphi in his work Greece a Poem In 1888 Charles Marie Rene Leconte de Lisle published his lyric drama L Apollonide accompanied by music by Franz Servais More recent French authors used Delphi as a source of inspiration such as Yves Bonnefoy Delphes du second jour or Jean Sullivan nickname of Joseph Lemarchand in L Obsession de Delphes 1967 but also Rob MacGregor s Indiana Jones and the Peril at Delphi 1991 The presence of Delphi in Greek literature is very intense Poets such as Kostis Palamas The Delphic Hymn 1894 Kostas Karyotakis Delphic festival 1927 Nikephoros Vrettakos return from Delphi 1957 Yannis Ritsos Delphi 1961 62 and Kiki Dimoula Gas omphalos and Appropriate terrain 1988 to mention only the most renowned ones Angelos Sikelianos wrote The Dedication of the Delphic speech 1927 the Delphic Hymn 1927 and the tragedy Sibylla 1940 whereas in the context of the Delphic idea and the Delphic festivals he published an essay entitled The Delphic union 1930 The nobelist George Seferis wrote an essay under the title Delphi in the book Dokimes 92 The importance of Delphi for the Greeks is significant The site has been recorded on the collective memory and have been expressed through tradition Nikolaos Politis the famous Greek ethnographer in his Studies on the life and language of the Greek people part A offers two examples from Delphi a the priest of Apollo 176 When Christ was born a priest of Apollo was sacrificing below the monastery of Panayia on the road of Livadeia on a site called Logari Suddenly he abandoned the sacrifice and says to the people in this moment was born the son of God who will be very powerful like Apollo but then Apollo will beat him He didn t have time to finish his speech and a thunder came down and burnt him opening the rock nearby into two p 99 citation needed b The Mylords 108 The Mylords are not Christians because nobody ever saw them cross themselves They originate from the old pagan inhabitants of Delphi who kept their property in castle called Adelphi named after the two brother princes who built it When Christ and his mother came to the site and all people around converted to Christianity they thought that they should better leave thus the Mylords left for the West and took all their belongings with them The Mylords come here now and worship these stones p 59 citation needed Gallery Edit The theatre at Delphi Ruins of the theatre at Delphi Stacked stones The PhaedriadesSee also EditAristoclea Delphic priestess of the 6th century BC said to have been tutor to Pythagoras Ex voto of the Attalids Delphi Franz Weber activist made an honorary citizen of Delphi in 1997 Greek art List of traditional Greek place names Portico of the AetoliansFootnotes Edit In English the name Delphi is pronounced either as ˈ d ɛ l f aɪ or in a more Greek like manner as ˈ d ɛ l f iː The bottom line on the etymology is that Delphoi is related to delphus womb which is consistent with the omphalos stone there being considered the navel of the universe and the site being the uterus of Earth The delphis or dolphin connection is an accidental result of the dolpins being named from their uterus like appearance The full etymology is to be found in Frisk 2 The inscriptional variants Dalphoi Dolphoi Derphoi 3 might appear to be dialects especially Dalphoi usually taken as Phocian as the Phocians spoke Doric Frisk labels them as secondary developments including the apparent Doric original a in Dalphoi It could well be Phocian but was not originally Doric The true dialect form Aeolic Belphoi with Delphoi must be reflexes of a Bronze Age Gwelphoi which does not have an original a 4 Frisk s Proto Indoeuropean is gwelbh u with a u extension Without the extension there is no relation between Delphoi and delphus However Frisk a major Indo Europeanist cites some parallels of woi to oi in other words The evidence from mythology adds strength to his hypothesis Without the w Delphoi is not related to Delphus but only seems so The etymology of dolphin is fairly standard The speaking water is much criticised because it is the Pythia that speaks not the water However a standard feature of oracular response from Apollo is the requirement that the priestess drink from a spring of fresh water considered sacred It is certain that the spring captured at the chasm was piped to the adyton in the temple Those who argue for an entirely literary manufacture of the poems do not recognize any proto history in them The prevalent archaeological view is that with regard to geographic detail they are in fact mainly proto historic All three versions instead of being simple and traditional are already selective and tendentious They disagree with each other The poem has two parts To Delian Apollo and To Pythian Apollo The Pytho myth is only in the latter Such was its prestige that most Hellenes after 500 BCE placed its foundation in the earliest days of the world before Apollo took possession they said Ge Earth Gaia and her daughter Themis had spoken oracles at Pytho Such has been the strength of the tradition that many historians and others have accepted as historical fact the ancient statement that Ge and Themis spoke oracles before it became Apollo s establishment yet nothing but the myth supports this statement In the earliest account known of the Delphic oracle s beginnings the story found in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo 281 374 there was no oracle before Apollo came and killed the great she dragon Pytho s only inhabitant This was apparently the Delphic myth of the sixth century 43 The earth is the abode of the dead therefore the earth deity has power over the ghostly world the shapes of dreams which often foreshadowed the future were supposed to ascend from the world below therefore the earth deity might acquire an oracular function especially through the process of incubation in which the consultant slept in a holy shrine with his ear upon the ground That such conceptions attached to Gaia is shown by the records of her cults at Delphi Athens and Aegae A recently discovered inscription speaks of a temple of Ge at Delphi As regards Gaia we also can accept it It is confirmed by certain features in the latter Delphic divination and also by the story of the Python 44 Because the founding of the city was for the Greeks as it had been for earlier cultures primarily a religious act Delphi naturally assumed charge of the new foundations and especially in the early period of colonization the Pythian Apollo gave specific advice that dispatched new colonies in every direction under the aegis of Apollo Few cities would undertake such an expedition without consulting the oracle Thus at a moment when the growth of population might have led to congestion within the city to random emigration or to conflicts for arable land in the more densely populated regions Delphi willy nilly faced the problem and conducted a program of organized dispersal 55 Citations Edit Wells John C 2000 1990 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary new ed Harlow England Longman p 209 ISBN 978 0 582 36467 7 Frisk Hjalmar 1960 delfis Delfoi delfys Griechisches Etymologisches Worterbuch Vol Band I Heidelberg Carl Winter Also given in Henry George Liddell Robert Scott Henry Stuart Jones 1940 Delfoi A Greek English Lexicon Perseus Digital Library Alice Mouton Ian Rutherford Ilya Yakubovich 2013 Luwian Identities Culture Language and Religion Between Anatolia and the Aegean Leiden Brill p 66 Suda pi 3137 Suda delta 210 Archaeological Site of Delphi World Heritage Convention United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 23 October 2022 a b Konstaninou Ioanna Delphi the Oracle and its Role in the Political and Social Life of the Ancient Greeks Hannibal Publishing House Athens a b LSJ s v py8w a b c Miller 2004 p 95 Kase 1970 pp 1 2 Kase 1970 pp 4 5 Kase 1970 p 5 Gregory Timothy E 1983 Julian and the last oracle at Delphi Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 24 4 a b c Delphi Archived 2005 04 01 at the Wayback Machine Hellenic Ministry of Culture Petrides P 1997 Delphes dans l Antiquite tardive premiere approche topographique et ceramologique BCH 121 681 695 Petrides P 2003 Ateliers de potiers protobyzantins a Delphes in X MPAKIRTZHS ed 7o Die8nes Synedrio Mesaiwnikhs Keramikhs ths Mesogeioy 8essalonikh 11 16 Oktwbrioy 1999 Praktika A8hna 443 446 Petrides P 2005 Un exemple d architecture civile en Grece les maisons protobyzantines de Delphes IVe VIIe s Melanges Jean Pierre Sodini Travaux et Memoires 15 Paris pp 193 204 Maurizio Lazzari Silvestro Lazzari July 2012 Geological and Geomorphological Hazard in Historical and Archaeological Sites of the Mediterranean Area Knowledge Forecasting and Mitigation Disaster Advances 5 3 69 Sakoulas Thomas Delphi Archaeological Site Ancient Greece org Retrieved 16 November 2020 Sakoulas Thomas Temple of Apollo at Delphi Ancient Greece org Retrieved 28 November 2016 Bowra C M 2000 Pindar Oxford University Press pp 373 75 a b c Harissis 2019 Bommelaer J F 1991 Guide de Delphes Le site Paris Laroche D pp 207 212 Delphi Theater at Ancient Greece org Bommelaer J F Das Theater in Maas M ed Delphi Orakel am Nabel der Welt Karlsruhe 1996 pp 95 105 Mulliez D Oi py8ikoi agwnes Oi martyries twn epigrafwn in Kolwnia R ed Arxaia 8eatra ths Stereas Elladas Diazwma A8hna 2013 147 154 ARXAIO 8EATRO DELFWN Parel8on Paron Mellon XORHGIKOS FAKELOS Diazoma gr Retrieved 5 March 2022 Xlepa E A Papantwnopoylos K Tekmhriwsh kai apokatastash toy arxaioy 8eatroy Delfwn in Kolwnia R ed Arxaia 8eatra ths Stereas Elladas Diazwma A8hna 2013 173 198 Marcus Vitruvius Pollio de Architectura Book VII University of Chicago Retrieved 14 June 2017 Delphi Stadium at Ancient Greece org Pindar Pythian 3 Hippodrome of ancient Delphi located archaeologynewsnetwork blogspot co uk Retrieved 14 April 2018 Manumission Wall Archived 2015 09 23 at the Wayback Machine at Ashes2Art Manumission of female slaves at Delphi at attalus org a b c Miller 2004 p 98 Harissis 2019 p 89 Lloyd Jones 1976 p 60 Parke 1939 p 6 Graves Robert 1993 The Greek Myths Complete Edition Penguin Harmondsworth Herbert William Parke The Delphic Oracle v 1 p 3 William Godwin 1876 Lives of the Necromancers London F J Mason p 11 Hymn to Pythian Apollo l 254 74 Telphousa recommends to Apollo to build his oracle temple at the site of Krisa below the glades of Parnassus Fontenrose Joseph 1978 The Delphic Oracle Its Responses and Operations with a Catalogue of Responses pp 3 4 Farnell Lewis Richard The Cults of the Greek States v III pp 8 10 onwards Odyssey VIII 80 See e g Fearn 2007 p 182 Liritzis I Castro B 2013 Delphi and Cosmovision Apollo s absence at the land of the hyperboreans and the time for consulting the oracle Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 16 2 184 Bibcode 2013JAHH 16 184L Castro Belen Liritzis Ioannis Nyquist Anne 2015 Oracular Functioning And Architecture of Five Ancient Apollo Temples Through Archaeoastronomy Novel Approach And Interpretation Interpretation Nexus Network Journal Architecture amp Mathematics 18 2 373 doi 10 1007 s00004 015 0276 2 Spiller Henry A Hale John R de Boer Jelle Z 2002 The Delphic Oracle A Multidisciplinary Defense of the Gaseous Vent Theory PDF Clinical Toxicology 40 2 189 196 doi 10 1081 clt 120004410 PMID 12126193 S2CID 38994427 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 11 28 John Roach 14 August 2001 Delphic Oracle s Lips May Have Been Loosened by Gas Vapors National Geographic Retrieved 8 March 2007 Spiller Henry de Boer Jella Hale John R Chanton Jeffery 2008 Gaseous emissions at the site of the Delphic Oracle Assessing the ancient evidence Clinical Toxicology 46 5 487 488 doi 10 1080 15563650701477803 PMID 18568810 S2CID 12441885 Piccardi Luigi 2000 Active faulting at Delphi Greece Seismotectonic remarks and a hypothesis for the geologic environment of a myth Geology 28 7 651 654 Bibcode 2000Geo 28 651P doi 10 1130 0091 7613 2000 28 lt 651 AFADGS gt 2 0 CO 2 Piccardi Luigi Monti Cassandra Vaselli Orlando Tassi Franco Gaki Papanastassiou Kalliopi Papanastassiou Dimitris January 2008 Scent of a myth tectonics geochemistry and geomythology at Delphi Greece Journal of the Geological Society 165 1 5 18 Bibcode 2008JGSoc 165 5P doi 10 1144 0016 76492007 055 S2CID 131225069 Harissis Haralampos V 2014 A Bittersweet Story The True Nature of the Laurel of the Oracle of Delphi Perspect Biol Med 57 3 351 360 doi 10 1353 pbm 2014 0032 PMID 25959349 S2CID 9297573 Retrieved 27 November 2016 Lewis Mumford The City in History New York Harcourt Brace amp World 1961 p 140 Livy Ab urbe condita 1 56 a b c Lampsas Giannis 1984 Dictionary of the Ancient World Lexiko tou Archaiou Kosmou Vol I Athens Domi Publications pp 761 762 Wood Michael 2003 The road to Delphi the life and afterlife of oracles 1st ed New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 0 374 52610 9 OCLC 52090516 a b c d Gregory Timothy E 1991 Delphi In Kazhdan Alexander ed Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium London New York Oxford University Press p 602 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 Scott Michael 2014 Delphi A History of the Center of the Ancient World 1st ed Princeton Oxford Princeton University Press pp 240 241 ISBN 978 0 691 15081 9 Plato Charmides 164d 165a Plato Protagoras 343a b at the Perseus Project Pausanias Description of Greece Phocis and Ozolian Locri 10 24 1 at the Perseus Project Hodge A Trevor The Mystery of Apollo s E at Delphi American Journal of Archaeology Vol 85 No 1 Jan 1981 pp 83 84 H Parke and D Wormell The Delphic Oracle Basil Blackwell 1956 vol 1 pp 387 389 Parke amp Wormell p 389 a b c Cf Seyffert Dictionary of Classic Antiquities article on Delphic Oracle Archived 2007 02 02 at the Wayback Machine James Hall A History of Ideas and Images in Italian Art pp 70 71 1983 John Murray London ISBN 0719539714 Michael Grant John Hazel 2 August 2004 Who s Who in Classical Mythology Routledge p 61 ISBN 978 1 134 50943 0 Rodhe E 1925 Psyche The Cult of Souls and the Belief in Immortality among the Greeks trans from the 8th edn by W B Hillis London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1925 reprinted by Routledge 2000 p 97 Stevens Natalie L C 2009 A New Reconstruction of the Etruscan Heaven American Journal of Archaeology 113 2 153 164 doi 10 3764 aja 113 2 153 JSTOR 20627565 S2CID 191397946 Entry smin8eys Archived 2009 12 02 at the Wayback Machine at Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon Kase 1970 pp 16 17 Kase 1970 pp 28 29 Pausanias 10 12 1 Grecia Guida d Europa in Italian Milano Touring Club Italiano 1977 p 126 a b c d Miller 2004 p 96 Miller 2004 p 97 Burkert 1985 pp 61 84 Edward W Bodnar Later travels with Clive Foss Chandler R Revett N Pars W Ionian Antiquities London 1769 Chandler R Revett N Pars W Inscriptiones antiquae pleraeque nondum editae in Asia Minore et Graecia praesertim Athensis collectae Oxford 1774 Chandler R Revett N Pars W Travels in Asia Minor Oxford 1775 Chandler R Revett N Pars W Travels in Greece Oxford 1776 A classical and topographical tour through Greece London 1819 Tolias George 2006 Nikolaos Sophianos s Totius Graeciae Descriptio The Resources Diffusion and Function of a Sixteenth Century Antiquarian Map of Greece Imago Mundi 58 2 150 182 doi 10 1080 03085690600687214 hdl 10442 13763 S2CID 54885024 The views are imaginary and some are reproductions or variants of older woodcuts of German towns here used for Greek towns Tarot of Delphi Aeclectic net Retrieved 14 April 2018 Michelangelo 1509 Delphic Sibyl Wikimedia Commons painting John Collier 1891 The Priestess of Delphi painting John William Waterhouse 1882 Consulting the Oracle JWWaterhouse com painting Malin Lind 22 January 2013 The Oracle of Delphi theshapeshifter wordpress com ink on paper Delphi Art creation of life Retrieved 14 April 2018 Yiannias Vicky October 6 2003 Lecture on Seferis at the Hellenic Culture Foundation Greek News Archived from the original on 2021 04 18 Retrieved 2021 04 18 Citation references EditBroad William J The Oracle Ancient Delphi and the Science Behind its Lost Secrets New York Penguin 2006 ISBN 1 59 420081 5 Burkert Walter 1985 Greek Religion Connelly Joan Breton Portrait of a Priestess Women and Ritual in Ancient Greece Princeton University Press 2007 ISBN 0691127468 Call of Duty Black Ops 4 2018 Ancient Evil Dempsey T Reverend The Delphic oracle its early history influence and fall Oxford B H Blackwell 1918 Castro Belen Liritzis Ioannis and Nyquist Anne 2015 Oracular Functioning And Architecture of Five Ancient Apollo Temples Through Archaeastronomy Novel Approach And Interpretation Nexus Network Journal Architecture amp Mathematics 18 2 373 395 DOI 10 1007 s00004 015 0276 2 Farnell Lewis Richard The Cults of the Greek States in five volumes Clarendon Press 1896 1909 Cf especially volume III and volume IV on the Pythoness and Delphi Fearn David 2007 Bacchylides Politics Performance Poetic Tradition Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199215508 Fontenrose Joseph Eddy The Delphic oracle its responses and operations with a catalogue of responses Berkeley University of California Press 1978 ISBN 0520033604 Fontenrose Joseph Eddy Python a study of Delphic myth and its origins New York Biblio amp Tannen 1974 ISBN 081960285X Goodrich Norma Lorre Priestesses New York F Watts 1989 ISBN 0531151131 Guthrie William Keith Chambers The Greeks and their Gods 1955 Hall Manly Palmer The Secret Teachings of All Ages 1928 Ch 14 cf Greek Oracles www PRS Harissis H 2015 A Bittersweet Story The True Nature of the Laurel of the Oracle of Delphi Perspectives in Biology and Medicine Volume 57 Number 3 Summer 2014 pp 295 298 Harissis H 2019 Pindar s Paean 8 and the birth of the myth of the first temples of Delphi Acta Classica Proceedings of the Classical Association of South Africa 62 1 78 123 Herodotus The Histories Homeric Hymn to Pythian Apollo Kase Edward W 1970 A Study of the Role of Krisa in the Mycenaean Era Master s Thesis Loyola University Docket 2467 Liritzis I Castro B 2013 Delphi and Cosmovision Apollo s absence at the land of the hyperboreans and the time for consulting the oracle Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 16 2 184 206 Bibcode 2013JAHH 16 184L Lloyd Jones Hugh 1976 The Delphic Oracle Greece amp Rome 23 1 60 73 doi 10 1017 S0017383500018283 S2CID 162187662 Manas John Helen Divination ancient and modern New York Pythagorean Society 1947 Miller Stephen G 2004 Ancient Greek Athletics New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 9780300100839 Parke Herbert William 1939 A history of the Delphic oracle Oxford Basil Blackwell Plutarch Lives Rohde Erwin Psyche 1925 Seyffert Oskar Dictionary of Classical Antiquities London W Glaisher 1895 Spiller Henry A John R Hale and Jelle Z de Boer The Delphic Oracle A Multidisciplinary Defense of the Gaseous Vent Theory Clinical Toxicology 40 2 2000 189 196 West Martin Litchfield The Orphic Poems 1983 ISBN 0 19 814854 2 Further reading EditAdornato G 2008 Delphic Enigmas The Gelas ἀnasswn Polyzalos and the Charioteer Statue American Journal of Archaeology 112 1 29 55 doi 10 3764 aja 112 1 29 S2CID 157508659 Davies J K 1998 Finance Administrations and Realpolitik The Case of Fourth Century Delphi In Modus Operandi Essays in Honour of Geoffrey Rickman Edited by M Austin J Harries and C Smith 1 14 London Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Suppl 71 Davies John 2007 The Origins of the Festivals especially Delphi and the Pythia In Pindar s Poetry Patrons and Festivals From Archaic Greece to the Roman Empire Edited by Simon Hornblower and Catherine Morgan 47 69 Oxford Oxford Univ Press Kindt Julia 2016 Revisiting Delphi Religion and Storytelling in Ancient Greece Cambridge Classical Studies Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press Maurizio Lisa 1997 Delphic Oracles as Oral Performances Authenticity and Historical Evidence Classical Antiquity 16 2 308 334 doi 10 2307 25011067 JSTOR 25011067 McInerney Jeremy 2011 Delphi and Phokis A Network Theory Approach Pallas 87 87 95 106 doi 10 4000 pallas 1948 McInerney Jeremy 1997 Parnassus Delphi and the Thyiades Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 38 3 263 284 Morgan Catherine 1990 Athletes and Oracles The Transformation of Olympia and Delphi in the Eighth Century BC Cambridge UK Cambridge Univ Press Partida Elena C 2002 The Treasuries at Delphi An Architectural Study Jonsered Denmark Paul Astroms Scott Michael Delphi A History of the Center of the Ancient World Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 2014 ISBN 978 0 691 15081 9 Scott Michael 2010 Delphi and Olympia The Spatial Politics of Panhellenism in the Archaic and Classical Periods Cambridge and New York Cambridge Univ Press Temple Robert K G Fables Riddles and Mysteries of Delphi Proceedings of 4th Philosophical Meeting on Contemporary Problems No 4 1999 Athens Greece In Greek and English Weir Robert G 2004 Roman Delphi and its Pythian games BAR Series 1306 Oxford Hadrian 5th century evidence Edit Petrides P 2010 La ceramique protobyzantine de Delphes Une production et son contexte Ecole francaise d Athenes Fouilles de Delphes V Monuments figures 4 Paris Athenes Petrides P Deroche V Badie A 2014 Delphes de l Antiquite tardive Secteur au Sud est du Peribole Ecole francaise d Athenes Fouilles de Delphes II Topographie et Architecture 15 Paris Athenes Petrides P 1997 Delphes dans l Antiquite tardive premiere approche topographique et ceramologique BCH 121 pp 681 695 Petrides P 2003 Ateliers de potiers protobyzantins a Delphes in X MPAKIRTZHS ed 7o Die8nes Synedrio Mesaiwnikhs Keramikhs ths Mesogeioy 8essalonikh 11 16 Oktwbrioy 1999 Praktika A8hna pp 443 446 Petrides P 2005 Un exemple d architecture civile en Grece les maisons protobyzantines de Delphes IVe VIIe s Melanges Jean Pierre Sodini Travaux et Memoires 15 Paris pp 193 204 Petrides P Demou J 2011 La redecouverte de Delphes protobyzantine Pallas 87 pp 267 281 External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Delphi Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ancient Delphi Wikisource has original text related to this article Britannica 1911 Delphi E Partida 2012 Delphi Archaeological Museum Odysseus Ministry of Culture and Sports Hellenic Republic Online books and library resources in your library and in other libraries about Delphi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Delphi amp oldid 1130959588, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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