Sacred Site
The Oracle of Delphi continues to fascinate visitors thousands of years after the last prophesy was delivered there. Known as the "most important shrine" in all Greece, poets, politicians, and philosophers alike visited or took part in ceremonies at Delphi ("The Oracle at Delphi" n.d.). The exact origin of the site and its oracle is unknown. It was used in the Mycenaean period as a sanctuary to worship a female deity prior to being used as the Hellenic seat of the oracle and temple to Apollo (UNESCO, 2014). Delphi became a major point of pilgrimage, as an annual festival called the Pythian Games (named after the oracle herself) was held there.
However, the oracle's power was at its peak in 1600 BCE (Nevins, n.d.). Although Delphi is the geographical location, the most important element of the site for ancient Greeks was the prophet herself: the Oracle at Delphi. Known as Pythia, the Oracle at Delphi channeled the god Apollo, and communicated the god's words to those who sought her counsel. Historians have suggested that either hallucination or "suggestion" might account for the phenomenon (Nevins, n.d.). Scientific research shows that there may be some evidence that Delphi does indeed have the potential to intoxicate: as Greek historian Strabo pointed out "the seat of the oracle is a cavern hollowed down in the depths & #8230; from which arises pneuma [breath, vapor, gas] that inspires a divine state of possession," (from Geography 9.3.5, cited by de Boer & Hale, 2013). These gases might be fumes that rose from the earth in the location of the sanctuary. "Analysis...
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