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Scandalous Facts Behind the Oracle of Delphi in Greece

What actually happened during the hundreds of years between 720 B.C.E. and 395 A.D. when ancient Greeks consulted the Oracle of Delphi? Who was this magical woman named Pythia whose advice changed history?

In our teacher group walking tour of Delphi, we learned shocking facts to explain the history of the Oracle.

My coworker and I are so excited to be in Delphi, Greece!
My coworker and I are so excited to be in Delphi, Greece!

1. The Oracles were drugged from ethylene gas?!

The Oracle of Delphi was actually several different women from the village below. They were normal gals who took turns climbing the mountain to don the Oracle outfit and breathe some holy smoke from a tripod vase before answering questions of visitors.

But here’s the thing: modern Geologists recently realized that there are fissures in the Earth at Delphi that emit Ethylene gas, so when the ladies inhaled the output, they became drugged!!! Hence their speaking in tongues when asked a question. Drugged Oracles! (Don’t believe me? Read this New York Times article!).

How beautiful is the site of the legendary Oracle of Delphi?!
How beautiful is the site of the legendary Oracle of Delphi?!

2. Spies of Delphi.

When the Oracle replied to questions, she did so in ecstatic, magical gibberish, and thus had to be “translated” by a male priest.

Now, our guide explained that these priests were actually like a giant network of spies, in that they had eyes and ears all around the land; they knew what was going on in the world, and hence could give solid advice.

While the drugged Oracle screeched on, the priest could write whatever he wanted. Generally, what they wanted was to give wise advice that would maintain the peace (and thus keep Delphi safe), so the information from espionage was key in creating this.

Our guide, Mara, shows what Delphi looked like at its height.
Our guide, Mara, shows what Delphi looked like at its height.

3. Subterfuge by animals.

Sometimes an important person would come to Delphi to ask a question, but the spies needed more time to gather information for a sufficient answer, so they would use a trick to buy more time.

Here’s how: People coming to ask the Oracle questions were expected to bring animals to sacrifice. A priest would sprinkle water on the animal, and if it shook its woolly head upon receiving the droplets, the visitor could proceed to the Oracle.

If, however, the animal didn’t react, the pilgrim had to turn around and come back to try again later. How did the priests buy time for certain people, while allowing others to pass? They dripped cold water when they wanted the animal to react, and warm water when they didn’t!

One of the most famous sculptures at Delphi, now in the museum.
One of the most famous sculptures at Delphi, now in the museum.

4. Ambiguity in answers.

Students of Greek myth and legend know that the advice of the Oracle was usually cryptic. Any Horoscope writer knows this is smart, because if things go wrong for you from a prediction, it’s your fault for misinterpreting the advice, not the Oracle’s!

Here’s a legendary example from 560 B.C.E.: “If you cross the river, a great empire will fall,” the Oracle told Croesus, King of Lydia. Being hubristic, the king assumed the doomed empire would be the Persians’, and crossed the water. He lost, and it was his own empire that fell! But you can’t blame the Oracle for a misinterpreted clue. :)

5. Overall great advice.

Whatever the Oracle said, visitors to Delphi would still leave with extra wisdom if they read the writing on the walls. According to our guide, on the walls of Delphi’s structures were etched the following life lessons:

The team that found Delphi's ruins. Can you imagine?!
The team that found Delphi’s ruins. Can you imagine?!

Know thyself

• Everything in moderation

• Harmony in difference

Visitors who took the time to mull over these lessons would think twice about doing something rash like going to war.

6. Slaves to freedom.

In ancient Greece, nearly anyone could become a slave with a little bad luck. According to our guide, even Plato was briefly enslaved after a shipwreck, and his kids had to buy back his freedom. What does this have to do with Delphi? On the stone walls of the Temple of Apollo on Delphi’s mountain, freed slaves of antiquity carved their names.

“That way,” said our guide, “it was literally written in stone that they were freed, and no one could say they weren’t!” This shows a powerful element of ancient Greek democracy: because everyone was expected to adhere to written laws, it obligated the government to provide education and literacy for its citizens!

One of the belly button sculptures, also symbolizing Zeus.
One of the belly-button sculptures, also symbolizing Zeus.

7. Delphi as the navel.

The legend is that Zeus sent two birds around the world in opposite directions, and the place where they met was the center of everything: Delphi… hence, it is known as the “belly-button of the world.” Small domed rock statues around the mountain symbolize this.

8. Buried treasure.

After the Oracle stopped being used, a town was built on top of the site in Delphi, and it wasn’t until 1893 that archaeologists even realized the massive piece of history under the houses! After an earthquake forced the townspeople to move, time was ripe for excavation.

How lucky we are that this remarkable site was found, and that its secrets are slowly being revealed! Can you IMAGINE being that first person who dug down and found the first relic?!

How magical to touch the site of the Oracle of Delphi!
How magical to touch the site of the Oracle of Delphi!

A huge shout-out to Greece for doing such a lovely and respectful job of preserving the magic of the ancient site of Delphi. Well done!

If your imagination is stimulated by this place and history, check out these 40 creative art prompts or these works of famous architecture and historic ruins from around the world — and Delphi is featured.

Want to read more about our teacher curriculum tour of Greece? Click here!

 

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Susan

Tuesday 1st of October 2019

A couple of weeks ago Mara guided us for two days to several sites the most haunting of which was Delphi. Mists encircled the surrounding mountain tops, and the gloom brought by passing showers added to Delphi’s mystery. Mara shared those stories with us, too. I wonder who first tested the ethylene gases!

Lillie Marshall

Wednesday 2nd of October 2019

So wonderful that you had Mara as a guide, too!!! Your trip sounds magical. Great question about the origins of using the gases...

john libby

Friday 1st of May 2015

visited the site in 1969. Geologists were worried about quakes. Locals could be hired to visit other fissures. 'Sweet smelling gases and smoke was everywhere' scary!

Lillie

Saturday 2nd of May 2015

Interesting!

Dr. Steve

Tuesday 1st of April 2014

Thanks for bringing Delphi alive and making it exciting for kids! You get high-schoolers perfectly. I just discovered this site after showing the History Channel documentary for the first time (in accordance with the Common Core, I'm adding more non-fiction to the English 9 Honors curriculum). Your link to the NY Times article gave me three easy-to-access sites for their paper on the scientific findings about the presence of fault lines and ethylene gas.

Now that I've finished my doctorate, I want to do more travel, possibly educational tours, and Greece is definitely on my itinerary. Congratulations on the wedding and the baby. Keep up the great blogging! That's what I call teaching!

Lillie

Tuesday 1st of April 2014

Thanks so much for your comment, Steve! It made my day. I was SO curious why there were so many people on this article today (I can see a live map of viewers through Google Analytics) and you've solved the mystery! I'm honored to be part of your students' reading. Thanks for connecting!

Kathy G

Wednesday 23rd of October 2013

I will be traveling there with GEEO this summer.I can't wait!

Lillie

Wednesday 23rd of October 2013

Have a great time!

Peter

Tuesday 9th of April 2013

I'm glad I stumbled across your site. I was just Googling for some quotes by Socrates to support some vengeful stuff that had my head in the wrong place. Considering feelings aren't made in stone are they malleable, temporal and unique to the moment experienced? Reading about the distant land in the distant past helped take my mind off the here and now and chill out.

And you're very beautiful.

Feel free to squeegee me from your thread.

Lillie

Tuesday 16th of April 2013

Very kind. Thanks!

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