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{{Quote|Most want to know about love or death. I tell them what they want to hear. But when people want to know about war or politics, I'm paid very well to tell them what the Cult wants them to hear.|The Pythia, on the Cult of Kosmos' influence, 431 BCE.|Assassin's Creed: Odyssey|The Truth Will Out}}
{{Quote|Most want to know about love or death. I tell them what they want to hear. But when people want to know about war or politics, I'm paid very well to tell them what the Cult wants them to hear.|The Pythia, on the Cult of Kosmos' influence, 431 BCE.|Assassin's Creed: Odyssey|The Truth Will Out}}
[[File:ACOD Pythia.png|thumb|250px|The Pythia in 431 BCE]]
The '''Pythia''', also known as the '''Oracle of Delphi''', was the high priestess of the [[Temple of Apollo, Delphi|Temple]] of [[Apollo]] in [[Sanctuary of Delphi|Delphi]] who delivered prophecies to all who visited her.  
The '''Pythia''', also known as the '''Oracle of Delphi''', was the high priestess of the [[Temple of Apollo, Delphi|Temple]] of [[Apollo]] in [[Sanctuary of Delphi|Delphi]] who delivered prophecies to all who visited her.  



Revision as of 14:41, 21 April 2019


This article is about the Oracle of Delphi. For other uses, see Pythia.
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"Most want to know about love or death. I tell them what they want to hear. But when people want to know about war or politics, I'm paid very well to tell them what the Cult wants them to hear."
―The Pythia, on the Cult of Kosmos' influence, 431 BCE.[src]-[m]
The Pythia in 431 BCE

The Pythia, also known as the Oracle of Delphi, was the high priestess of the Temple of Apollo in Delphi who delivered prophecies to all who visited her.

Pythia was a title given to any woman who served in the role at a given period, and the position was widely regarded as sacrosanct throughout Greece. Throughout the first millennium BCE, her counsel had enormous sociopolitical influence because of the faith the highly religious Greeks placed upon her connection with Apollo. She was commonly selected among the villagers in the region, such as those living at the Chora of Delphi. [citation needed]

History

Archaic period

In the late 7th century BCE, the Theran Battus I visited the Pythia to seek advice, including one on his home which had been plagued with a severe drought with no rain for 7 years. The Pythia gave him a prophecy, tasking him to travel to Libya to establish a city on advice from Apollo. Accepting her advice, Battus I led a group of Therans to Libya, founding the city of Cyrene and the colony of Cyrenaica.[1]

Classical period

The Pythia attempting to dissuade Leonidas

At least since the Greco-Persian Wars, the Pythia had been corrupted by the Cult of Kosmos, who manipulated them into giving false prophecies to individuals who sought their wisdom. Using an Isu artifact in the Sanctuary of Kosmos, the Pythia were given glimpses of the future, which the Cult used for their own benefits and goals.[2] In 480 BCE, King Leonidas I of Sparta sought out the Pythia for advice into going to war with King Xerxes I of Persia, who began a second invasion of Greece. The Cult were present alongside the Pythia, who attempted to dissuade Leonidas from warring, stating that his efforts would be fruitless. However, Leonidas defied the Pythia and Cult and led his men to meet Xerxes' army at the Hot Gates of Thermopylai.[3]

When Kassandra was a baby, her mother Myrrine took her to see the acting Pythia, and the oracle said the child had "such promise."[4] Similarly, when Myrrine's youngest child Alexios was born, he was taken to see the Pythia, whose role was played by Praxithea at the time. Under the orders of the Cult to relay false prophecies according to their designs, Praxithea proclaimed that Myrrine's youngest child had to die to prevent the downfall of Sparta.[5] Nevertheless, the plan failed as both Alexios and Kassandra, who tried to stop and was dropped by Nikolaos,[6] ultimately survived.[7]

The Pythia confronted by Kassandra in 431 BCE

By the time of the Peloponnesian War, Praxithea had stepped down as the Pythia and was succeeded by another oracle. The guilt from her giving the false prophecies eventually led her to confess to her grandchildren Lykaon and Agave, both of whom wanted to take matters into their own hands and bring her to justice.[5]

In 431 BCE, the misthios Kassandra visited the Pythia at the suggestion of her Adrestia co-captain Barnabas.[8]

Appearances

References

  1. Assassin's Creed: Origins
  2. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyThe Truth Will Out
  3. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyBully the Bullies
  4. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyCatching Up
  5. 5.0 5.1 Assassin's Creed: OdysseySins of the Past
  6. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyDebt Collector
  7. Assassin's Creed: Odyssey
  8. Assassin's Creed: OdysseyConsulting a Ghost