In the Archaic period, there were - as well as the prophets, sibyls and Orphic prophets - numerous oracles, these being mainly those which dealt with the forecasting of the future. Most of them ceased to function during the Classical period, and only the most important managed to survive into early Christian times. Certainly the best-known of them was the oracle of Apollo at Delphi. Oracular utterances were made by the Pythia, initially a virgin chosen from among the daughters of the important families of Delphi, but an elderly woman was later preferred. After washing in the Castalian Spring, the Pythia would sit at the sacred tripod in the temple, and, chewing leaves of laurel, would drink water from the Castalian or the Cassotid spring. In the process she fell into an ecstasy, and her normally unintelligible utterances were interpreted by the god's prophet and priests. The first Pythia was said to have been Phemonoe, who used to give oracles in hexameter verse. The Oracle was particularly respected by the Dorians, and, of all the Ionians, most by the Athenians. From very early on it consolidated its political role, both among the Greeks and among the other peoples of Asia Minor. In those days, with Greeks travelling and settling throughout the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, no colonizing mission was considered if it did not have the prior consent and advice of Apollo.
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