Dictionary Definition
oracular adj
1 of or relating to an oracle; "able by oracular
means to expose a witch"
2 obscurely prophetic; "Delphic pronouncements";
"an oracular message" [syn: Delphic]
3 resembling an oracle in obscurity of thought;
"the oracular sayings of Victorian poets"; "so enigmatic that
priests might have to clarify it"; "an enigmatic smile" [syn:
enigmatic]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
(US) IPA: /ˌɔˈrækjələr/Adjective
oracular- relating to an oracle
- 1810, Sir Walter Scott, Lady of the Lake
-
- In some of the Hebrides they attributed the same oracular power to a large black stone by the sea-shore, which they approached with certain solemnities, and considered the first fancy which came into their own minds, after they did so, to be the undoubted dictate of the tutelar deity of the stone, and, as such, to be, if possible, punctually complied with.
- prophetic,
foretelling the future
- 1844, William Makepeace Thackeray, Barry Lyndon
- My Lord Chatham, whose wisdom his party in those days used to call superhuman, raised his oracular voice in the House of Peers against the American contest;
- 1844, William Makepeace Thackeray, Barry Lyndon
- ambiguous, hard to
interpret
- 1754, Horace Walpole, letter to John Chute
- Nothing offended me but that lisping Miss Haughton, whose every speech is inarticulately oracular.
- 1895, Andrew Dickson White, History of the Warfare of Science
with Theology in Christendom
- This utterance was admirably oracular, being susceptible of cogent quotation by both sides...
- 1754, Horace Walpole, letter to John Chute
Extensive Definition
An oracle is a person or agency considered to be
a source of wise counsel or prophetic opinion; an infallible authority, usually
spiritual in
nature. It may also be a revealed prediction or precognition of the future,
from deities, that is spoken through another object (e.g.: runemal) or life-form (e.g.:
augury and auspice). In the ancient
world many sites gained a reputation for the dispensing of
oracular wisdom: they too became known as "oracles", and the
oracular utterances, called khrēsmoi in Greek,
were often referred to under the same name — a name derived from
the Latin
verb ōrāre, to speak.
Ancient civilizations
China
Oracles were common in many civilizations of antiquity. In China, the use of oracle bones dates as far back as the Shang Dynasty, (1600 BC - 1046 BC). The I Ching, or "Book of Changes", is a collection of linear signs used as oracles that dates from that period. Although divination with the I Ching is thought to have originated prior to the Shang Dynasty, it was not until King Wu of Zhou (1046 BC-1043 BC) that it took its present form. In addition to its oracular power, the I Ching has had a major influence on the philosophy, literature and statecraft of China from the time of the Zhou Dynasty (1122 BC - 256 BC).Egypt
The earliest known oracle was in the renowned temple at Per-Wadjet. This was an important site in the Predynastic era of Ancient Egypt, which includes the cultural developments of ten thousand years from the Paleolithic to 3100 BC The temple was dedicated to the worship of Wadjet and may have been the source for the oracular tradition that spread to Ancient Greece from Egypt. The Per-Wadjet tradition continued through the entire history of the Ancient Egyptian culture. The later Greeks called both the goddess and the city Buto.Another oracle of note lay in Egypt during the
Eighteenth dynasty (1550-1292
BC), in a temple dedicated to Amun, a god who rose
to importance during that time. The Greeks associated him with
Zeus. Alexander
the Great once visited it, and although no record of his query
remains, the oracle is thought to have hailed him as Ammon's son,
influencing his conceptions of his own divinity.
Greece
The earliest tradition of oracular practice in
Hellenic culture is from the archaic period shortly after arrival
of the Hellenes in their current place of settlement c.1300 BC. The
oracle was associated with the cults of deities derived from the
great goddess of nature and fertility, the pre-eminent ancient
oracle—the Delphic
Oracle—operated at the temple of Delphi.
The temple was changed to a center for the
worship of Apollo during the
classical period of Greece
and priests were added to the temple organization—although the
tradition regarding prophecy remained unchanged—and the apparently
always-female priestess continued to provide the services of the
oracle exclusively. It is from this institution that the English
word, oracle, is derived.
The Delphic Oracle exerted considerable influence
throughout Hellenic culture. The Greeks consulted her prior to all
major undertakings, wars, the founding of colonies, and so
forth.
The semi-Hellenic countries around the Greece
world, such as Lydia, Caria, and even
Egypt also
respected her and came to Delphi as supplicants. Croesus of Lydia
consulted Delphi before attacking Persia,
and according to Herodotus was
told, "If you cross the river, you will destroy a great empire."
Believing the response favorable, Croesus attacked, but it was his
own empire that ultimately was destroyed by the Persians.
She allegedly also proclaimed Socrates to be the
wisest man in Greece, to which Socrates said that, if so, this was
because he alone was aware of his own ignorance. After this
confrontation, he believed it his duty to share his knowledge by
teaching Greece's youth. This Oracle's last recorded response was
given in 393 AD, when the emperor Theodosius I
ordered pagan temples to cease operation.
Dodona another
oracle devoted to the Mother
Goddess identified at other sites with Rhea or
Gaia,
but here called Dione.
The shrine of Dodona was the oldest Hellenic oracle, according to
the fifth-century historian Herodotus and, in fact, dates to
pre-Hellenic times, perhaps as early as the second millennium BC
when the tradition spread from Egypt. It became the second most
important oracle in ancient Greece, which later was dedicated to
Zeus and to
Heracles
during the classical period of Greece.
During the period, on Crete lay another
important oracle, sacred to Apollo. It ranked as
one of the most accurate oracles in Greece.
India
In ancient India, the oracle was known as
Akashwani, literally meaning "voice from the sky" and was related
to the message of God. Oracles played key roles in many of the
major incidents of the epics Mahabharat and
Ramayana.
An example is that Kamsa, the evil uncle
of lord Krishna, was
informed by an oracle that the eighth son of his sister Devaki would kill
him. In South Indian language Kannada, "Oracle" is mentioned as
"Asareeravani". There is a famous temple in Gurpur near Mangalore
that brings people from far. In Tamil it is mentioned as
"Asareeree". In Telugu, it is called "Deva Vaakku". It literally
means 'Words of God'.
Mesoamerica
In the migration myth of the Mexitin, i.e., the
early Aztecs,
a mummy-bundle (perhaps an
effigy) carried by four
priests directed the trek away from the cave of origins by giving
oracles. One an oracle led to the foundation of Mexico-Tenochtitlan.
The Yucatec
Mayas knew oracle priests or chilanes, literally 'mouthpieces'
of the deity. Their written repositories of traditional knowledge,
the Books of Chilam
Balam, were all ascribed to one famous oracle priest who
correctly had predicted the coming of the Spaniards and its
associated disasters.
Nigeria
The Igbo people of
southeastern Nigeria in Africa have a long
tradition of using oracles. In Igbo villages, oracles were usually
female priestesses to
a particular deity, usually dwelling in a cave or other secluded
location away from urban areas, and, much as the oracles of ancient
Greece, would deliver prophecies in an ecstatic state to visitors
seeking advice. Though the vast majority of Igbos today are
Christian,
many in Nigeria today still use oracles.
In Igboland of present-day Nigeria many different
oracles were regularly consulted. Two of these became especially
famous: the Agbala oracle at Awka and the Chukwu
oracle at Arochukwu.
Scandinavia
In Norse
mythology, Odin took the severed
head of the mythical god Mimir to Asgard for
consultation as an oracle. The Havamal and other
sources relate the sacrifice of Odin for the
oracular Runes whereby he lost
an eye (external sight) and won wisdom (internal sight; insight).
Tibet
In Tibet, oracles have
played, and continue to play, an important part in religion and
government. The word "oracle" is used by Tibetans to refer to the
spirit that enters those men and women who act as media
between the natural and the spiritual realms. The media are,
therefore, known as kuten, which literally means, "the physical
basis".
The Dalai Lama,
who lives in exile in northern India, still consults an oracle
known as the Nechung
Oracle, which is considered the official state oracle of the
government of Tibet. The Dalai Lama has according to custom, a
custom that has endured for centuries, consulted the Nechung Oracle
during the new year festivites of Losar. Another oracle
he consults is the Tenma
oracle, for which a young Tibetan woman is the medium for the
goddess. The Dalai Lama gives a complete description of the process
of trance and spirit
possession in his book Freedom in Exile. http://www.tibet.com/Buddhism/nechung_hh.html.
Notes
Further reading
- Broad, William J. 2006. The Oracle: The Lost Secrets and Hidden Message of Ancient Delphi. New York: Penguin Press.
- Curnow, T. 1995. The Oracles of the Ancient World: A Comprehensive Guide. London: Duckworth — ISBN 0-7156-3194-2
- Evans-Pritchard, E. 1976. Witchcraft, oracle, and magic among the Azande. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Fontenrose, J. 1981. The Delphic Oracle. Its responses and operations with a catalogue of responses. Berkeley: University of California Press (main page)
- Temple, Robert 2002. Netherworld. London: Century.
- Oracle Insights http://www.oracleinsights.com - A collaborative website about oracles.
- The Copper Oracle of Shri Achyuta- one of the existing and open to all Oracles. More info available at: http://www.garoiashram.org/english/oracle.html
External links
oracular in Samogitian: Žīnīs
oracular in Bulgarian: Оракул
oracular in Catalan: Oracle
oracular in Czech: Věštba
oracular in Danish: Orakel
oracular in German: Orakel
oracular in Modern Greek (1453-): Μαντείο
oracular in Spanish: Oráculo
oracular in Finnish: Oraakkeli
oracular in French: Oracle grec
oracular in Hebrew: אורקל (דת)
oracular in Italian: Oracolo
oracular in Japanese: 神託
oracular in Georgian: ორაკული
oracular in Latin: Oraculum
oracular in Luxembourgish: Griichesch
Orakelen
oracular in Lithuanian: Žynys
oracular in Dutch: Orakel
oracular in Norwegian: Orakel
oracular in Polish: Wyrocznia
oracular in Portuguese: Oráculo
oracular in Russian: Оракул
oracular in Slovenian: Preročišče
oracular in Swedish: Orakel
oracular in Yiddish: אראקעל
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
apocalyptic, augural, auguring, bigoted, conceited, divinatory, doctrinaire, doctrinarian, dogmatic, dogmatizing, fatidic, forecasting, foreseeing, foretelling, forewarning, fortunetelling, haruspical, mantic, opinionated, opinionative, opinioned, peremptory, pontifical, positive, positivistic, predictional, predictive, predictory, prefigurative, prefiguring, presageful, presaging, presignificative,
presignifying,
prognostic, prognosticative,
pronunciative,
prophetic,
self-opinionated, self-opinioned, sibyllic, sibylline, vaticinal, vaticinatory,
weather-wise