✪ Giza = "border" (Arabic) between upper Egypt and lower Egypt.
✪ See image of "Stone relief found in the harbor of Pereas, the ancient harbor of Athens. It depicts a pythoness, one possessed with a spirit of divination (Acts 16:16), offering a gift to Apollo at his shrine at Delphi." Gordon Franz, "Gods, Gold and the Glory of Philippi", Ref-0066, 17:4 (2004), pp. 117.
✪ "Upon completion of the laurel ritual, the Pythia would drink deeply from the water of the Castilian Fountain, burn laurel and barley on the unending fire of the altar to Apollo and finally take her seat upon the Tripod in preparation for what was to come. Instantly the Pythia would enter in a manonion (mania), which was characterized by frantic and uncontrolled bodily movements and speaking in unknown tongues. As the Pythia went into here ecstatic and maniacal trance, a prophate (male prophet) would interpret and write down the oracle or prophecy of the Pythia. The wild and ecstatic manner in which these Pythia would receive the oracle did not always end well. Plutarch notes, one one occasion she died as a result of the violent agitation caused by the prophetic furor, due to the fact that the Pythia had entered the tripod against here will and was possessed by an “incoherent and evil inspiration” (Dempsey 1972: 68; Plutarch, Obsolescence of Oracles 438; LCL 5: 499)." Ernest B. McGinnis, "Delphi's Influence on the Word of the New Testament: Part 2: The Oracles of Delphi", Ref-0066, Vol. 20 No. 2 2007, 61:64, p. 63.