Second Sacred War

The Second Sacred War was the Spartan defeat of the Phocians at Delphi and the restoration of Delphian self-government.

Background
In 458 or 457   BC, the Phocians captured three towns in the Spartan metropolis of Doris. A Spartan army marched on Doris, defeated the Phocians, and restored Dorian rule. On their way back to Peloponnese, an Athenian force attacked the Spartan army but were repelled, and the Spartans returned home. After the Five Years' Truce, Sparta embarked on a campaign of truncating "Athens' imperialistic ambitions in Central Greece".

Conflict
The Second Sacred War was a conflict over the occupation of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi. The Spartans quickly removed the Athenian-backed Phocians and returned stewardship to the Delphians. After the Spartans left, however, an Athenian army led by Pericles took the city and re-installed Phocian rule.

Dating of Conflict
Accepting the writings of the Greek historian Philochorus, a group of historians led by Karl Julius Beloch, Benjamin Dean Meritt, Theodore Wade-Gery and Malcolm Francis McGregor argued that the Spartan ejection of the Phocians occurred in 449   BC, and that the Athenians re-installed them in 447    BC. An alternative view was put forward by historians led by Arnold Wycombe Gomme and Felix Jacoby who rejected Philochorus' chronology. Instead, they asserted that both marches on Delphi happened in 448   BC.

Comment
This Sacred War and the Third were the only two to be referred to as such in classical antiquity. , there was no extant evidence that these changes in Delphian governance had any effect on pilgrims to Pythia.