2022
DOI: 10.3390/rel13020164
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The Construction of Sacred Landscapes and Maritime Identities in the Post-Medieval Cyclades Islands: The Case of Paros

Abstract: The Cyclades islands in the South Aegean initially attracted the attention of prehistorians approaching islands as ‘laboratories’ for the study of cultural development, examining the notions of ‘isolation’ and ‘connectivity’, or, more recently, by introducing new terminologies, such as ‘seascape’ and ‘islandscape’. The wealth of material remains of the post-medieval era in the Cyclades islands (e.g., ecclesiastical architecture, ceramics) and the textual record available (e.g., Ottoman tax registers, traveller… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…A lot of studies have been conducted on island identity and religion. Recent studies include Bocci (2019), Keane (2021), Moore and Gibbon (2021), Papantoniou and Depalmas (2022), Stoddart (2022), andVionis (2022). These studies used Archaeological, historiographical, and ethnographic approaches and methods to study the construction of island identities including individual and communal differentiation from various insularities and coastal contexts.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A lot of studies have been conducted on island identity and religion. Recent studies include Bocci (2019), Keane (2021), Moore and Gibbon (2021), Papantoniou and Depalmas (2022), Stoddart (2022), andVionis (2022). These studies used Archaeological, historiographical, and ethnographic approaches and methods to study the construction of island identities including individual and communal differentiation from various insularities and coastal contexts.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The landscape considered sacred reflects and preserves the fundamental ideas and values of society and serves as an important factor of continuity over time, ensuring the transmission of a wide range of historical information to future generations [5,6]. The most culturally and historically relevant sacred elements built along the coast are found in geomorphologically significant places [7], such as the mouth of a river on the sea or the edge of a promontory.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%