“…Even more interestingly, the study of 'sacred' landscapes has by now become another prominent field of landscape research, mainly in Northwest Europe and North America, by paying attention to the ideational dimensions of sacred mountains and hills, burial monuments and grave markers, sanctuaries, temples and churches [113][114][115]. As we have explained elsewhere [20], the term 'sacred landscapes' has been chosen in acknowledgement of the inspiration provided by the published work of Susan Alcock [116][117][118]. By using this term in her examination of the Hellenistic and Roman sacred landscapes of the Greek world, Alcock shows that the relationship between religion, politics, identity and memory was more intimate and more involved than has often been assumed [118][119][120].…”