The Contribution of the Cartographic Visualisation in Understanding the Historical Geography of an Old Land Property Regime in Mouth Athos (Karyes). Sidiropoulos, G. The Cartographic Journal, 47(3):270–277, August, 2010. Publisher: Taylor & Francis _eprint: https://doi.org/10.1179/000870410X12786821061576
The Contribution of the Cartographic Visualisation in Understanding the Historical Geography of an Old Land Property Regime in Mouth Athos (Karyes) [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
title/\textgreater The peninsula of Mount Athos is the largest monastic gathering of Modern Orthodoxy in the world, operating continually under the same regime since 883 AD. Focusing on Mount Athos, this paper attempts to examine the spatial regime continuation and identify the relation to what is considered to be a small residential unit around a central church (Protatos) within the limits of the Athos peninsula. The paper investigates the delimitation of the area, mapping and recording the relevant changes cartographically. At the same time, the paper creates a cadastral plan of the present regime, recording real estate owners in a cadastral table. Finally, the paper focuses on the significance of the findings to the historical geography of Athos, as well as the emergence of a new ‘area’, added to the twenty monasteries of the peninsula after 1450.
@article{sidiropoulos2010,
	title = {The {Contribution} of the {Cartographic} {Visualisation} in {Understanding} the {Historical} {Geography} of an {Old} {Land} {Property} {Regime} in {Mouth} {Athos} ({Karyes})},
	volume = {47},
	issn = {0008-7041},
	url = {https://doi.org/10.1179/000870410X12786821061576},
	doi = {10.1179/000870410X12786821061576},
	abstract = {title/{\textgreater} The peninsula of Mount Athos is the largest monastic gathering of Modern Orthodoxy in the world, operating continually under the same regime since 883 AD. Focusing on Mount Athos, this paper attempts to examine the spatial regime continuation and identify the relation to what is considered to be a small residential unit around a central church (Protatos) within the limits of the Athos peninsula. The paper investigates the delimitation of the area, mapping and recording the relevant changes cartographically. At the same time, the paper creates a cadastral plan of the present regime, recording real estate owners in a cadastral table. Finally, the paper focuses on the significance of the findings to the historical geography of Athos, as well as the emergence of a new ‘area’, added to the twenty monasteries of the peninsula after 1450.},
	number = {3},
	urldate = {2024-06-05},
	journal = {The Cartographic Journal},
	author = {Sidiropoulos, George},
	month = aug,
	year = {2010},
	note = {Publisher: Taylor \& Francis
\_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1179/000870410X12786821061576},
	keywords = {Mount Athos, cartography, historical geography, historical heritage, proprietary status},
	pages = {270--277},
}

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