1. On ideology and historical geography, in A.R.H. Baker and M. Billinge (Eds);Baker;Period and Place: Research Methods in Historical Geography,1982
2. For instance, landscape and identity has been described as a burgeoning subject area within historical geography. See;McQuillan;Progress in Human Geography,1995
3. D. Cosgrove, Social Formation and Symbolic Landscapes, London 1984, idem, Prospect, perspective and the evolution of the landscape idea, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 10, 1985, 45, 62, D. Cosgrove and, S. Daniels (Eds), The Iconography of Landscape: Essays on the Symbolic Representation, Design and Use of Past Environments, Cambridge 1988, D. Atkinson and, D. Cosgrove, Urban rhetoric and embodied identities: city, nation, and empire at the Vittorio Emanuele II monument in Rome, 1870–1945, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 88, 1998, 28, 49, S. Daniels, Iconography in historical geography, Area, 16, 1984, 289, 90
4. For instance, see the subjects discussed in, A.R.H. Baker and, G. Biger (Eds), Ideology and Landscape in Historical Perspective: Essays on the Meaning of Some Places in the Past, Cambridge 1992, A more eclectic mix of subjects can be seen in Cosgrove and Daniels, The Iconography of Landscape
5. H. Nitz, Planned temple towns and Brahmin villages as spatial expressions of the ritual politics of Medieval kingdoms in South India, in Baker and Biger, op. cit., 107, 24, R.A. Butlin, Ideological contexts and the reconstruction of Biblical landscapes in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries: Dr Edward Wells and the historical geography of the Holy Land, in Baker and Biger, op. cit., 31, 62