The twentieth century discovered the concept of sacred place
largely through the work of Martin Heidegger and Mircea Eliade.
Their writings on sacred place respond to the modern manipulation
of nature and secularization of space, and so may seem
distinctively postmodern, but their work has an important and
unacknowledged precedent in the Neoplatonism of Late Antiquity and
the early Middle Ages. "Sacred Place in Early Medieval
Neoplatonism" traces the appearance and development of sacred place
in the writings of Neoplatonists from the third to ninth centuries,
and sets them in the context of present-day debates over place and
the sacred.
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