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Liguria linked northern Italy to southern Gaul and the western Mediterranean through coastal and Alpine communication routes.
Venetia connected northern Italy to the Adriatic and Danubian worlds through trade, mobility and imperial communication routes.
Etruria formed part of the cultural and religious heartland of central Italy closely connected to Rome and the Tyrrhenian world.
Umbria formed part of the central Italian heartland through which religious practices circulated between Rome and the northern provinces.
Picenum connected the Adriatic coast of central Italy to inland communication routes and the wider networks of the Roman Peninsula.
Samnium occupied a mountainous region of central Italy linked to Rome through military movement and regional urban networks.
Lucania connected inland southern Italy to the Tyrrhenian and Ionian maritime worlds through regional communication networks.
Bruttium occupied the southernmost reaches of the Italian Peninsula where maritime mobility linked Italy, Sicilia and the wider Mediterranean.
Apulia connected southern Italy to the Adriatic and eastern Mediterranean through maritime trade and regional urban networks.
Latium formed the political and religious centre of the Roman world where some of the most important Mithraic communities developed.
Sicilia connected Italy, North Africa and the eastern Mediterranean through some of the busiest maritime routes of the Roman world.
Mauretania Caesariensis connected western North Africa to Mediterranean trade routes and the provincial networks of the Roman empire.
Syria-Coele formed one of the principal urban and cultural centres of the Roman Near East where diverse religious traditions coexisted.
Cappadocia formed a major frontier and military region linking central Anatolia to the eastern limits of the Roman empire.
Bithynia et Pontus connected northwestern Anatolia to the Black Sea through major maritime, urban and provincial networks.
Achaea preserves some of the earliest and most culturally complex evidence for Mithraic cults in the Greek-speaking eastern Mediterranean.
Macedonia formed a major crossroads between the Greek world, the Balkans and the communication routes of the eastern Roman empire.
Thracia connected the Balkan world to the northern Aegean through military movement, trade routes and provincial urban centres.
Pannonia superior preserves one of the richest frontier corpora of Mithraic evidence along the middle Danube.
Noricum formed a key link between the Alpine world and the Danubian frontier where Mithraic cults spread through military and urban environments.