Your search Al. N. Oikonomides gave 2979 results.
Tripolitania connected the southern Mediterranean coast to caravan routes and maritime exchange networks of Roman North Africa.
Dacia superior formed part of one of the most intensely Mithraic frontier regions of the Roman empire after the conquest of Trajan.
Baetica occupied a prosperous and highly urbanised corner of Roman Hispania where Mithraic cults circulated through Mediterranean exchange networks.
Across Tarraconensis, Mithraic evidence appears in diverse urban, military and Mediterranean environments of Roman Hispania.
Slave and vilicus in the household of Tiberius Claudius Livianus, linked to the earliest known Mithraic tauroctony.
Neapolitan senator who dedicated a tauroctonic relief to Mithras tauroctonus to the Almighty God Mithras.
Clarissimus knight and legate born in Poetovio that helped to disseminate the cult of Mithras in the African provinces.
Garlic merchant, probably from Lusitania, who dedicated an altar to Cautes in Tarraconensis.
Germania inferior preserves a strongly militarised body of Mithraic evidence from the lower Rhine frontier of the Roman empire.
Cyrene linked North Africa to the Greek East through long-standing urban traditions and eastern Mediterranean maritime exchange.
Along the northern frontier of Roman Britain, Britannia inferior preserves important evidence linked to military and frontier communities.
Aegyptus occupied a unique position within the Roman world where Mediterranean trade, Nile networks and ancient religious traditions intersected.
Campania preserved a vibrant urban and maritime environment closely connected to the commercial life of Roman Italy.
Corsica et Sardinia occupied an important insular position within the maritime networks of the western Mediterranean.
At the western edge of the Roman world, Mauretania Tingitana linked North Africa to Hispania through military and maritime exchange.
Mesopotamia formed part of the eastern frontier zone where Roman military expansion encountered long-established Mesopotamian traditions.
Cilicia occupied a key position between Anatolia, Syria and the eastern Mediterranean maritime routes.
Lycia et Pamphylia connected southern Anatolia to the maritime networks of the eastern Mediterranean world.
Asia formed one of the most urbanised and interconnected provinces of the eastern Roman world where Mithraic cults circulated widely.