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Plovdiv is the second-largest city in Bulgaria, standing on the banks of the Maritsa river in the historical region of Thrace, behind the state capital Sofia.
Ostia may have been Rome's first colony. According to legend, Ancus Marcius, the fourth king of Rome, destroyed the area and founded the colony. An inscription seems to confirm the foundation of the ancient castrum of Ostia in the 7th century BC.
Macerata is a city and comune in central Italy, the county seat of the province of Macerata in the Marche region.
Lambaesis, Lambaisis or Lambaesa, is a Roman archaeological site in Algeria, 11 km southeast of Batna and 27 km west of Timgad, located next to the modern village of Tazoult.
Capua is currently a city and comune in the province of Caserta, in the region of Campania, southern Italy, situated 25 km north of Naples, on the northeastern edge of the Campanian plain.
Tripolitania connected the southern Mediterranean coast to caravan routes and maritime exchange networks of Roman North Africa.
Baetica occupied a prosperous and highly urbanised corner of Roman Hispania where Mithraic cults circulated through Mediterranean exchange networks.
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.
The Mithraeum des Bolards was integrated into a therapeutic cultural complex related to healing waters.
Tribune of the First Cohort of Vardulli, he erected a mithraeum at Bremenium together with his consacranei.
Garlic merchant, probably from Lusitania, who dedicated an altar to Cautes in Tarraconensis.
This supposed Mithraic altar from Soulan in the Pyrenees was later identified as a modern forgery, including both the inscription and the alleged cave context in which it was said to have been discovered.
The Mithraeum of Kunzing was an underground building, oriented east-west. The entrance was probably on the east.
This relief of Mithras slaying the bull incorporates the scene of the god carrying the bull and its birth from a rock.
Histria connected the northern Adriatic to the Balkan and Danubian worlds through maritime and regional communication networks.
Liguria linked northern Italy to southern Gaul and the western Mediterranean through coastal and Alpine communication routes.
Picenum connected the Adriatic coast of central Italy to inland communication routes and the wider networks of the Roman Peninsula.
Lucania connected inland southern Italy to the Tyrrhenian and Ionian maritime worlds through regional communication networks.