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Sextantio occupied a strategic position near the Mediterranean routes of southern Gaul.
The locality of San Juan is associated with archaeological discoveries from the Iberian provinces.
The designation Prope Apulum refers to discoveries made in the vicinity of Apulum within the wider archaeological landscape of central Dacia.
Păuleni-Ciuc is associated with archaeological discoveries linked to the eastern frontier region of Dacia.
The locality of Carevac is associated with archaeological discoveries from the inland territory of Dalmatia.
Athenae remained one of the foremost intellectual and cultural centres of the eastern Mediterranean under Roman rule.
The region of Argolis occupied a central position in the northeastern Peloponnese and preserved important religious traditions into the Roman period.
An ochrea, also spelled ocrea, is a plant structure formed of stipules fused into a sheath surrounding the stem.
Formia is a city and comune in the province of Latina, on the Mediterranean coast of Lazio, Italy.
Sabratha, in the Zawiya District of Libya, was the westernmost of the ancient "three cities" of Roman Tripolis, alongside Oea and Leptis Magna.
Arsameia on the Nymphaios is an ancient city located in Old Kâhta in Kâhta district, Adıyaman Province, Turkey.
A scholarly note recording that the concentration of Mithraic finds at Interanum (modern Entrains-sur-Nohain) in Lugdunensis indicates the existence of one or more Mithraea there, with stone heads in the Delimoges collection possibly being Mithraic representations…
A fragment of a pebble relief showing Mithras as bullkiller, with the collar-wearing dog holding its head near the wound, found in the bed of a stream at Interanum (modern Entrains-sur-Nohain) in Lugdunensis.
The base of a statuette, preserving only one foot of Cautes, found at Luguvallium (modern Carlisle), bearing a dedication to Deus Cautes by Iulius, the archietus.
An inscription found in the ruins of an old stone wall at Cambeck, near Petrianae, recording a vow willingly and with merit fulfilled to Deus Sol Invictus by Sextus Severius Salvator, prefect.
A fragmentary inscription from Scaleby Castle near Cambeckfort (ancient Petrianae), preserving a partial dedication to Sol Mithras.
A small ara from Longovicium (modern Lancaster), bearing a fragmentary dedication to the Invincible God and decorated on the left side with a relief of a boar.