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The first academic journal devoted exclusively to the study of the cult of Mithras.
Un recorrido por los orígenes, la expansión y el legado de Mitra desde Persia hasta el corazón de Roma.
Iulium Carnicum controlled Alpine communications routes linking northern Italy with Noricum.
Drobeta controlled an important crossing point on the Danube and became one of the major centres of Dacia.
The colonia of Iulia Equestris, modern Nyon, overlooked the shores of Lake Geneva and controlled regional routes.
Burnum served as an important legionary centre controlling routes between the Adriatic coast and the Dalmatian interior.
Limestone base from near the Kutyamál vineyard south of the fortress at Apulum, Dacia, decorated with Bacchic vine scrolls and grapes at the top.
The Romans controlled Poetovium until the 1st century BC. It became the base camp of the Legio XIII Gemina, where they built a castrum.
Alpes Poenninae controlled important Alpine routes through which military movement and religious practices circulated between Gaul and Italy.
This monograph presents the findings from Robert J. Bull's 1973 excavation of the Mithraeum in Caesarea Maritima, Israel, including stratigraphic analyses, studies of frescoes and and insights into the site's historical significance.
Some scholars have speculated that the scrolls both figures hold in their hands represent Eastern doctrines brought to the Western world.
The article reveals the context in which the first public appearance of Mitra happened to answer two questions: who were the first people to give prominence to this deity, and for what purpose they did so.