Your search St. Egyden gave 2267 results.
Member of the Mithraic community of Les Bolards and dedicator of a statue of Cautes.
Tribune of the First Cohort of Vardulli, he erected a mithraeum at Bremenium together with his consacranei.
Professional author with a special interest in Greco-Roman ritual and sacred landscapes, art and philosophy.
Bactria occupied a distant eastern horizon associated with Iranian cultural traditions and the wider background of Mithraic interpretations.
Along the upper Rhine frontier, Germania superior became one of the principal centres of Mithraic activity in northwestern Europe.
Germania inferior preserves a strongly militarised body of Mithraic evidence from the lower Rhine frontier of the Roman empire.
This small and highly questionable relief from southern France may depict a winged leontocephalic figure seated.
This heavily damaged relief from Narbo preserves the figure of a cross-legged Mithraic torchbearer carved in low relief near the church of Saint-Sébastien in Narbonne.
Cyrene linked North Africa to the Greek East through long-standing urban traditions and eastern Mediterranean maritime exchange.
Persia occupied a central place in ancient and modern interpretations concerning the origins and eastern background of Mithraic traditions.
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.
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.
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.
Mauretania Caesariensis connected western North Africa to Mediterranean trade routes and the provincial networks of the Roman empire.
Mesopotamia formed part of the eastern frontier zone where Roman military expansion encountered long-established Mesopotamian traditions.