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The New Mithraeum Database

Find news, articles, monuments, persons, books and videos related to the Cult of Mithras

Your search St. Egyden gave 2267 results.

 
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Sicilia

Roman Sicilia preserves Mithraic evidence shaped by Mediterranean mobility and the island’s strategic position between east and west.

 
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Mauretania

Mauretania preserves western North African evidence linked to urban and maritime networks of the Roman empire.

 
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Mesopotamia

Mesopotamia preserves frontier evidence from the eastern limits of Roman Mithraic expansion.

 
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Regnum Bospori

The Bosporan Kingdom preserves evidence from one of the northernmost horizons of Mithraic diffusion in the ancient world.

 
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Rhaetia

Raetia preserves Mithraic evidence connected to Alpine frontier systems and military mobility.

 
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Dacia

Roman Dacia preserves one of the densest and most frontier-oriented bodies of Mithraic evidence in the empire.

 
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Africa

The evidence from Roman Africa reflects the implantation of Mithraic cults within prosperous urban centres of the western Mediterranean.

 
Monumentum

Tauroctony in the British Museum

The sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull was transported from Rome to London by Charles Standish in 1815.

 
Monumentum

Tauroctony relief from Puteoli

This lost Mithraic relief, formerly kept near the church of the Santissima Annunziata in Naples, was probably a large tauroctony associated with the area of Puteoli or Pausilypon.

 
Monumentum

Altar from Grumentum

This altar from Grumentum in Lucania was dedicated to Sol Invictus Mithras by Titus Flavius Saturninus, an evocatus in imperial service.

 
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Persia

Persia occupies a central place in the intellectual and historical background of Mithraic studies.

 
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Syria

Roman Syria preserves a major eastern corpus of Mithraic evidence within one of the empire’s most interconnected regions.

 
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Pannonia

Pannonia preserves one of the most important frontier corpora of Mithraic evidence in the Roman world.

 
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Macedonia

Macedonia preserves Mithraic evidence shaped by major Balkan routes and long-standing urban traditions.

 
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Moesia

Moesia preserves a strongly militarised body of Mithraic evidence along the Danubian frontier of the empire.

 
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Galatia

Galatia preserves Mithraic evidence shaped by central Anatolian routes and eastern provincial networks.

 
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Corsica et Sardinia

Corsica and Sardinia preserve a small island corpus within the western Mediterranean diffusion of Mithraism.

 
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Creta et Cyrene

Crete and Cyrene connect Mithraic evidence to island, North African and eastern Mediterranean networks.

 
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Cappadocia

Cappadocia preserves evidence shaped by military movement, eastern frontier dynamics and Anatolian religious landscapes.

 
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Armenia

Armenia occupied a strategic position between Roman and Iranian religious worlds during the centuries of Mithraic expansion.

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