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Tiddis was a Roman city that depended on Cirta and a bishopric as Tiddi, which remains a Latin Catholic titular see. It was located on the territory of the current commune of Bni Hamden in the Constantine Province of eastern Algeria.
Carsulae was a Roman municipium in the region of Umbria, now preserved as an archaeological site, about 4 km north of the small town of San Gemini. Its foundation dates back to 220 BC with the construction of the Via Flaminia.
Kalkar is a municipality in the district of Kleve, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
The area was populated by Iberians, but the origins of Baetulo date back to the 1st century BC, when the Romans founded the city on the Rosés hill. Baetulo was famous for its vineyards, which produced wine for export throughout the Empire.
Apulum, now within Alba Iulia, was a Roman settlement first mentioned by the mathematician, astrologer and geographer Ptolemy. Its name comes from the Dacian Apoulon.
Africa Proconsularis formed one of the principal urban and administrative centres of Roman North Africa where Mithraic cults circulated through prosperous civic networks.
Within the southern sectors of Roman Dacia, Dacia Malvensis preserves evidence linked to military mobility and provincial urbanisation.
Dacia superior formed part of one of the most intensely Mithraic frontier regions of the Roman empire after the conquest of Trajan.
Lusitania preserves one of the most important bodies of Mithraic evidence in Roman Hispania, centred above all on Augusta Emerita and its urban religious landscape.
Member of the Mithraic community of Les Bolards and dedicator of a statue of Cautes.
Along the upper Rhine frontier, Germania superior became one of the principal centres of Mithraic activity in northwestern Europe.
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.
This relief of Mithras slaying the bull incorporates the scene of the god carrying the bull and its birth from a rock.
Armenia occupied a frontier crossroads between the Roman world, Anatolia and the Iranian cultural sphere.
Aegyptus occupied a unique position within the Roman world where Mediterranean trade, Nile networks and ancient religious traditions intersected.
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.
Cappadocia formed a major frontier and military region linking central Anatolia to the eastern limits of the Roman empire.
Thracia connected the Balkan world to the northern Aegean through military movement, trade routes and provincial urban centres.
Noricum formed a key link between the Alpine world and the Danubian frontier where Mithraic cults spread through military and urban environments.