Your search Tulln an der Donau gave 577 results.
Augusta Treverorum, today's Trier in Rhineland-Palatinate, is considered to be the oldest city in Germany.
Aquincum was an ancient city, situated on the northeastern borders of the province of Pannonia within the Roman Empire.
Baetica occupied a prosperous and highly urbanised corner of Roman Hispania where Mithraic cults circulated through Mediterranean exchange networks.
This supposed Mithraic altar from Soulan in the Pyrenees was later identified as a modern forgery, including both the inscription and the alleged cave context in which it was said to have been discovered.
The Mithraeum of Kunzing was an underground building, oriented east-west. The entrance was probably on the east.
Cyrene linked North Africa to the Greek East through long-standing urban traditions and eastern Mediterranean maritime exchange.
Along the northern frontier of Roman Britain, Britannia inferior preserves important evidence linked to military and frontier communities.
Armenia occupied a frontier crossroads between the Roman world, Anatolia and the Iranian cultural sphere.
Etruria formed part of the cultural and religious heartland of central Italy closely connected to Rome and the Tyrrhenian world.
Samnium occupied a mountainous region of central Italy linked to Rome through military movement and regional urban networks.
Lucania connected inland southern Italy to the Tyrrhenian and Ionian maritime worlds through regional communication networks.
Bruttium occupied the southernmost reaches of the Italian Peninsula where maritime mobility linked Italy, Sicilia and the wider Mediterranean.
Corsica et Sardinia occupied an important insular position within the maritime networks of the western Mediterranean.
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.
Syria-Palestina occupied a complex religious landscape shaped by imperial administration, pilgrimage and eastern Mediterranean mobility.
Lycia et Pamphylia connected southern Anatolia to the maritime networks of the eastern Mediterranean world.
Chersonesus occupied a northern Black Sea position where Greek, Roman and frontier cultures intersected at the edges of the Mithraic world.
Moesia superior preserves frontier evidence shaped by the military infrastructure and circulation networks of the middle Danube.
Along the lower sectors of the middle Danube, Pannonia inferior became a major centre of Mithraic activity in the frontier provinces.