Your search Val di Non gave 2329 results.
Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium, usually just called Colonia, was the Roman settlement in the Rhineland that became the modern city of Cologne, now in Germany. It was the capital of Germania Inferior and the military headquarters of the region.
Tripolitania connected the southern Mediterranean coast to caravan routes and maritime exchange networks of Roman North Africa.
Across Tarraconensis, Mithraic evidence appears in diverse urban, military and Mediterranean environments of Roman Hispania.
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.
Bactria occupied a distant eastern horizon associated with Iranian cultural traditions and the wider background of Mithraic interpretations.
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.
Aegyptus occupied a unique position within the Roman world where Mediterranean trade, Nile networks and ancient religious traditions intersected.
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.
Sicilia connected Italy, North Africa and the eastern Mediterranean through some of the busiest maritime routes of the Roman world.
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.
Syria-Coele formed one of the principal urban and cultural centres of the Roman Near East where diverse religious traditions coexisted.
Cilicia occupied a key position between Anatolia, Syria and the eastern Mediterranean maritime routes.
Lycia et Pamphylia connected southern Anatolia to the maritime networks of the eastern Mediterranean world.
Achaea preserves some of the earliest and most culturally complex evidence for Mithraic cults in the Greek-speaking eastern Mediterranean.
Narbonensis connected Roman Gaul to the Mediterranean world through some of the oldest urban and maritime networks of the western empire.
Cilicia preserves Mithraic evidence linked to coastal mobility, eastern Mediterranean trade and Anatolian crossroads.