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The city of Narona occupied a prominent position in the Neretva valley and became one of the principal centres of Roman Dalmatia.
Papers of the international conference "Roman Mithraism: the Evidence of the Small Finds". Tienen 7-8 November 2001.
Roman Britannia preserves one of the most strongly militarised corpora of Mithraic evidence in the western empire.
Roman Gallia preserves one of the largest and most geographically diverse corpora of Mithraic evidence in the western empire.
Roman Hispania preserves a relatively modest but strongly urban body of Mithraic evidence, centred above all on Mérida.
Within the southern sectors of Roman Dacia, Dacia Malvensis preserves evidence linked to military mobility and provincial urbanisation.
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.
Along the northern frontier of Roman Britain, Britannia inferior preserves important evidence linked to military and frontier communities.
Cilicia preserves Mithraic evidence linked to coastal mobility, eastern Mediterranean trade and Anatolian crossroads.
Roman Sicilia preserves Mithraic evidence shaped by Mediterranean mobility and the island’s strategic position between east and west.
Mauretania preserves western North African evidence linked to urban and maritime networks of the Roman empire.
Mesopotamia preserves frontier evidence from the eastern limits of Roman Mithraic expansion.
The Bosporan Kingdom preserves evidence from one of the northernmost horizons of Mithraic diffusion in the ancient world.
Raetia preserves Mithraic evidence connected to Alpine frontier systems and military mobility.
Roman Dacia preserves one of the densest and most frontier-oriented bodies of Mithraic evidence in the empire.
The evidence from Roman Africa reflects the implantation of Mithraic cults within prosperous urban centres of the western Mediterranean.
Roman Syria preserves a major eastern corpus of Mithraic evidence within one of the empire’s most interconnected regions.
Pannonia preserves one of the most important frontier corpora of Mithraic evidence in the Roman world.
Lycia and Pamphylia preserve Mithraic evidence linked to southern Anatolian maritime and urban networks.
Macedonia preserves Mithraic evidence shaped by major Balkan routes and long-standing urban traditions.