Galatia preserves Mithraic evidence shaped by central Anatolian routes and eastern provincial networks.
Corsica and Sardinia preserve a small island corpus within the western Mediterranean diffusion of Mithraism.
Crete and Cyrene connect Mithraic evidence to island, North African and eastern Mediterranean networks.
Cappadocia preserves evidence shaped by military movement, eastern frontier dynamics and Anatolian religious landscapes.
Dalmatia preserves Mithraic evidence shaped by Adriatic routes, military movement and provincial urban centres.
Armenia occupied a strategic position between Roman and Iranian religious worlds during the centuries of Mithraic expansion.
Roman Aegyptus preserves a distinctive body of Mithraic evidence shaped by Alexandria and the religious diversity of the eastern Mediterranean.
Roman Asia preserves a rich and diverse body of Mithraic evidence connected to the major cities of western Anatolia.
Bithynia and Pontus preserve important evidence for the diffusion of Mithraic cults across the Black Sea and northwestern Anatolia.
Achaea preserves some of the earliest and most culturally complex evidence for Mithraic activity in the Greek-speaking eastern Mediterranean.
The Alpine regions preserve scattered Mithraic evidence associated with military circulation and strategic routes across the western empire.
Germania preserves some of the densest concentrations of Mithraic evidence in the Roman frontier provinces.