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Late Roman provinces

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Lycia
thumb|350px
Roman Egypt
Egypt (30 BC–AD 641)
Mauretania Caesariensis
province of the Roman Empire in northwest Africa
Lesser Armenia
historical Anatolian region
Lycaonia
thumb|320px|Heinrich Kiepert. Asia citerior. Lycaonia, 1903 Lycaonia (; , Lykaonia; ) was a large region in the interior of Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey), north of the Taurus Mountains. It was bounded on the east by Cappadocia, on the north by Galatia, on the west by Phrygia and Pisidia, while to the south it extended to the chain of Mount Taurus, where it bordered on the country popularly called in earlier times Cilicia and in the Byzantine period Isauria; but its boundaries varied greatly at different times. The name is not found in Herodotus, but Lycaonia is mentioned by Xenophon as traver
Gallaecia
Gallaecia, originally known as Callaecia, was the name of a Roman province in the northwest of Hispania, approximately present-day Galicia, northern Portugal, Asturias and León, and the later Suevic and medieval kingdom of Gallaecia. The Roman cities included Auria (Ourense), the port of Cale (Porto), and the governing centers Lucus Augusti (Lugo), Bracara Augusta (Braga), and Asturica Augusta (Astorga), together with their administrative areas: Conventus Lucensis, Conventus Bracarensis, and Conventus Asturicensis, respectively.
Mesopotamia
Province of the Roman Empire
Thracia
thumb|250px|Roman empire under Hadrian (ruled 117–38), showing the [[imperial province of Thracia in southeastern Europe]] thumb|250px|The Roman diocese of Thraciae
Dardania
Roman province
Isauria
Isauria ( or ; ), in ancient geography, is a rugged, isolated district in the interior of Asia Minor, of very different extent at different periods, but generally covering what is now the district of Bozkır and its surroundings in the Konya Province of Turkey, or the core of the Taurus Mountains. In its coastal extension it bordered on Cilicia. thumb|right|350px|Location of Isauria in Asia Minor
Scythia Minor
ancient region surrounded by the Danube at the north and west and the Black Sea at the east
Thebaid
thumb|right|300px|Map of the late Roman Diocese of Egypt (Late Antiquity)|Diocese of Egypt, with Thebais in the south. The Thebaid or Thebais (, Thēbaïs) was a region in ancient Egypt, comprising the 13 southernmost nomes of Upper Egypt, from Abydos to Aswan.
Byzacena
Byzacena (or Byzacium; ) was a Late Roman province in the central part of Roman North Africa, which is now roughly Tunisia, split off from Africa Proconsularis.
Hispania Carthaginensis
Roman province
Palaestina Prima
Byzantine province (390-636)
Palaestina Salutaris
Roman/Byzantine province (c.300-636)
Novempopulania
300px|thumb|Novempopulania was first known as Aquitania.
Praevalitana
Praevalitana (also Prevalitana, Prevaliana, Praevaliana or Prevalis) was a Late Roman province that existed between c. 284 and c. 600. It included parts of present-day Montenegro, Albania, and part of present-day Kosovo. Its capital city was Doclea, later Scodra.
Britannia Inferior
3rd-century Roman province in Britain
Dacia Ripensis
province of the Roman Empire in the Balkans in Late Antiquity
Pannonia Valeria
province of the Roman Empire
Palaestina Secunda
Byzantine province (390-636)
Britannia Superior
Roman province
Pannonia Savia
Roman province (295 - 5th century)
Dacia Aureliana
Province of the Roman Empire (275-283)
Moesia Inferior
Roman province
Britannia Prima
Roman province
Rhodope
Roman province
Haemimontus
Haemimontus () was a late Roman and early Byzantine province, situated in northeastern Thrace. It was subordinate to the Diocese of Thrace and to the praetorian prefecture of the East. Its capital was Adrianople, and it was headed by a praeses. In the 5th century, Epiphanius in a report mentions a three dioceses within the province; the Diocese of Adrianopolis, the Diocese of Plotinoupolis and an unnamed third diocese. The province was superseded by the Theme of Thrace during the 7th century, but survived as an Orthodox ecclesiastical metropolis until late Byzantine times.
Moesia Superior
Roman province
Euphratensis
Euphratensis (Latin for "Euphratean"; , Euphratēsía), fully Augusta Euphratensis, was a late Roman and then Byzantine province in Syrian region, part of the Byzantine Diocese of the East.
Pannonia Secunda
Roman province (296 - mid-5th century)
Flavia Caesariensis
Roman province
Pannonia Prima
Roman province (296 - mid-5th century)
Europa
Roman province
Maxima Caesariensis
Roman province
Britannia Secunda
Roman province
Dacia Mediterranea
Roman province
Osroene
Roman province (214-637)
Theodorias
Byzantine province (528–7th Century)
Mauretania Sitifensis
Roman province
Quaestura exercitus
Late Roman province
Valentia
province of Roman Britain
list of Late Roman provinces
Wikimedia list article
Viennensis
Viennensis or Gallia Viennensis was a Late Roman province that derived its name from its capital Vienna (modern day Vienne, Isère), a Roman city, first located in Gallia Narbonensis.
Hispania Balearica
Laterculus Veronensis
manuscript
Insulae
Roman province
Syria I
Byzantine province (c.415–630s)
Augustamnica
Augustamnica (Latin) or Augoustamnike (Greek) was a Roman province of Egypt created during the 4th century and was part of the Diocese of Oriens first and then of the Diocese of Egypt, until the Muslim conquest of Egypt in the 640s.
Zabdicene
Zabdicene (; ; ; ) was a Carduchian principality in Anatolia, in today's Turkey. It was located west of Ake, southwest of Anjewaci and north of Adiabene.
Arcadia Aegypti
ancient region of Roman-controlled Egypt
Honorias
Honorias () was a late Roman province encompassing parts of Bithynia and Paphlagonia in Asia Minor (modern Asian Turkey).