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Danube region can be traced back to the legions that fought under his command in Armenia.
Together with his son, with whom he shares his name, Kastos has dedicated several monuments in Rome to the glory of Zeus Helios Mithras.
Together with his father, Kastos dedicated several monuments in Rome to the glory of Zeus Helios Mithras.
The marble statue of Cautes, found in the Mithraeum of Santa Prisca, was originally a Mercury.
Garlic merchant, probably from Lusitania, who dedicated an altar to Cautes in Tarraconensis.
Freedman, he offered a monument to Mithras for the well-being of his two former masters in Apulum.
Archaeologists discovered the 20th temple dedicated to Mithras in Ostia during the restoration of the domus del Capitello di stucco in 2022.
University Student living in the Greater Toronto area. For any questions about the Anglo-Mithraic Society feel free to directly message me.
Richard Gordon suggests the object on the Miles step is a bull’s hindquarter.
“In the light of the sacrificial scene on the altar of Flavius Aper (Poetovio), the interpretation as a bull’s hind-quarter rather than shoulder is to be preferred. The scene at Ostia is perfectly in keeping with other evidence suggest- ing that (junior) Mithraic grades fulfilled specific manual tasks within the cult, in the case of Miles, butchery of sacrificial animals.”
See:
Gordon, R. 2013c. “The Miles-frame in the Mitreo di Felicissimo and the practicalities of sacrifice.” Religio: Revue Pro Religionistiku 21, no.1: 33–38.
A.B. Candidate in Departments of History and Classics at Dartmouth College (Hanover, NH)
Why did the Romans worship a Persian god? This book presents a new reading of the Mithraic iconography taking into account that the cult had a prophecy.
Der römische Gott Mithras aus der Perspektive der vergleichenden Religionsgeschichte.
Professeur d’histoire romaine à l’Université de Toulouse Jean-Jaurès.
Aphrodisius, probably of Greek origin, must have been a slave of the Cornelii.
Senator and Pater Sacrorum of Mithras, who consecrated several monuments in Rome in the late 4th century.