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Acta diurna

Daily Gazette

Acta diurna is our Mithraic social stream for keeping up to date with what is happening in The New Mithraeum.

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Jan 2023
NewNotitia

Let's talk about Mithras with Yolanda De Iuliis

Yolanda's multimedia dissertation focuses on the cognitive mechanisms that motivate Mithras worshippers. Her work includes a podcast entitled Conversations about Mithras.

 
Jan 2023
 
NewScriptum

just got a copy of the Mithras conspirancy and can't stop reading!

 
Jan 2023
NewSocius

scholar and mom of 4 successful college grads (former homeschooler). Phd student

 
Jan 2023
NewSocius

I study because not enough do.

 
Jan 2023
NewComentum

I’d be grateful for some advice as I’m hoping to visit the exhibition in Frankfurt. Has anyone else on this site been there? I’ve looked on the museum’s website but cannot establish if I need to get tickets in advance. It’s a long journey from the UK if I discover I needed to book beforehand! Many thanks for any help.

I agree with the comments about the catalogue. It’s outstanding! Ordered two copies from the Mariemont museum and they arrived quickly.
Sukey

 
I think there is no need of booking in advance. Just come to Frankfurt an feel happy Wolfgang Janecke
 
Jan 2023
Socius

Nam cum coeperis deae servire, tunc magis senties fructum tuae libertatis.

 
Jan 2023
NewSocius

Lecturer in Ancient History

 
Jan 2023
NewVideo

The Rudchester Mithraeum

The archaeology of the Rudchester Mithraeum

 
Jan 2023
NewComentum

If you want definitive proof that Mithraism was different in every corner of the empire, just read this book! What the hell was going on in Britannia? I admit that love pulp fiction and have been interested in Mithraism for so long that I expected to have fun with this one. I did, not as much as I'd have liked, but it's a read. You might think that Mithraism is a great subject for fiction. A novelist can amuse himself by filling in the many gaps that surround the cult. Yet Lukas Scott decides to reinvent the whole thing, content to keep a very light and often erratic skeleton to build his story. The characters lack volume. We don't know much about their backstories and that's probably for the best. A light plot seems to be building up behind the scenes, but not really, the whole thing decanting into a sort of a love story (or so Scott tells us) between a Brit and a Roman. And of course, they both have beautiful, strong, young, perfect muscular bodies with big, long johns. Other than th...

 
Dec 2022
NewVideo

Britain's best preserved Mithraeum - Carrawburgh on Hadrian's Wall

The archaeology of the Mithraeum at Carrawburgh

 
Dec 2022
NewVideo

Vulgariser Mithra. Rencontre avec Jean-Christophe Piot

Jean-Christophe Piot a participé à la réalisation de l'exposition 'Le mystère Mithra' en réalisant des pastilles sonores sur certaines œuvres de l'exposition.

 
Dec 2022
NewSocius

nun

 
Dec 2022
NewComentum

I think there is no trace of this mithraeum since long time ago...

 
Dec 2022
NewVideo

Dans les coulisses de l'exposition « Le mystère Mithra. Plongée au cœur d'un culte romain »

Découvrez les coulisses de la réalisation et du montage de l'exposition « Le mystère Mithra. Plongée au cœur d'un culte romain ».

 
Dec 2022
NewSocius

Scholar in Mithraic Studies

 
Dec 2022
NewSocius

Classicist, Teacher, Author, Academic, and researcher

 
Dec 2022
NewSocius

Writer, literature professor, cultural historian, pagan.

 
Dec 2022
NewComentum

I recently had the opportunity to visit the remains of this mithraeum. It is located in Altafulla, in a pleasant seaside village on the Catalan coast. In situ, not much is preserved apart from the foundations, but it's worth a detour if you're passing through the area to visit the site and, if the weather is good, take a dip in the beach!

 
Dec 2022
NewComentum

Remarkable monument not only because it is the first sculpted representation of the entire Mithraic tauroctony, but also because of the arrangement of certain figures, such as Cautes and Cautopates, who, even without their heads, seem to hesitate about what they are supposed to do.

 
Dec 2022
NewComentum

If this phallus really belonged to the mithraeum where it is currently placed and not elsewhere, they must have had some fun in this temple.

 
No, I think it's not fun, but really superstition. The Romans all wore amulets, often with a phallus and a hand, even children wore them. In the mithraeum there could be talismans