This site uses cookies to offer you a better browsing experience.
Find out more on how we use cookies in our privacy policy.

 
Monumentum

Isis de Mérida

The Isis of Merida is covered by a long dress that reaches down to her feet.
Isis of Mérida

Isis of Mérida
The New Mithraeum / Olivier-Antoine Reÿnès (CC BY-SA) 

 
The New Mithraeum
22 Jan 2022
Updated on Jan 2022

The full article is reserved for our members.

Log in or create a free account to access the entire site.

Sobre plinto de 11 cm figura femenina, representación de la divinidad oriental Isis, cubierta con largo vestido de una sola pieza, que tras ocultar hombros (el izquierdo en este caso queda al aire) cae hasta rozar el suelo; se ciñe con dos cintas anudadas por delante, que envuelven el tronco a la altura del esternón y de las caderas. Lleva un manto que sostiene en parte con el antebrazo izquierdo y que luego, tras dos vueltas por nalgas y piernas, asoma de nuevo por delante, naciendo a la altura del pubis un extraño pliegue que cae después verticalmente entre ambos muslos hasta por debajo…

Related monuments

Casa del Mitreo de Mérida

Although the site at Cerro de San Albín is not a Mithraeum, archaeologists have found several monuments related to the cult of Mithras.

Aion of Mérida

The Aion-Chronos of Mérida was found near the bullring of the current city, once capital of the Roman province Hispania Ulterior.

Lion-headed figure of Mérida

The lion-headed figure, Aion, from Mérida, wears oriental knickers fastened at the waist by a cinch strap.

Cautopates from Casa del Mitreo of Mérida

The sculpture of the solar god is signed by its author, Demetrios.

 

Naked figure from Mérida

This sculpture may be a naked dadophorus, probably Cautopates.

Mithras's feast from Mérida

This mithraic communion from Mérida shows three persons at table with other people standing besides, one of them with a bull's head on a plate.

Altar of Merida consecrated by Marcus Valerius Secundus

This altar is dedicated to the birth of Mithras by a frumentarius of the Legio VII Geminae.

Mercury of Mérida

The statue of Mercury in Merida bears a dedication from the Roman Pater of a community in the city in 155.

 

Cautes of Mérida

This nude male figure, found at Cerro de San Albín, Mérida, has been identified as Cautes.

Venus pudica of Mérida

The Venus pudica of Merida stands next to the young Amor riding a dolplhin.

Aesculapius of Merida

This standing sculptural figure from Mérida appears to carry the serpent staff, characteristic of the medicine god Aesculapius.

Altar by Caius Aemilius Superaius of Merida

Small white marble altar made in honour of Mithras found at San Albín, Mérida.

 

Altar of Gaius Iulius from Mérida

The small Mithraic altar found at Cerro de San Albin, Merida, bears an inscription to the health of a certain Caius Iulius.

Oceaunus of Mérida

The sculpture of Oceanus in Merida bears an inscription by the Pater Patrorum Gaius Accius Hedychrus.

Venus of Mérida small sculpture

The lack of attributes and its decontextualisation prevent us from attributing a specific Mithraic attribution to this small Venus pudica from Mérida.

Serapis head from Mérida

This head of Serapis from Cerro de San Albín may be unrelated to Mithras worship.

 

Altar of Mérida from Quintio

This altar, which has now disappeared, was dedicated by the slave Quintio for the health of a certain Coutius Lupus.

Tauroctony of the Gran Mitreo de Mérida

These fragments of a monumental tauroctony found in the Cerro de San Albín must have decorated the Gran Mitreo de Mérida, which has not yet been found.