Your selection in monuments gave 371 results.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull is unique in the Apulum Mithraic repertoire because of its inscription in Greek.
Several authors read the name Suaemedus instead of Euhemerus as the author of this mithraic relief from Alba Iulia, Romania.
This stone altar found in Poreč was dedicated by two freedmen to the numen and majesty of the emperors Philip the Arab and Otacilia Severa.
This column found in the Mithraeum of Sarmizegetusa bears an inscription to Nabarze instead of Mithras.
The donor of this Mithraic inscription from Bolsena, a certain Tiberius Claudius Thermoron, is known from two other monuments.
This high stele by a certain Acilius Pisonianus bears an inscription commemorating the restoration of a Mithraeum in Mediolanum, today's Milan.
This marble tablet found at Portus Ostiae mentions a pater, a lion donor and a series of male names, probably from a Mithraic community.
This fragmented altar of a certain Caius Iulius Crescens, found in the Mithraeum of Friedberg, bears an inscription to the Mother Goddesses.
The Tauroctony from Landerburg, Germany, shows a naked Mithras only accompanied by his fellow Cautes.
This inscription belongs to the 4th mithraeum found in the modern town of Ptuj.
This altar dedicated to the Invincible Sol Mithra was found in 1878 in a cemetery in Alba Iulia.
This monument bears an inscription by a certain Lucius Aelius Hylas, in which he associates Sol Invictus with Jupiter.
Straton, son of Straton, consecrated an altar to Helios Mithras in Kreta, Moesia inferior.
In this monument, the imperial slave Ision claims the completion of a new temple to Mithras in Moesia.
This marble relief of Mithras killing the bull was made by a freedman who dedicated it to his old masters.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull was dedicated by the bearer of the imperial standard of Legio XIII Gemina, Marcus Ulpius Linus.
In the altar that Titus Tettius Plotus dedicated to the invincible God, he called himself pater sacrorum.
Workman digging in a field near Dormagen found a vault. Against one of the walls were found two monuments related to Mithras.
This second tauroctony, found in the Mithraeum of Dormagen, was consecrated by a man of Thracian origin.
This inscription to Zeus Helios Mithras Serapis by a certain Ioulios Pyrros is now lost.