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This relief of Mithras slaying the bull incorporates the scene of the god carrying the bull and its birth from a rock.
Mithras emerging from the rock with torch and dagger beside a reclining Oceanus or Saturn.
Mithras birth from the knees upwards emerging from a rock and wearing as usual a Phrygian cap.
Another sculpture of Mithras rock-birth from the Mithraeum of Victorinus, in Aquincum.
The relief of Mithras being born from the rock of the Esquiline shows the young god naked, as usual, with a torch and a dagger in his hands.
Only parts of the knees of Mithras, emerging from the rock, have been preserved from this monument of Petronell-Carnuntum, Austria.
Sandstone petrogenesis from Petronell-Carnuntum (Lower Austria), depicting Mithras emerging from the rock, preserved from the knees upwards.
A naked Mithra emerges from the cosmic egg surrounded by the zodiac, as always carrying a torch and a dagger.
The importance of the Mithraeum of Marino lies in its frescoes, the most significant of which is that of Mithras slaying the bull, surrounded by mythological scenes.
A serpent emerging from a umbilicus at the side of the stele coils over Mithras naked body.
The second statue of Mithras rock-birth was found in the Mitreo di Santo Stefano Rotondo shows a childish Mitras emerging from the rock.
In one of Hawarte’s frescoes, the rock birth of Mithras is preceded by Zeus and followed by the young Persian god suspended from a cypress tree.
The votive fresco from the Mithraeum Barberini displays several scenes from Mithras’s myth.
This marble relief, found in Sisak, Croatia, shows Mithras killing the bull in a circle of corn ears, gods and some scenes from the Mithras myth.
The relief of Mithras slaying the bull of Nersae includes several episodes from the exploits of the solar god.
The relief of Dieburg shows Mithras riding a horse as main figure, surrounded by several scenes of the myth.
These two fragments of a sandstone relief were walled into a house on the market square in Besigheim.
The sculpture of the birth of Mithras in Florence included the head of Oceanus.
The relief of Mithras slaying the bull at Mauls in Gallia cisalpina is a paradigmatic example of the so-called Rhine-type Tauroctony.
This plaque was found in Mithraeum I at Stockstadt broken into pieces inserted between the blocks of the socle of the cult relief, in the manner of a votive deposit.