Your selection in monuments gave 202 results.
This terracotta vase features prolific decoration, including Mithras Tauroctonos, Fortuna, Cautes, a dog and Pan playing a syrinx.
The Tauroctony of Stixneusiedl was found in ancient Pannonia Superior, currently Austria.
Votive sculpture of Mithras sacrificing the bull from the Mithraeum of Tarquinia.
The Mithra Tauroctonos from Syracuse, Sicily, is currently on display in the city's archaeological museum.
In the Tauroctony of Hermopolis, Cautes and Cautopates are placed over two columns at each side of the sacrifice.
Maarten Vermaseren acquired this rosso antico marble of Mithras slaying the bull in 1961.
Tauroctony in black marble on display at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, California.
This relief was found under the Palazzo Montecitorio, in Rome, and bought by the Liebighaus at Frankfort.
The relief of Mithras slaying the bull from Nida's Mithraeum III was found in two pieces in 1887, destroyed during an air raid on Frankfurt in 1944, and restored in 1986.
The sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull was transported from Rome to London by Charles Standish in 1815.
The archeologists have found three fragments of the Tauroctony of Lucciana, which includes Cautes and Cautopates.
Szony's bronze plate shows Mithra slaying the bull and the seven planets with attributes at the bottom of the composition.
The marble shows Mithras slaying the bull, on one side, and Sol and Mithras feasting on a bull skin, on the other.
The relief of Mithras slaying the bull of Sisak includes the zodiac and multiple scenes from the myth of Mithras.
Relief of Heracles/Hercules capturing the Golden Hind of Artemis.
Engraving with cosmological and symbolic mithraic elements.
Tauroctony from a gemme, printed on Le gemme antiche figurate di Leonardo Agostini.
Palæographia Britannica: or, discourses on antiquities that relate to the history of Britain. Number III.