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

 
Quaere

The New Mithraeum Database

Find news, articles, monuments, persons, books and videos related to the Cult of Mithras

Your selection gave 851 results.

Syndexios

Marcus Aemilius Chrysanthus

Freedman of the two Marcus and 'magister of the first year'.

Syndexios

Myro

Son of the slave Fructus.

Syndexios

Flavius Septimius Zosimus

Vir perfectissimus and priest of Zeus Brontes and Hekate, he erected a mithraeum in Rome.

Syndexios

Claudius Arennius Reatinus

Pater from Nersae, Italia, known by an inscription of his mithraic Apronianus.

Syndexios

Valerius Marinus

Valerius Marinus dedicated an image in Ocriculum.

Syndexios

Proficentius

Pater sacrorum and founder of the Mithraeum under the Basilica of S. Lorenzo.

Syndexios

Agatho

Agatho has dedicated several monuments to Mithras in the Coelian Hill.

Syndexios

Lollius Rufus

This is the first Pater mentioned in an inscription known to date.

Syndexios

Theodoros

One of the lions mentioned on the Santa Prisca procession fresco.

Syndexios

Aulus Caedicius Priscianus

Eques Romanus and Pater active in S. Stefano Rotondo.

Syndexios

Gaius Lucretius Mnester

Assistant magister.

Syndexios

Publius Acilius Pisonianus

Pater patratus, he financed the restoration of a Mithraeum in Milan.

Syndexios

Quintus Tessignius Maximianus

Pater of Aquileia that devoted an altar to Mithras.

Syndexios

Bebius Quintianus

Equus (knight).

Syndexios

Marcellinus

Marcellinus was an antistes who reached the grade of Leo in Rome.

Syndexios

Heliodoros

One of the lions mentioned on the Santa Prisca procession fresco.

Syndexios

Lucius Gavidius

He dedicated to the Emperor, for the worshipers of the god Mithras a sculpture in Stabiae.

Syndexios

Rufius Caeionius Sabinus

Senator and Pater Sacrorum of Mithras, who consecrated several monuments in Rome in the late 4th century.

Syndexios

Aurelius Mithres

Imperial freedman and strator that offered a monument to Serapis.

Back to Top