Your selection in monuments gave 60 results.
Limestone slab dedicated to the invincible Sun by the governor Marcus Aurelius Decimus near the temple of Aesculapius.
Marble plate inscription dedicated to Deo Soli Invicto Mithrae for the wellbeing of Emperor Commodus, dated 180-192 A.D., from Aïn-Tekria.
Inscription of the cohorts of Legion II Herculiae dedicated to Deus Invictus Mithras, dated after 285 A.D., from the Ager Sitifensis.
Small stone block inscribed to Deo Soli, found walled up in an Arabic wall near a Roman spring at Sicca Veneria (modern Kef).
Punic ex-voto to Tanit bearing the formula 'Meqim Elim Mithrahastarni', tentatively interpreted as a Mithras reference but pre-dating the Roman cult.
Small Mithras relief found in the upper layer of the tophet at Carthage by Cintas in 1949.
Statuettes of eastern deities including Mithras, found in a walled compartment near a Punic cemetery at Duimes, Carthage.
Lower part of a white marble cinerary casket decorated with a relief of Mithras killing the bull, from the necropolis area near the amphitheatre of Sabratha.
Limestone keystone dedicated to the invincible Sun by Peticius Pastor and preserved at Lepcis Magna.
Epigraphic monument from Tripolitania preserving a corrected reading discussed in later scholarship.
Fragmentary remains of statues identified as representations of the Mithraic torchbearers.
Group of monuments from Lepcis Magna published among the principal Mithraic remains of Roman Tripolitania.
Two inscriptions dedicated to Mithras found at Volubilis near the Fertassa aqueduct fountain, probably indicating the presence of a Mithraeum.
Inscription dedicated to Sol Invictus with a votive formula pro salute, from Mozaïaville.
Marble plate recording the construction of a centenarium Solis by the governor Septimius Flavianus, found at Bir Haddada in the Ager Sitifensis, dated 315/316 A.D.
Relief depicting Mithras killing the bull in scaled armour, with Luna and Sol busts in the upper corners, found at the cavalry barracks of Sétif in 1861.
Inscription dedicated to Sol Invictus for the wellbeing of Emperor Aurelianus and his dynasty, from Thagaste, dated 275 A.D.
Stone inscription dedicated to Sol Deus Augustus, found at Zraya (ancient Zarai).
Altar serving as a column base, dedicated to Deus Invictus by M. Messius Messor, prefect of a cohort, found in the house of the sheik near Lambaesis at Sidi Okba.
Altar dedicated to Deo Soli, Honori et Virtuti pro salute, found at the foot of the West gate of the Roman town at Hr. Kaussât, near Ucubi.