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This scene from the frescoes of the Mitreo di Santa Maria Capua Vetere shows a kneeling, naked man surrounded by two other figures.
This is the first of several fresco scenes depicting the initiation of a new member in a mithraic community, in Capua Vetere.
The Mackwiller Mithraeum was built in the middle of the 2nd century, during the reign of Antoninus the Pious, on the site of a spring already worshipped by the natives.
The Mithraeum of Lucretius Menander was installed in the early 3rd century in an alley to the east of a Hadrianic building named after the solar god temple.
Curator of Greek and Roman Antiquities, Royal Museum of Mariemont (Belgium). Research fields: Archaeology of the Oriental cults in the Roman Empire.
There are two Venus from the Mithraeum of Sidon, one in bronze and the other in Parian marble.
The lion-headed god is standing on a globe encicled by two crossed bands on which five pearls.
Mithra et ses actualités - Journée d'études.
A bronze plaque records the existence of a mithraeum at Virunum that collapsed and was rebuilt by members of the community.
This marble gives some details of the reconstruction of the Virunum Mithraeum.
Intervention de Nicolas Amoroso, commissaire de l’exposition Le Mystère Mithra.
Mithras rock-born from Villa Giustiniani was holding a bunch of grapes in its raised right hand instead of a torch, probably due to a restoration.
The Mithraeum of Caernarfon, in Walles, was built in three phases during the 3rd century, and destroyed at the end of the 4th.
This marble basin found in the Mithraeum of the Footprint bears an inscription of a certain Umbilius Criton, associated with a monumental tauroctonic sculpture also found in Ostia.
The Mitreo dei Castra Peregrinorum was discovered under the church of Santo Stefano Rotondo in Rome.
One of the altars from the Carrawburgh Mithraeum depicts the bust of Mithras or Sol.
The Cautopates with scorpion found in 1882 in Sarmizegetusa includes an inscription of a certain slave known as Synethus.
This altar, which has now disappeared, was dedicated by the slave Quintio for the health of a certain Coutius Lupus.
The floor of the central aisle of the Mithraeum of the Footprint in Ostia has a mosaic depicting a snake and a footprint.
The head of Mithras had seven holes made for fastening rays.