Your search Al-Bahnasa gave 3015 results.
Various altar and base fragments, two sandstone balls, and two millstone fragments from the Mithraeum at Dieburg
Small fragmentary inscription from the Mithraeum at Dieburg preserving only the abbreviated dedication D(eo) i(nvicto) M(ithrae)
Small red sandstone fragment from the Mithraeum at Dieburg preserving a head in a Phrygian cap
Red sandstone relief from the Mithraeum at Dieburg showing Mithras in Oriental dress carrying the bull on his shoulders
Small finds from the Gross-Krotzenburg Mithraeum including a Phrygian-capped head, a pinecone fragment, coins of Trajan and Hadrian, and column fragments
Basalt fragment preserving the skin and hoof of a bull probably belonging to a tauroctony scene.
Small bronze figure of the torchbearer Cautes fitted with attachment rivets.
Unusual sculptural representation of stylised flames mounted on a pedestal.
Fragmentary limestone statuette of a cross-legged torchbearer originally attached to a tauroctony relief.
Pair of inscriptions from Lugdunum recorded in the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum.
Fragmentary inscription from Pola preserving a possible reading of the name Atticus.
Group of inscriptions from Umbria including one entry reassigned to Interamna Lirenas in Latium.
Marble relief showing Mithras slaying the bull inside a vaulted cave accompanied by Sol, Luna and the torchbearers.
Group of monuments from Lepcis Magna published among the principal Mithraic remains of Roman Tripolitania.
The tauroctonic relief from Dragus includes a naked flying figure that Vermaseren has identified as Phosporus or Lucifer.
Evidence for a Mithraeum at Sentinum (modern Sassoferrato) in ancient Umbria, attested by a marble tauroctony group and three inscriptions, with a related mosaic found on the grounds of the Countess of Leuchtenberg and later given to King Louis of Bavaria…
A white marble fragment from Ocrea in Umbria bearing the name "Mitrha" (sic), possibly related to Mithraic monuments from nearby sites.
A terracotta arm found near the cone-shaped stone in the Mithraeum at Spoleto, the hand holding a broken object possibly from a representation of Mithras's rock-birth.
A triangular prism in cipollino marble with a hollow on the upper side, found standing in front of the cone-shaped stone in the Mithraeum at Spoleto.
A brief inscription to Sol Invictus as companion of the emperor found among the ruins of ancient Interamna Lirinatis in the Umbrian territory of Terni.