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Honorific marble statue base dedicated to the senator and Mithraic pater Alfenius Ceionius Iulianus Kamenius by members of his provincial administration.
The small Mithraic altar found at Cerro de San Albin, Merida, bears an inscription to the health of a certain Caius Iulius.
On one of the capitals of the cathedral of Santa Maria Nuova in Monreale, Sicily, an unusual turbaned bull-slaying Mithras has been recorded.
This altar, discovered in Grude, near Tihaljina, Bosnia and Herzegovina, bears an inscription by Pinnes, a soldier of the Cohors Prima Belgica.
This altar was dedicated by a son to his father, one of the few Patres Patrum recorded in the western provinces.
Val di Non is an Alpine valley in Trentino associated with Roman-period finds.
Zwiefalten belongs to the upland territory historically associated with the province of Raetia.
Thessalonike became one of the principal urban centres of the Balkans and the Via Egnatia corridor.
Rohr im Kremstal belongs to the Alpine hinterland associated with Roman Noricum.
Halle lies within the broader northern frontier zone of the Roman imperial world.
Dolna-Malina lies within the inland territory historically associated with Roman Thrace.
Callatis developed as an important Black Sea port on the western coast of the Pontus Euxinus.
Alesia became famous as the site of Caesar’s decisive siege during the Gallic Wars.
Alcsút lies within the central Danubian region historically associated with Roman Pannonia Inferior.
Málaga is a municipality of Spain, capital of the Province of Málaga, in the autonomous community of Andalusia.
Marble leontocephalic Aion/Arimanus from the now-lost Fagan Mithraeum at Ostia, dedicated in AD 190 by three members of the local Mithraic priesthood.
A double-sided limestone relief found near Meclo in Val di Non in 1895, now in the Museo Nazionale at Trento, with a raven and altar scene on the obverse and scenes on the reverse showing a figure attacking a kneeling Phrygian-capped person and Mithras as a bull-carrier…
A decorated inscription with egg-and-dart moulding found in the castle of La Fratta near Montefalco in Umbria, bearing a brief dedication to Sol Invictus.
The marble altar mentions Vettius Agrorius Praetextatus as Pater Sacrorum and Patrum and his wife Aconia Fabia Paulina.
Inscription dedicated to Sol pro salute et reditu et victoria, with Tato as pater sacrorum, from the Ager Albanus.