Your search Al. N. Oikonomides gave 3559 results.
These fragmentary monuments, one with an inscription, were found in the Gimmeldingen mithraeum.
The few remains of the Mithraeum of Gimmeldingen are preserved at the Historical Museum of the Palatinate, in Speyer, Germany.
This monument with an inscription to the god Sol Mithras was found in front of the cathedral of Speyer during some sewer works.
A bearded Bacchus and another hermes as a woman, both crowned with vine tendrils, were walled into the base of a niche.
This head of Italian marble, found at Arles, probably belongs to a sculpure of Mithras.
This low relief on an altar of Mithras killing the bull was found in a church in Pisignano, south of Ravenna.
Franz Cumont bought this relief of Mithras as a bullkiller from a dealer who claimed to have found it in a vineyard near the church of Saint Pancrace, in Rome.
This small relief of Mithras killing the bull was found in 1859 in Turda, in the Cluj region of Romania.
The relief of Mithra slaying the bull from Apulum, Romania, has been missing until the scholar Csaba Szabó identified it in the diposit of the Arad Museum.
The donor of this Mithraic inscription from Bolsena, a certain Tiberius Claudius Thermoron, is known from two other monuments.
This 3rd century marble relief of Silvanus is the only sculpture found in Mitreo Aldobrandini.
This lion-headed marble was found on the ruins of the Alban Villa of Domitianus.
Only a fragment of this marble group of Mithras killing the bull remains.
Excavations in 1979 on the remains of the church of Notre-Dame d'Avigonet in Mandelieu, Alpes-Maritimes, brought to light a small mithraeum.
In the Mithraic bronze brooch found in Ostia, Cautes and Cautopates have been replaced by a nightingale and a cock.
These three fragments of carved marble depict Jupiter, Sol, Luna and a naked man wearing a Phrygian cap, with inscriptions calling Mithras Sanctus Dominum.
Several fragmentary Mithraic remains dedicated by a certain Agatho in the Caelius suggest that a Mithraeum existed in the area.
This inscription to Mithras Invencible was dedicated by a certain Apronianus in 172 is currently lost.
Mithras galloping, in a cypress forest, carrying a globe in one hand and accompanied by a lion and a snake.
The Aion of Arles includes nine signs of the zodiac in three groups of three, between the spirals of the serpent.