Your search Arsha wa Qibar gave 1657 results.
White marble statue of Lion-head god of time, formerly in the Villa Albani, nowadays in the Musei Vaticani.
A powerful and wealthy man, founder of a mithraeum in the city of Aquincum of which he was the mayor.
Callimorphus was a cashier (arkarius) of the estates of Chresimus, steward of emperors.
Thrasyllus was an Egyptian of Greek descent grammarian, astrologer and a friend of the Roman emperor Tiberius.
He was from Aphrodisias in Caria, where he erected a relief depicting Mithras killing the bull.
He was cornicularius, supply officer, to the prefect of the Legion XXII Primigenia.
He was a centurion from Savaria, serving in Legio XIV Gemina based in Carnuntum.
He was a Heliodromus who recorded his grade on an inscription dedicated to Mithras.
Founder of the Arasacid dynasty, Tiridates I was crowned king of Armenia by Nero in 66.
His name was added to the main tauroctony sculpture of the Mitreo Fagan.
Pater Patrum and Senator. He was also the patriarch of the Olympian dynasty, overseeing a Mithraic community in the centre of Rome.
He was a plebeian citizen who dedicated a monument to the Unconquerable Sun, Mithras.
Pater patrorum of equestrian rank, he was a prominent figure in the Mithraic sphere in Rome.
Governor of Numidia in 303, vir perfectissimus Valerius Florus was a well-known persecutor of Christians.
Firmidius Severinus was a soldier who served in the Legio VIII Augusta for 26 years.
He was a soldier of the Cohors I Belgarum, probably of Dalmatian origin, who dedicated an altar to Mithras in Aufustianis.
A freedman of Septimius Severus, he was Pater and priest of the invincible Mithras, as mentioned in a marble inscription found in Rome.