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Founder of the Arasacid dynasty, Tiridates I was crowned king of Armenia by Nero in 66.
Pater Patrum and Senator. He was also the patriarch of the Olympian dynasty, overseeing a Mithraic community in the centre of Rome.
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.
Fructus was the slave who paid for the erection of the Mitreo del Sabazeo in Ostia.
For the health of this man, a small altar was dedicated to the god Invictus in the Emerita Augusta.
A bronze plaque with a tauroctony dedicated by him was found between the blocks of the base of the cult relief in one of the Stockstadt temples.
Valerius was a discharged veteran was a worshipper of the Undefeated Mithras in Künzing.
Gaius Valerius Iulianus was a lion who erected an altar to Cautopates in Statio, the present-day Angera, with his brother Marcus.
Together with his uncle, he was a syndexios of the Mithraeum in Stockstadt.
Senilius Carantinus, also named Cracissius, was a citizen (civis) of Mediomatrici.
Murius Victor was an aedile of Civitas Taunensium who, in fulfilment of a vow, built an altar to Mithras.