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This plaque, now on display in the British Museum, may have come from the Aldobrandini Mithraeum in Ostia.
This fragmented altar was erected by two brothers from the Legio II Adiutrix who also built a temple.
A certain Hermanio has been identified in the dedication of several monuments in different cities in Dacia and even in Rome.
Musée Saint-Raymond, musée d'Archéologie de Toulouse, associate curator of the exhibition Le mystère Mithra, plongée au cœur d'un culte romain.
Remarkable fragmentary sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull on an inscribed altar found in Mithraeum III at Ptuj.
This coin was deposited in the upper level of the throne in the cult niche of the Mitreo della Planta Pedis.
This intaglio depicting Mithras killing the bull is preserved at the Bibliothèque national de France.
This altar, which has now disappeared, was dedicated by the slave Quintio for the health of a certain Coutius Lupus.
This altar bears the oldest known Latin inscription to the god Mithras, written Mitrhe.