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Small Mithras relief from Apulum, Dacia, mentioned by Buday but not published; a design shows the bust of Sol with one ray pointing towards Mithras.
Limestone base from Apulum, Dacia, decorated on the front with Mithras riding the bull to the right while holding an upraised torch — the tauriphoros riding type, distinct from the tauroctony.
Large marble base from near Kutyamál at Apulum, Dacia, dedicated ex iussu dei Apollinis and naming the Fons Aeternus — the eternal spring — by Ulpius Proculinus, speculator of Legio XIII Gemina.
Limestone base from near the Kutyamál vineyard south of the fortress at Apulum, Dacia, decorated with Bacchic vine scrolls and grapes at the top.
Marble relief fragment found in the Turda castrum in 1954, Dacia, preserving the bust of Sol in the upper left corner and Mithras grasping the bull; remnants of a wreath are visible in the upper right.
Inscription from a house staircase at Salona, Dalmatia, dedicated to Deo Mithrae invicto and all the other immortal gods by a dedicant whose name ends in -elius.
Large tauroctony plate with pediment from Vadas, Pannonia Inferior, formerly in the hunting lodge of the Jankovich estate, demolished in 1907; now lost.
Reference to a Cautopates statuette with inscription from Rácálmas near Intercisa, Pannonia Inferior, preserved at Székesfehérvár; the publication cited was inaccessible to the author.
Base from Aquincum, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Deo invicto Mithrae by Marcus Aurelius Frontinianus, decurio of the Colonia Aquinci.
Altar from Aquincum, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Deo Soli by Claudius Patasio; dated to AD 191, one of the earliest dated Mithraic inscriptions from Aquincum.
Inscription from Brigetio, Pannonia Superior, dedicated by Nonius Bassinus; possibly a sacerdos inscription though the reading is uncertain.
Limestone altar from Brigetio, Pannonia Superior, dedicated to Invicto deo Mithrae by Masuininius Amicus, Augustalis of the Municipium Brigetionis Antoniniani.
Base probably found during the discovery of the Dolichenum at Brigetio in 1899, Pannonia Superior; possibly belonging to the adjacent Mithraeum given its proximity.
Lost base from the Mithraeum at Brigetio, Pannonia Superior, dedicated jointly to Cautopates and Invicto deo by Marcus Ulpius Castrensis, veteran of Legio I Adiutrix; a companion piece to the preceding Cautes dedication.
Lost base from the Mithraeum at Brigetio, Pannonia Superior, dedicated to Cautes by Marcus Ulpius Castrensis, veteran of Legio I Adiutrix; dated to the early third century.
White marble tauroctony relief fragment from Carnuntum, Pannonia Superior, preserving the bull and the lower part of Mithras's tunic.
Sandstone shell from Mithraeum III at Carnuntum, Pannonia Superior, probably mounted on a base and serving as a cult water basin.
Cone-shaped sandstone stone encircled by a serpent from Mithraeum I at Carnuntum, Pannonia Superior, probably forming the base of a rock-birth group.
Marble relief fragment from Mithraeum III at Ptuj, ancient Poetovio, preserving part of Mithras's flying cloak and the scorpion below the bull.
Marble fragment of Mithras's flying cloak from Mithraeum II at Ptuj, ancient Poetovio.