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The Aion-Chronos of Mérida was found near the bullring of the current city, once capital of the Roman province Hispania Ulterior.
Founded on the site of ancient Byzantium and refounded in 330 CE, Constantinopolis became an imperial residence in the eastern Roman Empire. In the 4th century, it was a key setting for interaction between traditional cults and Christian authority.
Further other small finds were made such as bones of animals, tusks of boars, pieces of marble, among which one with the outlines of a fish, bronze objects such as e.
This votive silver plaque depicting Mithras was found at the site of Pessinus, Ballıhisar, in Turkey.
Mithras became the main deity worshipped in the sanctuary of Meter in Kapikaya, Turkey, in Roman times, at least until the fourth century.
Inscription from Hamadan where the ’great king’ Artaxerxes mentions Ahuramazda, Anahita, and Mithra as guardians.
A gold coin depicting a bearded god with a crescent facing another god with a nimbus and a radiate crown, identified as Mithras by Vermaseren.
This gold coin depicts Kanishka I on one side and Mithras standing on the other side.
During excavations at Boghaz-Koi in 1907 clay tablets were found on which a treaty concluded between Chatti and Mitanni in the 14th century B.
Near Frasha (T&: cI>&:potcrot), situated near the Zamanti-Sou, on a considerable height a grotto has been hewn out, which can be reached by way a fly of steps.
A rough-hewn statuette (H. 0.30), found at Emir Ghasi in Lycaonia, is said to be in a Museum at Oxford, where we have not been able to trace it.
The sepulchral inscriptions of Lycaonia on which the titles AECJ)V and occur do not mention any Mithraic grades, as Rhode thought.
Inscription carved on the pairs of columns on the backs of the five thrones, which stand on the west and east part of the terrace.
The soffit or reveal of the arched niche had been decorated with white stars on a blue background.
"Several heads were found of such a large scale that they must have belonged to fairly large paintings" (See fig. 12, IO) (Report, 104).