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Quaestiones veteris et novi testamenti, 113.11. Ambrosiaster, 5th cent.
Pseudo-Plutarch, De fluviis. Goodwin, Ed. Plutarch. Plutarch’s Morals. Translated from the Greek by several hands. Corrected and revised by. William W. Goodwin, PH. D. Boston. Little, Brown, and Company. Cambridge. Press of John Wilson and son.
Thrasyllus was an Egyptian of Greek descent grammarian, astrologer and a friend of the Roman emperor Tiberius.
Scholar, politician and a court astrologer to the Roman emperors Claudius, Nero and Vespasian.
He and his brother, both of the Legio II Adiutrix, built a temple and erected several monuments in Budaors, Pannonia.
Centurion of the Legio VII Gemina Antoniana Pia Felix who erected the only known mithraeum at Lucus Augusti to date.
Actuarius and notarius, Celsianus dedicated an altar to Sol Mithras for the health of two illustrious men.
Veteran and ex duplicarius of ala I civum Romanorum who dedicated an altar to Mithras in Teutoburgium.
Greek-speaking member of the community of Mithras followers from Apulum in the 2nd century.
A slave of a certain Tiberius, he likely dedicated an altar to the invincible god Mithras in Carnuntum.
Founder of the Arasacid dynasty, Tiridates I was crowned king of Armenia by Nero in 66.
Dedicated an altar found in Gallia Narbonensis on the occasion of his elevation to the grade of Perses.
The cenders of Chyndonax were found on an urn with an inscription that reads High Priest of Mithras.
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.