Your search Bad Ischl im Salzkammergut gave 1703 results.
Franz Cumont considers the bas relief of Osterburken ’the most remarkable of all the monuments of the cult of Mithras found up to now’.
Altar with Cautes and Cautopates dedicated to Sol Invictus Mithras as protector of the Tetrarchy in 3rd-century Carnuntum.
This marble relief depicting Mithras as a bull slayer was found in the back room of the Mithraeum of the Circus Maximus.
These fragmentary monuments, one with an inscription, were found in the Gimmeldingen mithraeum.
This sandstone altar was dedicated to the god Invictus by a certain Faustinus from Gimmeldingen.
The inscription was located at the base of the main Tauroctony of the Gimmeldingen Mithraeum.
This altar was dedicated to Cautes by a certain Lucius in Baetulo (Badalona), near Barcino (Barcelona).
The Mithraic stele from Nida depicts the Mithras Petrogenesis and the gods Cautes, Cautopates, Heaven and Ocean.
Pro praetor legate during the reign of Maxime, he dedicated an altar to Mithras in Lambaesis.
Dux of Pannonia Prima et Noricum Ripense, he built a mithraeum in Poetovio.
Vir clarissimus and governor of Numidia, who dedicated a temple to Mithras with its images and ornaments in Cirta.
Imperial slave who donated an altar to Mithras for the benefit of the emperor Caracalla.
Optio who erected several altars to Mithras in the Mithraeum of Sárkeszi.
Garlic merchant, probably from Lusitania, who dedicated an altar to Cautes in Tarraconensis.
Dedicated multiple monuments to Mithras, Fortuna Primigenia and Diana in Etruria.
Governor of Numidia in 303, vir perfectissimus Valerius Florus was a well-known persecutor of Christians.