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This inscribed limestone altar from Roman Salona preserves several lists of ministers associated with the Tritones collegium during the Tetrarchic period.
Fragments of this limestone statue include the head and torso of Mercury, holding the caduceus in his left hand.
This altar was dedicated by a certain Marcus Aurelius Decimus to Sol Mithras and other gods in Diana, Numibia, present Argelia.
This altar to Mithras found in Aquilieia mentions several persons of a same community.
The epigrahy includes a mention of Marcus Aurelius, a priest of the god Sol Mithras, who bestowed joy and pleasure on his students.
Figures in procession, each representing a different grade of Mithraic initiation, labeled with their respective titles.
Kamerios reached the seventh grade in the Mithraic ladder. A couple of graffitis celebrate his achievements in the Mithraeum of Dura Europos.
In this 4th-century Roman altar, the senator Rufius Caeionius Sabinus defines himself as Pater of the sacred rites of the unconquered Mithras, having undergone the taurobolium.
The sculptures of Cautes and Cautopates from the Mitreo del Palazzo Imperiale may have been reused from an older mithraeum in Ostia.
Hector erected an altar to Mithras in Emerita Augusta by means of a ‘divine vision’.
Gaius dedicated an altar to the god Invictus in Emerita Augusta in the 2nd century.
Centurio frumentarius probably from Tarraco, who served in the Legio VII Gemina located in Emerita Agusta.
This lost monument bears an inscription to Cautes by a certain Tiberius Claudius Artemidorus.
This small inscription from Termini Himeraeae in Sicily was dedicated to Sol Invictus as protector of the emperor Antoninus Augustus.