Your search Boulogne-sur-mer (Pas-de-Calais) gave 640 results.
This small white marble relief of Mithras as a bullkiller was found in the Botanical Gardens of Vienna in 1950.
It is not certain that the marble relief of Mithras killing the bull was found on Capri, in the cave of Matromania, where a Mithraeum could have been established.
This relief of Mithras tauroctonus and other finds were discovered in 1845 in Ruše, where a Mithraeum probably existed.
Corax Materninius Faustinus dedicated other monuments found in the same Mithraeum in Gimmeldingen.
The few remains of the Mithraeum of Gimmeldingen are preserved at the Historical Museum of the Palatinate, in Speyer, Germany.
There are no further details about this Mithraic statue from Transylvania, the historical region of central Romania.
The provenance of this fragment of a white marble relief depicting Mithras as a bullkiller is unknown.
This Aion is known for wearing a Kalathos on his lion’s head, linking him to the syncretic Sarapis.
These fragments of a cult relief of Mithras were found at the Mithraeum II of Ptuj, Slovenia.
This is one of the three reliefs depicting Mithras killing the bull that the Louvre Museum acquired from the Roman Villa Borghese collection.
This is one of the three reliefs of Mithras as a bullkiller from the Villa Borghese collection that belong to the Louvre museum, now in the Louvre Abu Dhabi.
This relief of Mithras Tauroctonos from Rome bears the inscription of three brothers, two of them lions.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull from Apulum, now Alba Iulia, Romania, contains several scenes from the Mithras legend.
The relief of Mithra slaying the bull from Apulum, Romania, has been missing until the scholar Csaba Szabó identified it in the diposit of the Arad Museum.
This monument, now lost, was discovered in the 16th century, probably on the site of Sublavio statio.
This limestone relief of Mithras killing the bull bears an inscription by a certain Flavius Horimos, consecrated in a 'secret forest' in Moesia.
The donor of this Mithraic inscription from Bolsena, a certain Tiberius Claudius Thermoron, is known from two other monuments.
Set in a Roman necropolis, the so-called Mithraeum of the Elephant takes its name from an elephant statue found in one of the tombs.
The altar of the Mithraeum of San Clemente bears the Tauroctony on the front, Cautes and Cautopates on the right and left sides and a serpent on the back.
This fragmented altar of a certain Caius Iulius Crescens, found in the Mithraeum of Friedberg, bears an inscription to the Mother Goddesses.