Your search Britannia inferior gave 146 results.
Marble head of a woman (H. 12 ins.), originally crowned with a diadem (ILN, 542; 636).
Fragment of a circular plaque showing the Danubian horsemen and leaping dogs (ILN, 542).
The torso of a male figure, in marble, flattened at the back, perhaps one of the attendant deities of Mithras.
Marble statue from Intercisa representing a lion holding an indistinct animal beneath its forepaws. Found in a vineyard, the piece is now in the Hungarian National Museum.
Fragment of an alabaster relief from Cologne with part of a tauroctony scene. Only the tip of Mithras’ Phrygian cap and small narrative details above are preserved.
A small limestone altar from Bandorf near Oberwinter dedicated to Deo Invicto Regi. Found in an isolated structure not resembling a mithraeum, its function remains uncertain.
The sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull found in Dormagen is exposed at Bonn Landesmuseum.
This monument with an inscription by two individuals was found in the first mithraeum of Cologne, Germany.
This sandstone altar found in Cologne bears an inscription to the goddess Semele and her sisters.
Votive inscription dedicated to Mithras by the veteran soldier Tiberius Claudius Romanius, from the Mithraeum II Köln, 3rd century.
A second Mithraeum was found in Cologne described by R. L. Grodon as of ’small importance’.
The Mithraeum of Symphorus and Marcus, in Óbuda, Budapest, has been restored to public view in 2004 and, while well presented, it has been heavily restored.
This is one of the altars erected by Septimius Valentinus, in this case, to the transitus of Mithras.
In this relief found in the Sárkeszi Mithraeum, Cautes and Cautopates hold an Amazon shield.
The Sárkeszi mithraeum is unusual for its large dimensions and its semicircular eastern wall.