Your search Budapest gave 71 results.
Campona occupied a strategic position south of Aquincum along the Danube frontier.
Aquincum was an ancient city, situated on the northeastern borders of the province of Pannonia within the Roman Empire.
Bronze plate from Budapest, ancient Aquincum or vicinity, preserving a Mithraic representation of uncertain composition; no longer in a known collection.
White marble statuette from Budapest, ancient Aquincum or vicinity, depicting a badly damaged Mithras killing the bull with dog and serpent; the god's head is lost.
Right upper corner of a white marble tauroctony relief from Budapest, ancient Aquincum or its vicinity, in the National Museum since 1868, preserving part of the grotto border and divine busts.
The dedicant of this altar to the god Arimanius was probably a slave who held the grade of Leo.
One of several dedications commissioned by the duumvir Marcus Antonius Victorinus in his Mithraeum of Aquincum, modern Budapest.
Small limestone altar from Aquincum, Budapest, dedicated to Petra Genetrix.
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.
The Mithraeum of Aquincum I existed in the potter's quarter of the ancient city of Budapest.
This sculpture of Mithras killing the sacred bull bears an inscription that mentions the donors.
Marble tauroctony relief from Aquincum, Pannonia Inferior, found at Budapest III, Fötér, depicting Mithras as bull-slayer with both torchbearers flanking the central group.
This temple of Mithras in Aquincum was located within the private house of the decurio Marcus Antonius Victorinus.
This limestone tauroctony from Aquincum preserves Mithras slaying the bull together with Cautopates, the serpent, the scorpion, and the legs of the raven.
These two altars, erected by a certain Victorinus in the mithraeum he built in his house, bear inscriptions to Cautes and Cautopates.
Fragments of this limestone statue include the head and torso of Mercury, holding the caduceus in his left hand.
Another sculpture of Mithras rock-birth from the Mithraeum of Victorinus, in Aquincum.
A sixth temple dedicated to Mithras has been identified for the first time in the military sector of the ancient Roman city of Aquincum.
This base was found in the 18th century and bears an inscription to the god Arimanius.
The fifth mithraeum from Aquincum has been found in the house of a military tribune.