Your search Calle Espronceda gave 38 results.
The Mithraeum at Espronceda Street, in Merida, was discovered in 2000. It is a semi-subterranean temple.
This sculpture of Mithras killing the bull was dedicated to the “incomprehensible god” by a certain priest called Gaius Valerius Heracles.
Veteran recalled to imperial service and sole named devotee of Mithras currently attested at Grumentum.
Thagaste was a Roman-Berber city in present-day Algeria, now called Souk Ahras.
An inscription from the place called La Oneda near Breno in Val Camonica, dedicated to Sol Divinus by L. Apisocius Successus for himself and his four patrons Marcus, Gaius, Lucius and Quintus, with a dagger with ribbons carved below.
I am an historian of religions. I currently studies so called "Oriental cults of the Roman Enmpire
To date, there is no evidence that the so-called Mithraeum of Burham was ever used to worship the sun god.
This altar found in Benifaió, València, was erected by a slave called Lucanus.
The altar with a Phrygian cap and a dagger from Trier was erected by a Pater called Martius Martialis.
Small Mithraic sanctuary discovered in 1958 in the grotto called Adam near Tirgușor, Moesia Inferior, about 30 km from Constanța; the monuments are remarkable for their Greek inscriptions.
Altar at Knjaževac (Ravna), Moesia Superior, preserved beneath a water-mill called Kulina, dedicated to Invicto deo for the welfare of Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus.
Mithraic sanctuary in a steep rock face called Preslica at Nefertara near Plevlje, Dalmatia, described as carved into the cliff above a ravine with a carved tauroctony scene.
Mithraic sanctuary found at Sárkeszi near Székesfehérvár, Pannonia Inferior, in a place called Ságvölgyi; yielding altars, tauroctony reliefs, and cult objects.
Small Mithraic sanctuary found in the slope of a ravine called Zlodjer (Devil's Ditch) at Ober-Pohanica near Zdole, Noricum; the finds are among the finest marble Mithraic sculpture from the eastern Alpine provinces.
Natural grotto called the Bichl on the south slope above the Glanegg lake near St. Urban, Noricum, adapted as a Mithraic sanctuary; part of the grotto floor was paved and remnants of water installations survive.
Small marble altar found in the bed of the Tiber near the bank called "muro nuovo", with a fragmentary dedication to Sol Invictus indicating the restoration of an altar.
Diana Veteranorum, today a village called Ain Zana, was an ancient Roman-Berber city in Algeria.
Palaiopoli is an ancient city on the west coast of Andros in the Cyclades Islands, Greece, and was the capital of Andros, called Andros, during the Classical period.
Venetonimagus, now Vieu, part of the town of Valromey, would have been called Venetonimagus or Venetonimago in Gallo-Roman times.
Panticapaeum was an ancient Greek city on the eastern shore of Crimea, which the Greeks called Taurica.