Your search Castellammare di Stabia gave 1970 results.
Governor of Numidia in 303, vir perfectissimus Valerius Florus was a well-known persecutor of Christians.
Imperial slave and an overseer of the Imperial estates who dedicated a Tauroctony to the Invincible god Sol.
He commissioned the main cult relief found in the Mithraeum of Circo Massimo.
Hector erected an altar to Mithras in Emerita Augusta by means of a ‘divine vision’.
Hyacinthus, like Hermadio, seems to have been one of the profets of Mithraism in the Dacian region.
A slave of a certain Flavius Baeticus, Quintio dedicated an altar to the health of a companion.
One of the most eminent representatives of late antique pagan religiosity, combining high civic authority with deep initiation into multiple mystery traditions, including the cult of Mithras.
Gaius dedicated an altar to the god Invictus in Emerita Augusta in the 2nd century.
Vir clarissimus and governor of Numidia, who dedicated a temple to Mithras with its images and ornaments in Cirta.
Solder of the Legio II Augusta who dedicated a monument to Mithras Invictus in Isca.
Governor of Numidia between 284 and 285, he dedicated several monuments in Numidia to Mithras and other gods.
He was from Aphrodisias in Caria, where he erected a relief depicting Mithras killing the bull.
Soldier of the XXII Legio Primigenia Pia Fidelis stationed in Mainz that erected an altar to Mithras in Sumelocenna.
Senilius Carantinus, also named Cracissius, was a citizen (civis) of Mediomatrici.
Freedman who dedicated the first monument mentioning a Pater.
Veteran and ex duplicarius of ala I civum Romanorum who dedicated an altar to Mithras in Teutoburgium.