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This plaque, now on display in the British Museum, may have come from the Aldobrandini Mithraeum in Ostia.
This altar has been unusually dedicated to both gods Mithras and Mars at Mogontiacum, present-day Mainz.
This is one of the few known Mithraic inscriptions dedicated by a member who attained the grade of Perses.
This altar was originally consecrated to Hercules and was rededicated to Mithras by Callinicus in the Mithraeum of the House of Diana.
This altar was erected by Hermadio, who also signed other monuments in Dacia and even in Rome.
The monument was dedicated by two brothers, one of them being the Pater of his community.
Mithras rock-born from Villa Giustiniani was holding a bunch of grapes in its raised right hand instead of a torch, probably due to a restoration.
The altar includes a slab with an inscription for the salvation of two emperors.
This altar bears the oldest known Latin inscription to the god Mithras, written Mitrhe.
The dedicant of this altar to the god Arimanius was probably a slave who held the grade of Leo.
These two inscriptions by a certain Titus Martialius Candidus are dedicated to Cautes and Cautopates.
It bears an inscription repeated on each side of the podia.
This marble slab found near the Casa de Diana in Ostia bears two inscription with several names of brothers of a same community
The dedicator of this marble basin could be the same person who offered the sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull in the Mitreo delle Terme di Mitra.
The image of the god Arimanius to which this monument refers has not yet been found.
These two parallel altars to the diophores were dedicated by the Pater and a Leo from the Mithraeum of S. Stefano Rotondo.
As this short inscription indicates, Aemilio Epaphorodito was both Pater and priest of the Mithraeum of the Seven Spheres.
This remarkable marble relief from the end of the 3rd century was discovered in the most remote room of the Mithraeum in the Circo Massimo.
The relief of Dieburg shows Mithras riding a horse as main figure, surrounded by several scenes of the myth.
Statue in yellow sandstone found in the pit of the Mithraeum of Dieburg, showing Mithras standing beside an altar with bow and arrow, accompanied by a vase and associated with the water miracle.