Your search Castellammare di Stabia gave 2069 results.
Inscribed altar from Gross-Krotzenburg dedicated to Deo Soli invicto by Lucius Fabius Anthimus, probably a physician of Cohors IIII Vindelicorum
Inscribed altar from Gross-Krotzenburg dedicated to Deo Soli invicto Mithrae by Iulius Macrinus, immunis of Legio VIII Augusta
Mithraic sanctuary discovered behind the west part of a Roman cemetery near the camp at Gross-Krotzenburg in 1881, finds destroyed in World War II
Sculpted torchbearer relief discovered near the Roman fort of Castellum Echzell.
Tuff fragments including a knee, thigh and possible lunar head from a bull-slaying scene.
Poorly preserved subterranean Mithraic sanctuary discovered beneath a medieval convent.
Fragmentary head wearing a Phrygian cap discovered with a Mithraic relief.
Marble stele relief with bull-slaying scene and subsidiary Mithraic episodes including the sacred banquet.
Dedication to Mithras mentioning Freio and Friatto.
Dedication to Mithras from Juslenville by Axius Verus, Quintus Vetius and Probinus.
Structure in the Tarn region initially reported as a Mithraeum but later identified as an ordinary silo.
Decorated ceramic vessel showing Mithras slaying the bull together with torchbearers, zodiacal motifs and figures of abundance.
Small altar dedicated to Cautopates discovered at Ospedaletto di Gemona and later lost.
Fragmentary inscription from Pola preserving a possible reading of the name Atticus.
Group of inscriptions from Umbria including one entry reassigned to Interamna Lirenas in Latium.
A medal in the form of a Grecian cross from the Mithraeum at Spoleto, showing busts of a bearded man and a veiled woman each with a radiate crown, identified by Cumont as Sol and Luna.
An oxidized sacrificial knife found in the Mithraeum at Spoleto in Umbria.
A terracotta arm found near the cone-shaped stone in the Mithraeum at Spoleto, the hand holding a broken object possibly from a representation of Mithras's rock-birth.
Two surviving wall paintings from the side-benches of the Mithraeum at Spoleto, out of an original six, depicting a cloaked bearded man identified as Saturn holding a sickle and a youth in a red shoulder-cape holding a money-bag, probably representing the seven planets…
A triangular prism in cipollino marble with a hollow on the upper side, found standing in front of the cone-shaped stone in the Mithraeum at Spoleto.