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This marble bust of Sol, found in the Mitreo di San Clemente, had five holes in the head where rays had been fixed.
Minto has claimed that the time god Aion was painted on the corner of the north wall of the Mitreo de Santa Capua Vetere.
A statue and a relief of Cautes have been found in an ancient Gallo-Roman site in the commune of Dyo.
This lost monument from Malaga, Spain, to Dominus Invictus has been linked to the cult of Mithras, although there is not enough evidence.
This relief of Mithras as bull slayer is surrounded by Cautes and Cautopates with their usual torch plus an oval object.
Three plaster altars within the main altar of the Mithraeum of Dura Europos, two of them with traces of fire and cinders.
The base of these sandstone reliefs bears an inscription referring to a certain Marcellius Marianus.
In this relief of the rock birth of Mithras, the child sun god holds a bundle of wheat in his left hand instead of the usual torch.
This small white marble relief of Mithras as a bullkiller was found in the Botanical Gardens of Vienna in 1950.
Horsley thought that, like some other inscriptions in the Naworth Collection, this altar also had come from Birdoswald.
The fragmented tauroctony of the Mitreo di Santa Prisca rests on the naked figure of a bearded man, probably Ocean or Saturn.
It is not certain that the marble relief of Mithras killing the bull was found on Capri, in the cave of Matromania, where a Mithraeum could have been established.
This unusual mural depicting Mithras killing the bull was found near the Colosseum in 1668.
This primitive relief of Mithras as a bullkiller is signed by a certain Valerius Marcelianus.
This altar, found in the 3rd mithraeum of Ptuj, bears an inscription and a relief of Sol and a person with a cornucopia.
There are no further details about this Mithraic statue from Transylvania, the historical region of central Romania.
Fragments of this limestone statue include the head and torso of Mercury, holding the caduceus in his left hand.
Three small limestone altars were found in the Jajce Mithraeum, one of which bears the inscription ’Invicto’.
Three larger altars and other finds from the Mithraeum of Jajce, Bosnia and Herzegovina.