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A bearded Bacchus and another hermes as a woman, both crowned with vine tendrils, were walled into the base of a niche.
This magnificent candelabrum was found in Rome in 1803, in the Syrian Temple of Janicule.
This head of Italian marble, found at Arles, probably belongs to a sculpure of Mithras.
Franz Cumont bought this relief of Mithras as a bullkiller from a dealer who claimed to have found it in a vineyard near the church of Saint Pancrace, in Rome.
This is one of the three reliefs of Mithras as a bullkiller from the Villa Borghese collection that belong to the Louvre museum, now in the Louvre Abu Dhabi.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull is unique in the Apulum Mithraic repertoire because of its inscription in Greek.
The remains of the mithraic triptic of Tróia, Lusitania, were part of a bigger composition.
This unfinished Mithras tauroctonos without the usual surrounding animals was found in 1923 in Italica, near Seville, Spain.
This marble of Cautes was found together with his partner Cautopates in Ostia in 1939.
Two inscriptions by Aurelius Nectoreca, a follower of Mithras, have been found in Meknès, Morocco.
These two mithraic sculptures of Cautes and Cautopates belong to the same collection of Astuto de Noto, made up of mostly Sicilian monuments.
The assumed find-place of the Mithras Tauroctonus of Palermo is uncertain.
The second temple devoted to Mithras in Carnuntum is situated besides a Jupiter's temple.
Mithraeum III found in the west part of Petronell near Hintausried in August 1894 by J. Dell and C. Tragau.
Set in a Roman necropolis, the so-called Mithraeum of the Elephant takes its name from an elephant statue found in one of the tombs.
This marble tablet found at Portus Ostiae mentions a pater, a lion donor and a series of male names, probably from a Mithraic community.
This fragmented altar of a certain Caius Iulius Crescens, found in the Mithraeum of Friedberg, bears an inscription to the Mother Goddesses.
The Tauroctony from Landerburg, Germany, shows a naked Mithras only accompanied by his fellow Cautes.
This inscription belongs to the 4th mithraeum found in the modern town of Ptuj.