Your search Dacia superior gave 240 results.
This Cautopates from Nida carries the usual downward torch in his right hand and a hooked stick in his left.
The inscription reports the restoration of the coloured painting of the main relief of the Mithraeum by a veteran of the Legio VIII Augusta.
These two reliefs of Cautes and Cautopates where found in the south corner of one of the Mithraea of Friedberg, Hesse.
One of the rooms in a sustantive masonry building in Hollytrees Meadow was considered to be a Mithreum, a theory that has now been discarded.
According to Hitzinger remnants of animal bones were found in front of the relief of the Mithraeum at Rozanec.
This monument was erected by a certain Publius Aelius Vocco, a solider of the Legio XXII Primigenia Pia Fidelis stationed in Mainz.
The Mithraeum of Osterburken could not be excavated bodily owing to the water of a well in the immediate neighbourhood. The monument had been covered carefully with sand.
This altar has been unusually dedicated to both gods Mithras and Mars at Mogontiacum, present-day Mainz.
The monument was dedicated by two brothers, one of them being the Pater of his community.
The Mithraeum II in Stockstadt was in fact the first one known built in the vicus. It was destroyed by fire around 210.
The sculpture of Mithras carrying the bull includes an inscription on its base.
Mithraeum III in Ptuj was built in two periods: the original walls were made of pebbles, while the extension of a later period was made of brick.
Part of the finds from the fifth Mithraeum of Ptuj is kept in the Hotel Mitra in the modern city.
Remarkable fragmentary sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull on an inscribed altar found in Mithraeum III at Ptuj.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull, now on display in Stuttgart, includes a small altar with a sacrificial knife and an oil lamp.
This head was found at the east end of temple of Mithras in London.
The Mithras's head of Walbrook probable belonged to a life-size scene of the god scarifying the bull.
The Mithraeum of Caernarfon, in Walles, was built in three phases during the 3rd century, and destroyed at the end of the 4th.