Your search Ernesto Milá gave 151 results.
This plaque, now on display in the British Museum, may have come from the Aldobrandini Mithraeum in Ostia.
On the occasion of the discovery of a Mithraeum in Cabra, Spain, we talk to Jaime Alvar, a leading figure in the field of Mithraism. With him, we examine the testimonies known to date and the peculiarities of the cult of Mithras in Hispania.
The Mithraeum of Frutosus was in a temple assigned to the guild of the stuppatores.
The main fresco of the Mithraeum of Santa Maria Capua Vetere portrays Mithras slaughtering a white bull.
Antiochus I of Commagene shakes Mithras hands in this relief from the Nemrut Dagi temple.
This altar was dedicated to Cautes by a certain Lucius in Baetulo (Badalona), near Barcino (Barcelona).
We propose to revisit a passage by the prolific author Marteen Vermaseren that highlights correspondences today forgotten between the Roman Mithras and its Eastern counterparts.
The Mithraeum of Lucretius Menander was installed in the early 3rd century in an alley to the east of a Hadrianic building named after the solar god temple.
The relief marble of Mithras sacrifying the bull, exposed on the Hermitage Museum comes from Rome.
A votive altar referring to the cult of Mithras was found more than forty years before the site was excavated and the Mithraeum discovered.
These two inscriptions by a certain Titus Martialius Candidus are dedicated to Cautes and Cautopates.
The Mitreo Fagan revealed remarkable sculptures of leon-headed figures now exposed at the Vatican Museum.
This relief of Mithras slaying the bull incorporates the scene of the god carrying the bull and its birth from a rock.
This limestone statue of Cautes is now exposed at Great North Museum of Newcastle.
Maarten Vermaseren acquired this rosso antico marble of Mithras slaying the bull in 1961.
The city of Hatra was famed for its fusion of several civilization cults, which several temples devoted to gods from all Indo-European world.
The Mithra Temple of Maragheh, also referred to as the Mithra Temple of Verjuy or simply Mehr Temple, is the oldest surviving Mithraic temple in Iran known to date.
The lion-headed statue of Hedderneheim is a reconstruction from fragments of two different sculptures.
Relief of Heracles/Hercules capturing the Golden Hind of Artemis.
The red ceramic vessel from Lanuvium shows Mithra carrying the bull, followed by the dog, and the Tauroctony on the opposite side.