Your search Farid ud-Din Attar gave 1181 results.
Round altar in white marble (H. 0.2 I Diam. 0.65), found "1909 im mittleren Teil des Demeter-Bezirks" at Pergamum.
The sepulchral inscriptions of Lycaonia on which the titles AECJ)V and occur do not mention any Mithraic grades, as Rhode thought.
A rough-hewn statuette (H. 0.30), found at Emir Ghasi in Lycaonia, is said to be in a Museum at Oxford, where we have not been able to trace it.
Exceptional sculpture of a lion devouring a bull's head founded in 1894 in Carnuntum, Pannonia.
The Mithraeum of Cyrene is preserved among the remarkable ruins of the ancient capital of the Roman province of Cyrene.
The statue of Arimanius/Ahriman was found in 1874 under the city wall of York during the construction of the railway station.
Peltuinum was a Roman town of the Vestini on the Via Claudia Nova, founded in the mid-1st century BC. It developed into a regional centre with city walls, a sanctuary, a theatre and an amphitheatre, and was monumentalised in the early Imperial period
The temple of Mithras of Carrawburgh, Brocolita, disclosed three main stages of development, the second exhibiting two reconstructions.
These two altars, erected by a certain Victorinus in the mithraeum he built in his house, bear inscriptions to Cautes and Cautopates.
This sculpture of Mithras killing the sacred bull bears an inscription that mentions the donors.
This altar to Mithras is dedicated by a certain Gaius Iulius Castinus, legate prefect of the emperors.