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Miscellaneous cult objects from Ober-Florstadt including pottery, lamps, legionary stamps, coins, animal bones, and a bone flute fragment
Sacrificial knife, lamps, pottery, animal remains and inscribed terracotta fragments discovered inside the sanctuary.
Triple-part sanctuary at Saalburg whose Mithraic interpretation remains uncertain despite serpent-vases and possible Aion fragments.
Sandstone fragment of a Mercury statuette preserving part of the shoulder and caduceus.
Fragmentary inscribed altar dedicated to Mercury from the Saalburg sanctuary area.
Small inscribed plaque invoking Mithras and Mercury attached to a sandstone column inside the sanctuary.
Decorative bronze candlestick discovered near the entrance of the supposed Mithraic sanctuary.
Sandstone basin from the pronaos of the sanctuary originally mounted on a short column.
Cult statue base discovered with a hooked ritual sword in front of the sanctuary niche.
Elongated cult building near the Saalburg fort traditionally interpreted as a Mithraeum but later reconsidered as a possible funerary enclosure.
Assemblage of altars, lamps, coins and ritual objects discovered in the sanctuary.
Group of altars and a base indicating the existence of a Mithraeum near the Roman camp of Vetera.
Colonia Ulpia Traiana Augusta Dacica Sarmizegetusa was the capital and the largest city of Roman Dacia, later named Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa after the former Dacian capital, located some 40 km away. The city was destroyed by the Goths.
The Mithraeum of Cabra is located in the Villa del Mitra, which owes its name to the discovery in 1951 of a Mithras tauroctonus in the remains of the Roman villa.
The colossal head has been identified as a solar god, Apollo-Mihr-Mithras-Helios-Hermes.
Painted Parthian inscription on a ceramic sherd possibly referring to Mithras as a bull-slayer.
Large apsidal hall with podium discovered at Uruk-Warka, once interpreted as a possible Mithraic sanctuary.
The site of Ay-Todor in Crimea revealed a Roman camp, a temple with votive offerings, and a Mithraeum.
Sassanian-period frescoes discovered at Susa whose possible Mithraic interpretation remains uncertain.
Ancient region of the Crimean Peninsula associated with the Greek colonies and Roman presence in Taurica.