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The Mithraic vase from Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium in Germany includes Sol-Mithras between Cautes and Cautopates, as well as a serpent, a lion and seven stars.
This altar found at ancient Burginatum is the northernmost in situ Mithraic find on the continent.
The vessel to burn incense from the Mithraeum of Dieburg is similar to those found in other Roman cities of Germany.
Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium, usually just called Colonia, was the Roman settlement in the Rhineland that became the modern city of Cologne, now in Germany. It was the capital of Germania Inferior and the military headquarters of the region.
This terra sigillata was found in 1926 in a grave on the Roman cemetery of St. Matthias, Trier. An eyelet indicates that it could have been hung on a wall.
Mithras and Sol share a sacred meal accompanied by Cautes and Cautopates on a relief found in a cemetery from Croatia.
The cantharus of Trier is reminiscent of the crater that often appears in tauroctony scenes collecting the blood from the slaughtered animal.
This monument with an inscription by two individuals was found in the first mithraeum of Cologne, Germany.
This marble head of Mithras was found in the Luxemburgerstrasze in Cologne, Germany.
The Mithraeum I of Cologne is situated amid a block of buildings. It was impossible to narrowly determine its construction and lay-out.
Coin of Istrus, Moesia Inferior, showing Caracalla on one side and a god on horseback (Mithras ?) on the other.
Straton, son of Straton, consecrated an altar to Helios Mithras in Kreta, Moesia inferior.
This sandstone altar found in Cologne bears an inscription to the goddess Semele and her sisters.
Votive inscription dedicated to Mithras by the veteran soldier Tiberius Claudius Romanius, from the Mithraeum II Köln, 3rd century.
A second Mithraeum was found in Cologne described by R. L. Grodon as of ’small importance’.
In this relief of the rock birth of Mithras, the child sun god holds a bundle of wheat in his left hand instead of the usual torch.
The sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull found in Dormagen is exposed at Bonn Landesmuseum.
Workman digging in a field near Dormagen found a vault. Against one of the walls were found two monuments related to Mithras.
This second tauroctony, found in the Mithraeum of Dormagen, was consecrated by a man of Thracian origin.
The Mithraeum of Kunzing was an underground building, oriented east-west. The entrance was probably on the east.