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This altar was erected by Hermadio, who also signed other monuments in Dacia and even in Rome.
This altar was erected by Hermadio, who also signed other monuments in Dacia and even in Rome.
As this short inscription indicates, Aemilio Epaphorodito was both Pater and priest of the Mithraeum of the Seven Spheres.
Reliefs of Cautes and Cautopates dedicated by Florius Florentius of Saalburg and Ancarinius Severus.
It bears an inscription repeated on each side of the podia.
This remarkable marble relief from the end of the 3rd century was discovered in the most remote room of the Mithraeum in the Circo Massimo.
Marble inscribed slab recording the dedication of a Mithraeum and an antrum to Mithras for the safety and victories of Septimius Severus and his family, found in Rome.
The bronze bears the dedication of a restoration of a Mithraeum carried out in 183.
Callimorphus dedicated this image of the sun god to the invincible sun ’Mythra’.
This cylindrical marble altar was dedicated by the same Pater Proficentius as the slab, both monuments found in the Mithraeum beneath the Basilica of San Lorenzo.
This slab dedicated to the invincible god, Serapis and Isis by Claudius Zenobius was found in 1967 in the walls of the city of Astorga, Spain.
Recent interpretations link this marble inscription to the cult of the goddess Nemesis.
Marius Victor, according to the inscription on the monument, erected this monument to Mithras ’when Philip and Titianus were consuls’.
In this inscription, found in Angera in Lombardy, Mithras is referred to by the unicum 'adiutor'.
This inscription found in the Mithraeum of the Seven Spheres mentions the Pater Marco Aemiliio Epaphrodito known from other monuments in Ostia.
This lost monument bears an inscription to Cautes by a certain Tiberius Claudius Artemidorus.
This inscription to Mithras Invencible was dedicated by a certain Apronianus in 172 is currently lost.
This plaque, now on display in the British Museum, may have come from the Aldobrandini Mithraeum in Ostia.
This is one of the few known Mithraic inscriptions dedicated by a member who attained the grade of Perses.