Your search Grotta di Pozzuoli a Posillipo gave 2088 results.
Le Musée Saint-Raymond de Toulouse recherche un médiateur culturel diplômé en archéologie. Pour en savoir plus : [ref:6583260271549]
The two altars found in the Mithraeum of Mundelsheim one of Sol and the other of Luna, are exposed in situ.
The altars of the gods of the Sun and Moon found in the Mithraeum of Mundelsheim wear openwork segments that could be lighten from behind.
The site of Orbe-Boscéaz, Switzerland, also known as Boscéay, is renowned for its mosaics and mithraic temple.
Mount Nemrut or Nemrud is one of the highest peaks in the eastern Taurus Mountains, southeastern Turkey. On its summit large statues stand around what is supposed to be a royal tomb from the 1st century BC.
This temple of Mithras in Aquincum was located within the private house of the decurio Marcus Antonius Victorinus.
Are you a Fluent English Speaker? Are you interested in joining a bourgeoning community centred around camaraderie, knowledge and community building? If so, we invite you to join the Anglo-Mithraic Society! We offer a welcoming community…
Mithraeum I in Güglingen, Landkreis Heilbronn (Baden-Württemberg).
A.B. Candidate in Departments of History and Classics at Dartmouth College (Hanover, NH)
Aelius Nigrinus dedicated this small altar in Carnuntum to the rock from which Mithras was born.
This Mithraic altar of a certain Iulius Rasci or Racci was found in 1979 in a field in Borovo, Croatia, in the area of the Roman fort of Teutoburgium.
This marble bust of Sol, found in the Mitreo di San Clemente, had five holes in the head where rays had been fixed.
Minto has claimed that the time god Aion was painted on the corner of the north wall of the Mitreo de Santa Capua Vetere.
A statue and a relief of Cautes have been found in an ancient Gallo-Roman site in the commune of Dyo.
This relief of Mithras as bull slayer is surrounded by Cautes and Cautopates with their usual torch plus an oval object.
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.
Horsley thought that, like some other inscriptions in the Naworth Collection, this altar also had come from Birdoswald.