Your search Grotta di Pozzuoli a Posillipo gave 2088 results.
Remarkable fragmentary sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull on an inscribed altar found in Mithraeum III at Ptuj.
One of the three altars to Mithras found at the Mithraeum of Carrawburgh fort.
The Mithréum de Bourg-Saint-Andéol was built against a rock where the main Tauroctony was chiseled.
This intaglio with Mithras killing the bull on one side and Kabiros on the other was probably used as a magical amulet.
This intaglio depicting Mithras killing the bull is preserved at the Bibliothèque national de France.
This ancient carnelian intaglio mounted in gold depicts Mithras slaying the bull surrounded by his companions Cautes and Cautopates.
Mithras Tauroctony on bronze exposed at the Metropolitan Museum of New York.
Des rituels mystérieux, une hiérarchie gradée au sein d’un culte énigmatique, une société considérée pendant longtemps comme secrète au sein de l’Empire Romain…
Small arula with mithraic inscription and dedication to Cautes from a garlic merchant.
Some scholars have speculated that the scrolls both figures hold in their hands represent Eastern doctrines brought to the Western world.
The Mithraeum of Inveresk, south of Musselburgh, East Lothian, is the first found in Scotland, and the earliest securely dated example from Britain.
The Mackwiller Mithraeum was built in the middle of the 2nd century, during the reign of Antoninus the Pious, on the site of a spring already worshipped by the natives.
The Cautes of Sidon who wields an axe also wears a piece of cloth on his left arm.
In this case, a quiver has been attached to the tree-stump behind the torchbearer.
There are two Venus from the Mithraeum of Sidon, one in bronze and the other in Parian marble.
The Mithraeum in the Chapel of the Three Naves was not linked to the cult of Mithras until recently because of a mosaic showing a pig, in the belief that it was an animal unfit for consumption in a temple of Eastern origin.
Intervention de Richard Veymiers, directeur du Musée royal de Mariemont et Laurent Bricault, de l'Université Toulouse Jean-Jaurès.
A bronze plaque records the existence of a mithraeum at Virunum that collapsed and was rebuilt by members of the community.
The relief marble of Mithras sacrifying the bull, exposed on the Hermitage Museum comes from Rome.
Intervention de Nicolas Amoroso, commissaire de l’exposition Le Mystère Mithra.