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This monument is the only one still available from the disappeared Mithraeum in Piazza S. Silvestro in Capite.
Gold lamina from Ciciliano showing a nude, serpent-entwined Aion-Kronos holding a key and surrounded by Greek voces magicae (2nd c. CE).
This graffito seems to be an account of offerings made by Mithras worshippers in the Cassegiato di Diana.
Dedication from Simitthus mentioning the restoration of a monument and a vow fulfilled to Cautes and Cautopates during the reign of Caracalla and Julia Maesa.
This inscription, which doesn’t mention Mithras, was found near the church of Santa Balbina on the Aventine in Rome.
A slave of a certain Tiberius, he likely dedicated an altar to the invincible god Mithras in Carnuntum.
The pater Artemidorus seems to be an Augustan freedman of the Claudians, of Eastern origin.
Firmidius Severinus was a soldier who served in the Legio VIII Augusta for 26 years.
He dedicated to the Emperor, for the worshipers of the god Mithras a sculpture in Stabiae.
Priest. He devoted an inscription found on the main altar of the Mitreo della Planta Pedis.
Born in North Africa, he dedicated an inscription to the unconquered god Mithras, found in the Forum of Lambasis.
Procurator of Tarraconensis, he dedicated a monument to the Invincible God, Isis and Serapis in Asturica Augusta.
Dedicated multiple monuments to Mithras, Fortuna Primigenia and Diana in Etruria.
Centurion who dedicated the first known Latin inscription to the invincible Mithras.
Dioscorus is a freedman from the Greek-speaking part of the Empire who dedicated an altar to the invincible Mythra.
Aphrodisius, probably of Greek origin, must have been a slave of the Cornelii.
The marble Aion from the lost Mithraeum Fagan, Ostia, now presides the entrance to the Vatican Library.
This inscription commemorates the building of a mithraeum in Bremenium with fellow worshippers of Mithras.
The person who commanded the sculpture may have been M. Umbilius Criton, documented in the Mitreo della Planta Pedis.