Your search Jabal al-Druze gave 2993 results.
Inscription copied at Vintu de Jos near Apulum, Dacia, in the 16th century, probably from Apulum, dedicated to Invicto Mithrae by Lucius Octavius Gratus.
Marble tauroctony relief from Vintu de Jos near Apulum, Dacia, depicting the standard bull-slaying scene.
Slab from Apulum, Dacia, dedicated to Soli invicto by Quintus Caecilius Laetus, legatus Augusti of Legio XIII Gemina.
Limestone altar found in Partoș, Dacia, dedicated to Deo Soli by Lucius Valerius Felix.
Limestone altar from Partoș or Mureș Port, Dacia, found in 1852, with a triangular pediment containing the head of Sol in a twelve-rayed crown and nimbus, flanked by a patera on the right and a jug on the left.
Limestone altar from Mureș Port near Apulum, Dacia, dedicated to Invicto Mithrae; the dedicant is identified only as Augustalis (coloniae?).
Small altar found in the floor of a house at Turda, ancient Potaissa in Dacia, dedicated to Deo invicto by Flavius Marcellinus, tessararius.
Limestone altar from Cluj, ancient Napoca in Dacia, dedicated to Soli invicto Mithrae for the welfare of the ordo Augustalis.
Inscription from Cluj, ancient Napoca in Dacia, dedicated to Deo Soli invicto by Marcus Cocceius Genialis, vir egregius, procurator Augustorum of Dacia Porolissensis.
Reference to a Cautopates statuette with inscription from Rácálmas near Intercisa, Pannonia Inferior, preserved at Székesfehérvár; the publication cited was inaccessible to the author.
Altar from Intercisa, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Soli invicto.
Altar from Intercisa, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Deo invicto.
Altar from Intercisa, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Deo invicto.
Altar from Intercisa, Pannonia Inferior, bearing only the brief dedication Cauti.
Altar from Intercisa, Pannonia Inferior, found in the area of the castra.
Altar from Intercisa, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Deo Soli invicto for the welfare of Emperor Commodus.
Limestone altar fragment from the Mithraeum at Sárkeszi, Pannonia Inferior, recording the restoration of a templum that had collapsed through age.
Limestone altar fragment from the Mithraeum at Sárkeszi, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Fonti dei by Septimius Valentinus, optio.
Altar from Aquincum, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Mythrae Nabarze by Tiberius Pontius Maximus — the epithet Nabarze, possibly of Iranian origin meaning 'victorious', is attested on only a handful of Mithraic inscriptions.
Altar from Aquincum, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Deo Soli by Claudius Patasio; dated to AD 191, one of the earliest dated Mithraic inscriptions from Aquincum.