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Some authors have speculated that the flying figure dressed in oriental style and holding a globe could be Mithras.
This altar found in Sentinum bears an inscription from two brothers.
This terracotta vase features prolific decoration, including Mithras Tauroctonos, Fortuna, Cautes, a dog and Pan playing a syrinx.
Maarten Vermaseren acquired this rosso antico marble of Mithras slaying the bull in 1961.
The St Albans mithraic vase depicts fragments of three figures identified by Vermaseren as Hercules, Mercury and Mithras as an archer.
The article reveals the context in which the first public appearance of Mitra happened to answer two questions: who were the first people to give prominence to this deity, and for what purpose they did so.
This lion-headed figure from Nida, present-day Frankfurt-Heddernheim, holds a key and a shovel in his hands.
The phallus from Tiddis, Algeria, has been represented as a cock.
The Mithraeum II in Stockstadt was in fact the first one known built in the vicus. It was destroyed by fire around 210.
Inscription recording the dedication of a mithraeum at Tiddis by a group of cultores who built the sanctuary at their own expense.
In the 1900s a model Mithraeum was built in Saalburg in the mistaken belief that there was an original temple of Mithras in an ancient Roman building.
Second terracotta tablet found at Calvi depicting Mithras killing the bull, now at Berlin, Antiquarium.
Marius Victor, according to the inscription on the monument, erected this monument to Mithras ’when Philip and Titianus were consuls’.
The monument was dedicated by two brothers, one of them being the Pater of his community.
A possible Mithraeum II was found in Bingen, but the few remains are not sufficient to prove it.
This relief was found under the Palazzo Montecitorio, in Rome, and bought by the Liebighaus at Frankfort.
The lion-headed statue of Hedderneheim is a reconstruction from fragments of two different sculptures.
Ancient region of the Crimean Peninsula associated with the Greek colonies and Roman presence in Taurica.