Your search Klagenfurt am Wörthersee gave 1437 results.
This heliotrope gem, depicting Mithras slaying the bull, dates from the 2nd-3rd century, but was reused as an amulet in the 13th century.
This intaglio with Mithras killing the bull on one side and Kabiros on the other was probably used as a magical amulet.
The city of Hatra was famed for its fusion of several civilization cults, which several temples devoted to gods from all Indo-European world.
The second tauroctony of Jabal al-Druze seems to have be made by the same sculptor.
This sculpture of Mithras born from a rock was found in 1922 together with two altars in what was probably a mithraeum.
This inscription by Luccius Crispus was found near the entrance of the Mithraeum at Pamphylia.
Fragmentary Greek graffito from Dura-Europos recording the prices of everyday goods such as wine, meat, wood and lamp wicks.
Samsat, formerly Samosata is a small town in the Adıyaman Province of Turkey, situated on the upper Euphrates river.
Burham is a village and civil parish in the borough of Tonbridge and Malling in Kent, England.
Samnium occupied a mountainous region of central Italy linked to Rome through military movement and regional urban networks.
Campania preserved a vibrant urban and maritime environment closely connected to the commercial life of Roman Italy.
Mesopotamia formed part of the eastern frontier zone where Roman military expansion encountered long-established Mesopotamian traditions.
Lycia et Pamphylia connected southern Anatolia to the maritime networks of the eastern Mediterranean world.
Mesopotamia preserves frontier evidence from the eastern limits of Roman Mithraic expansion.
Lycia and Pamphylia preserve Mithraic evidence linked to southern Anatolian maritime and urban networks.
'Hail to Kamerios the Pater' can be read on one of the walls of the mithraeum at Dura Europos.
This relief of Mithras slaying the bull, framed by acanthus leaves, was sold at auction in 2011 by Bonhams.
This marble relief bears an inscription by Marcus Modius Agatho, who dedicated several monuments to Mithras on the Caelian Hill in Rome.
This plaque from Carsulae, in Umbria, refers to the creation of a leonteum erected by the lions at their own expense.