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This damaged monument of a certain Hostilius from Malvesiatium, now Skelani, bears an inscription apparently to Mithras transitus.
The v in this small altar found in Novaria has been interpreted by some commentators as qualifying Mithras as victorious.
The statue was dedicated to Mercury Quillenius, an epithet used to refer to a Celtic god or the Greek Kulúvios.
Both objects have a snake winding itself around them.
Marble group of Mithras slaying the bull, formerly sold by Antiquarium Ltd., New York.
The relief of Mithras killing the bull from the Jajce Mithraeum is walled into the cult niche and surmounted by a roof.
These fragments of a cult relief of Mithras were found at the Mithraeum II of Ptuj, Slovenia.
The archeologists have found three fragments of the Tauroctony of Lucciana, which includes Cautes and Cautopates.
The relief of Sol was found during the construction of Piazza Dante in Rome in 1874.
The relief of Mithras being born from the rock of the Esquiline shows the young god naked, as usual, with a torch and a dagger in his hands.
Of this great relief of Mithras slaying the bull only a few segments remain.
This black marble of Mithras killing the Bull has belonged to the sculptor Carlo Albacini.
Exceptional sculpture of a lion devouring a bull’s head founded in 1894 in Carnuntum, Pannonia.
This altar dedicated to Helios Mithras by a certain Sagaris was repurposed in the masonry of Palazzo Bagnoli, Venosa, Italy.
This inscription by a certain Memmius Placidus is the first ever found signed by a Heliodromus.
The City of Darkness unique fresco from the Mithraeum of Hawarte shows the tightest links between the western and eastern worship of Mithras in Roman Syria.
The inscription pays homage to the emperor, probably Caracalla, to Mithras, the fathers, the petitor and the syndexioi.
This altar to Mithras found in Aquilieia mentions several persons of a same community.
Fragment of a white marble statue of Mithras killing the bull from Rusicade, today Skikda, Algeria.
White marble statue of Cautopates with crossed legs, accompanied by an owl beside a tree trunk.