Your search Lucciana (Mariana site) gave 296 results.
Nouveau video de Mysteria dédié au culte de Mithra à partir de l'exposition Le mystère de Mithra au Musée Saint Raymond.
Solder of the Legio II Augusta who dedicated a monument to Mithras Invictus in Isca.
Freedman and administrator of the country estate of a certain Flavius Macedo in Moesia.
Pater sacrorum and founder of the Mithraeum under the Basilica of S. Lorenzo.
Public treasurer known for several inscriptions to Mithras found in San Silvestro.
Dedicated multiple monuments to Mithras, Fortuna Primigenia and Diana in Etruria.
Several iron fragments found in the second mithraeum of Güglingen may have been used during mithraic ceremonies.
The Aion / Phanes relief, currently on display in the Gallerie Estensi, Moneda, is associated with two Eastern mysteric religions: Mithraism and Orphism.
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 frescoes depict several figures dressed in different garments associated with the Mithraic degrees.
The Mithraeum of Saara, Syria, has been identified through the deciphering of the remains of the iconographic programme on its arch.
The Niasar Cave, غار نیاسر, was a temple probably devoted to Iranian Mithras that dates back to the early Partian era.
There is no solid evidences of the finding of a Mithraic temple in Duhok, Iraq.
The exploration of an old pazo, a manor house, near the Roman wall, in Lugo, led to the discovery of a Roman domus, which existed continuously from the beginnings of the Christian Era until the Late Empire.
White marble relief depicting Mithras killing the bull, found broken in two parts in 1872 near Salita delle Tre Pile in Rome.
The Mithraeum of Visentium, near Capodimonte in Viterbo, was carved grotto-style into a tuff cliff overlooking the waters of Lake Bolsena, just a few dozen metres away.
These fragments of a monumental relief of Mithras killing the bull from Koenigshoffen were reassembled and are now on display at the Musée Archéologique de Strasbourg.