Your search Marcus Aurelius Antonius Augustus gave 213 results.
Altar at Knjaževac (Ravna), Moesia Superior, preserved beneath a water-mill called Kulina, dedicated to Invicto deo for the welfare of Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus.
Marble altar from the Mithraeum at Modrič, Pannonia Superior, dedicated to Deo invicto Mithrae by Marcus Aurelius Ingenuus, beneficiarius consularis.
Limestone altar from Apulum, Dacia, dedicated to Deo invicto Mithrae as a gift by Titus Aurelius Marcus (tribu Fabia), veteran of Legio XIII Gemina.
Base from Aquincum, Pannonia Inferior, recording that Marcus Aurelius Frontinianus and Marcus Aurelius Fronto, soldiers of Legio II Adiutrix and fratres, built a temple to Soli socio; dated to the consulship of Antoninus, either AD 213 or 222.
Base from Aquincum, Pannonia Inferior, dedicated to Deo invicto Mithrae by Marcus Aurelius Frontinianus, decurio of the Colonia Aquinci.
A devotee of Mithras who dedicated an altar for the health of Commodus alongside his father, a procurator castrensis, in Rome.
A powerful and wealthy man, founder of a mithraeum in the city of Aquincum of which he was the mayor.
Governor of Numidia and prolific dedicator of monuments to Sol Mithras, Sol Invictus and other deities in late Roman North Africa.
Emperor Caracalla ordered one of Rome’s largest temples to the god Mithras to be built in the baths bearing his name.
He and his brother, both of the Legio II Adiutrix, built a temple and erected several monuments in Budaors, Pannonia.
Frontinianus and Fronto built a Mithraeum in Budaors, probably on their own property.
Pro praetor legate during the reign of Maxime, he dedicated an altar to Mithras in Lambaesis.
Roman veteran stationed on the island of Andros, where he built a temple to Mithras.
Owner of www.mithraeum.org and the Mithras and Mithraeum discussion lists on Groups.io. Co-founder of Nova Roma and the founder of Byzantium Novum.
One of the three altars to Mithras found at the Mithraeum of Carrawburgh fort.
This inscription probably belonged to the fourth mithraeum of Poetovio and records the restoration of a Mithraic temple by the dux Aurelius Iustinianus.
This inscription reveals the existence of a Mithraeum on the island of Andros, Greece, which has not yet been found.
This monument, found in the Domus Flavia in Rome, bears an inscription by a certain Aurelius Mithres.