Your search Marcus Aurelius Antonius Augustus gave 203 results.
This white marble relief depicting a lion-headed figure from Ostia is now exposed at the Musei Vaticani.
Slab found at Tazoult-Lambèse dedicated to the Unconquered god Sol Mithras by the governor of Numidia Marcus Aurelius Decimus.
This temple of Mithras in Aquincum was located within the private house of the decurio Marcus Antonius Victorinus.
This monument, found in the Domus Flavia in Rome, bears an inscription by a certain Aurelius Mithres.
This marble relief from Alba Iulia contains numerous scenes from the myth of Mithras.
One of the three altars to Mithras found at the Mithraeum of Carrawburgh fort.
This marble gives some details of the reconstruction of the Virunum Mithraeum.
Emperor Caracalla ordered one of Rome’s largest temples to the god Mithras to be built in the baths bearing his name.
Centurion who engraved a plaque to Sol for the health of the Emperor Antoninus Pius and his sons.
Marcus Statius Niger was a lion who erected an altar to Cautopates in Statio, the present-day Angera, with his brother Gaius.
The relief of Dieburg shows Mithras riding a horse as main figure, surrounded by several scenes of the myth.
In his first book, Fahim Ennouhi sheds light on the cult of Mithras in Roman Africa. A marginal and elitist phenomenon, confined to restricted circles and largely absent from local religious dynamics, yet revealing.
This inscription commemorates the building of a mithraeum in Bremenium with fellow worshippers of Mithras.
This altar is dedicated to the birth of Mithras by a frumentarius of the Legio VII Geminae.
These bronze medallions associates the image of several Roman emperors with that of Mithras, usually as a rider, in the province Pontus.
This inscription reveals the existence of a Mithraeum on the island of Andros, Greece, which has not yet been found.
These twin inscriptions found in the Mithraeum of Tazoult were dedicated by the legate Marcus Valerius Maximianus.