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A small cippus from the Mithraeum of Sabazeus records the rebuilding of the sanctuary after its collapse.
A Mithraic pater of Ostia who dedicated an altar to Cautes in the Mithraeum of the Painted Walls.
Roman citizen of Ostia who re-consecrated an earlier marble statue to Sol Invictus Mithras during the second century CE.
Slave of a certain Macus Iulius Eunicus, Hermes dedicated a monument to Silvanus found in the Mitreo della Planta Pedis.
Donor of the monumental tauroctony that served as the central cult image of Mithraeum IV in Aquincum.
An imperial slave and customs administrator of the Illyrian tax system, he financed and built a Mithraic temple in Moesia Superior.
Freedman, he offered a relief of Mithras as a bull killer for the well-being of his two former masters in Apulum.
Landowner from Augustobriga, transferred to Tarraco by Antoninus Pius and owner of the villa of Els Munts and its Mithraeum.
Praeses of the Noric Mediterranean province, of equestrian rank, restaured the Mithraeum of Virunum in 311.
Marble tauroctony relief from Ozd (Magyarózd), attesting a rural Mithraic presence in the interior of Roman Dacia Superior.
Member of the Mithraic community attested at Kreta in Moesia Inferior.
Sandstone altar with patera from the rock sanctuary at Kreta, Moesia Inferior, bearing a Greek inscription of uncertain reading, possibly a thanksgiving to Mithras.
Straton, son of Straton, consecrated an altar to Helios Mithras in Kreta, Moesia inferior.
Sandstone altar with patera from the rock sanctuary at Kreta, Moesia Inferior, bearing a Greek inscription dedicating an altar to Helios Mithras by Marcus Sikis Dossis.
Sandstone tauroctony relief from the Mithraeum at Kreta (Крета), depicting Mithras within a vaulted grotto accompanied by the torchbearers, Sol and Luna.
Ceramic cup inscribed with a Greek graffito and recovered from the Mithraeum of Martigny, providing evidence for the use of inscribed vessels within the sanctuary assemblage.
This monument with an inscription by two individuals was found in the first mithraeum of Cologne, Germany.
Relief showing Mithras slaying the bull, found at Paks in Roman Pannonia, modern-day Hungary.
Fragmentary Mithraic relief from Ratiaria depicting the tauroctony above a series of narrative scenes from the myth of Mithras and Sol.