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This relief of Mithras killing the bull, now on display in Stuttgart, includes a small altar with a sacrificial knife and an oil lamp.
This head was found at the east end of temple of Mithras in London.
The Mithras's head of Walbrook probable belonged to a life-size scene of the god scarifying the bull.
The Mithraeum of Caernarfon, in Walles, was built in three phases during the 3rd century, and destroyed at the end of the 4th.
This relief found at Carnuntum represents Mithras slaughtering the bull, without the scorpion, in the sacred cave.
The Cautopates with scorpion found in 1882 in Sarmizegetusa includes an inscription of a certain slave known as Synethus.
A votive altar referring to the cult of Mithras was found more than forty years before the site was excavated and the Mithraeum discovered.
The temple of Mithras in Fertorakos was constructed by soldiers from the Carnuntum legion at the beginning of the 3rd century AD.
The Mithraeum of Mainz, was discovered outside the Roman legionary fortress. Unfortunately the site was destroyed without being recorded.
This altar bears the oldest known Latin inscription to the god Mithras, written Mitrhe.
On this slab, Gaius Iulius Propinquos indicates that he made a wall of the Mithraeum at his own expense.
The Kempraten Mithraeum was unexpectedly discovered during the 2015 excavations near the vicus.
Reliefs of Cautes and Cautopates dedicated by Florius Florentius of Saalburg and Ancarinius Severus
A possible Mithraeum II was found in Bingen, but the few remains are not sufficient to prove it.
The Housesteads Mithraeum is an underground temple, now burried, discovered in 1822 in a slope of the Chapel Hill, outside of the Roman Fort at the Hadrian's Wall.
This lion-headed figure from Nida, present-day Frankfurt-Heddernheim, holds a key and a shovel in his hands.
The lion-headed statue of Hedderneheim is a reconstruction from fragments of two different sculptures.
The first members of the Wiesloch Mithraeum may have been veterans from Ladenburg and Heidelberg.