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These fragments of a cult relief of Mithras were found at the Mithraeum II of Ptuj, Slovenia.
This altar was erected by Hermadio, who also signed other monuments in Dacia and even in Rome.
This altar to Invictus Mythra (sic) was found in 1867 in ancient Maros Portum, now Sighișoara, Romania.
Small limestone altar from Aquincum, Budapest, dedicated to Petra Genetrix.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull includes various singular features specific to the Danubian area.
This remarkable marble statue of Mithras killing the bull from Apulum includes a unique dedication by its donor, featuring the rare term signum, seldom found in Mithraic contexts.
This limestone altar to Sol Invictus Mithra was found at Turda in 1905.
The Mitreo della crypta neapolitana was used a des legends about its use, from a cult place devoted to Priapus to celebrate Aphrodite.
This altar, discovered in Grude, near Tihaljina, Bosnia and Herzegovina, bears an inscription by Pinnes, a soldier of the Cohors Prima Belgica.
The Mithraeum I of Ptuj contains the foundation, altars, reliefs and cult imagery found in it.
This damage relief of Mithras killing the bull was found walled into a house near Split, Croatia.
The relief of Mithra slaying the bull from Apulum, Romania, has been missing until the scholar Csaba Szabó identified it in the diposit of the Arad Museum.
Several authors read the name Suaemedus instead of Euhemerus as the author of this mithraic relief from Alba Iulia, Romania.
This column found in the Mithraeum of Sarmizegetusa bears an inscription to Nabarze instead of Mithras.
The Mithraeum of Mocici was situated in a grotto at one hour's walk fomr the ancient Epidaurum.
Excavations in 1979 on the remains of the church of Notre-Dame d'Avigonet in Mandelieu, Alpes-Maritimes, brought to light a small mithraeum.
This relief of Mithras killing the sacred bull was found in 1908 near Klisa, in the surroundings of Salona, the ancient capital of Roman Dalmatia.
Cautes and Cautopates attend the birth of Mithras from the rock in the Petrogenia of the third Mithraeum of Ptuj.
As usual, the solar god rises a dagger with one of his hands while emerges from the rock.
The rock of Mithra's birth in the Petrogenia of Sarmizegetusa is surrounded by a snake.