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This relief of Mithras killing the bull is on display at the Royal Ontario Museum.
This sculpture, probably of Cautopates, now in the Musei Vaticani, was transformed into Paris.
The fragmented tauroctony of the Mitreo di Santa Prisca rests on the naked figure of a bearded man, probably Ocean or Saturn.
This unusual mural depicting Mithras killing the bull was found near the Colosseum in 1668.
The Mithraeum of the House of Diana was installed in two Antonine halls, northeast corner of the House of Diana, in the late 2nd or early 3rd century.
This primitive relief of Mithras as a bullkiller is signed by a certain Valerius Marcelianus.
This altar, found in the 3rd mithraeum of Ptuj, bears an inscription and a relief of Sol and a person with a cornucopia.
The provenance of this fragment of a white marble relief depicting Mithras as a bullkiller is unknown.
Fragments of this limestone statue include the head and torso of Mercury, holding the caduceus in his left hand.
This damage relief of Mithras killing the bull was found walled into a house near Split, Croatia.
The remains of the Jajački Mithraeum were discovered accidentally during excavation for the construction of a private house in 1931.
The relief of Mithras killing the bull from the Jajce Mithraeum is walled into the cult niche and surmounted by a roof.
This relief of Mithras as a bullkiller was found in Golubić, Bosnia and Herzegovina, near a cementery.
This monument is too fragmentary to recod it definitely as a Mithras-monument.
This statuette was bought by A. Wiedemann in Luxor in 1882 from a man from Kus.
This Aion is known for wearing a Kalathos on his lion’s head, linking him to the syncretic Sarapis.
A bearded Bacchus and another hermes as a woman, both crowned with vine tendrils, were walled into the base of a niche.
This altar to Deo Invicto was found during the excavation of the Monastero Delle Benedettine di Santa Grata in Bergamo, with a bronze calf’s head on top.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull, signed by a certain Χρῆστος, is on display in the Sala dei Animali of the Vatican Museum.
Franz Cumont bought this relief of Mithras as a bullkiller from a dealer who claimed to have found it in a vineyard near the church of Saint Pancrace, in Rome.