Your search Nicopolis ad Istrum gave 1447 results.
Approved priest, Augustal serf at Casuentum et Carsulae, appointed quaestor of the Augustus treasury.
The altar of the Mithraeum of San Clemente bears the Tauroctony on the front, Cautes and Cautopates on the right and left sides and a serpent on the back.
Statue of Cautes from Bodobrica, discovered around 1940, depicting the torchbearer standing before a tree or rock and associated with a bucranium.
The article examines two recently discovered Mithraic representations of Cautes from Alba Iulia, focusing on a rare iconographic type showing the torchbearer with a bucranium.
Tribune of the first cohort of Vardulli, he erected a mithraeum with his fellows in Brementium.
Governor of Numidia between 284 and 285, he dedicated several monuments in Numidia to Mithras and other gods.
Greek-speaking member of the community of Mithras followers from Apulum in the 2nd century.
Centurion who engraved a plaque to Sol for the health of the Emperor Antoninus Pius and his sons.
Imperial slave who donated an altar to Mithras for the benefit of the emperor Caracalla.
Neapolitan senator who dedicated a tauroctonic relief to Mithras tauroctonus to the Almighty God Mithras.
Freedman, he offered a relief of Mithras as a bull killer for the well-being of his two former masters in Apulum.
Garlic merchant, probably from Lusitania, who dedicated an altar to Cautes in Tarraconensis.
Probably of Greek descent, he was active in Pannonia Superior by the 2nd century.
The pater Artemidorus seems to be an Augustan freedman of the Claudians, of Eastern origin.
Procurator of Tarraconensis, he dedicated a monument to the Invincible God, Isis and Serapis in Asturica Augusta.
Veteran and ex duplicarius of ala I civum Romanorum who dedicated an altar to Mithras in Teutoburgium.