Your search Roman cemetery of St. Matthias gave 3406 results.
An imperial freedman who restored the Mithraeum of Sabazeus for the Mithraic brethren.
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.
Landowner from Augustobriga, transferred to Tarraco by Antoninus Pius and owner of the villa of Els Munts and its Mithraeum.
Sandstone tauroctony relief from the Mithraeum at Kreta (Крета), depicting Mithras within a vaulted grotto accompanied by the torchbearers, Sol and Luna.
Senior Mithraic priest of Ostia whose inscriptions preserve rare and unique epithets of Mithras, including Incorruptus Juvenis and Indeprehensibilis.
Pater and priest of the Mithraeum of the Seven Spheres at Ostia during the sanctuary’s restoration and flourishing.
Known from an altar dedicated to Mithras at Ostia during the tenure of the pater Marcus Aemilius Epaphroditus.
A priest of Sol Invictus Mithras who helped dedicate a throne in the Casa di Diana mithraeum.
A pater of the Ostian Mithraic community and member of the guild of carpenters.
A Mithraic pater at Ostia associated with the dedication of an image of Arimanius in the Casa di Diana mithraeum.
Patronus of the corpus lenunculariorum tabulariorum auxiliariorum Ostiensium.
Syndexios in Ostia, his name Marsus suggests that he was a snake-charmer.
A small marble fragment from Augusta Emerita (modern Mérida) bearing the fragmentary inscription (S)arapi(s), attesting to the veneration of Sarapis in proximity to the Mithraic sanctuary.
Two limestone statue fragments from Mithraeum II at Aquincum, Pannonia Inferior, representing Mercury in a shoulder-pinned garment with wings in his hair; probably stood in room A on base y.
Petrianae was a Roman fort on Hadrian’s Wall, generally associated with Stanwix near Carlisle.
Longovicium was a Roman fort and settlement in northern Britannia, today associated with Lanchester.
Deva was a major Roman legionary fortress in northern Britannia, today Chester.
Tomis became one of the principal urban and maritime centres of the western Black Sea coast.
Sextantio occupied a strategic position near the Mediterranean routes of southern Gaul.