Your search Rome gave 373 results.
This temple of Mithras has been discovered under the Church in Vieux-en-Val-Romey, in 1869.
Both of them were discovered in 1609 in the foundations of the façade of the church of San Pietro, Rome.
At Rome’s twilight, amid political upheaval and Christian ascendancy, Vettius Agorius Praetextatus embodied pagan intellect, virtue, and authority across senatorial, military, and mystical spheres.
Le culte de Mithra : Une religion iranienne qui se répand à Rome et dans son empire.
This monument is the only one still available from the disappeared Mithraeum in Piazza S. Silvestro in Capite.
Roman relief from a sanctuary on the Janiculum Hill (Rome), showing a male figure bound by a serpent coiled seven times.
The relief of Palazzo Colonna, Rome, depicts a lion-headed figure holding a burning torch in his outstretched hands.
What appears to be a representation of Mithras killing the bull appears in the 12th century frescoes of the Basilica dei Santi Quattro Coronati in Rome.
This relief of Mithras Tauroctonos from Rome bears the inscription of three brothers, two of them lions.
This monument, found in the Domus Flavia in Rome, bears an inscription by a certain Aurelius Mithres.
This Mithraic temple, also known as the Mithraeum of the Olympii, dates to the 3rd century and was rediscovered in 15th-century Rome, but it has not been preserved.
Mithras being born from the rock (petrogenia), acquired in Rome and formerly kept in Berlin.
The Mithraeum under and behind S. Prisca on the Aventine is without doubt the most important sanctuary of the Persian god in Rome.
This inscription, which doesn’t mention Mithras, was found near the church of Santa Balbina on the Aventine in Rome.
Marble relief, probably found in Rome during the construction of the Palazzo Primoli along the Via Zanardelli.
This marble altar was found ’in the street called di Branco’, behind the palace of the Cardinal of Bologna, in Rome.