Your search San Gemini gave 605 results.
The small Mithraic altar found at Cerro de San Albin, Merida, bears an inscription to the health of a certain Caius Iulius.
This altar is dedicated to the birth of Mithras by a frumentarius of the Legio VII Geminae.
Representation of a person lying prostrate on the ground between two other walking figures on the Mitreo of Santa Capua Vetere.
Minto has claimed that the time god Aion was painted on the corner of the north wall of the Mitreo de Santa Capua Vetere.
This low relief on an altar of Mithras killing the bull was found in a church in Pisignano, south of Ravenna.
The donor of this Mithraic inscription from Bolsena, a certain Tiberius Claudius Thermoron, is known from two other monuments.
The site was destroyed in the 5th century but some elements, including the benches, can still been seen.
The lack of attributes and its decontextualisation prevent us from attributing a specific Mithraic attribution to this small Venus pudica from Mérida.
In the Mithraeum of S. Capua Veteres, Cautes stands between two laurel trees.
A dinner scene with Sabina from the Catacombe dei Santi Marcellino e Pietro, near Rome, may have been commissioned by a follower of Mithras.
Fragment of a relief (H. 0.63), found at Labicum "nella vigna di Luigi Domi- nicis, situata fra Colonna e la strada corriera" in the ruins of an Roman villa.
Pater and priest of the Fagan Mithtraeum with several monuments to his name.
A powerful and wealthy man, founder of a mithraeum in the city of Aquincum of which he was the mayor.
Centurion who engraved a plaque to Sol for the health of the Emperor Antoninus Pius and his sons.
Dedicated multiple monuments to Mithras, Fortuna Primigenia and Diana in Etruria.
Garlic merchant, probably from Lusitania, who dedicated an altar to Cautes in Tarraconensis.