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Marble lion's head, which was fastened into a wall because the marble of the backside ends into a flat square (Visconti, 171; MMM 243, 1).
The person who commanded the sculpture may have been M. Umbilius Criton, documented in the Mitreo della Planta Pedis.
The floor mosaic of the Mithraeum of the Seven Spheres, which gives its name to the temple, depicts a dagger.
The name of the Mithraeum of the Seven Gates refers to the doors depicted in the mosaic that decorates the floor, symbolising the seven planets through which the souls of the initiates have to pass.
The Mitreo dei Marmi Colorati takes its name after the discovery of a black-and-white mosaic of Pan fighting with Eros.
He dedicated to the Emperor, for the worshipers of the god Mithras a sculpture in Stabiae.
Centurion of the Legio VII Gemina Antoniana Pia Felix who erected the only known mithraeum at Lucus Augusti to date.
Patronus of the corpus lenunculariorum tabulariorum auxiliariorum Ostiensium.
Scholar, politician and a court astrologer to the Roman emperors Claudius, Nero and Vespasian.
He was a soldier of the Cohors I Belgarum, probably of Dalmatian origin, who dedicated an altar to Mithras in Aufustianis.
The pater Artemidorus seems to be an Augustan freedman of the Claudians, of Eastern origin.
Syndexios in Ostia, his name Marsus suggests that he was a snake-charmer.
Hector erected an altar to Mithras in Emerita Augusta by means of a ‘divine vision’.
Procurator of Tarraconensis, he dedicated a monument to the Invincible God, Isis and Serapis in Asturica Augusta.