Your search St Albans gave 2152 results.
Pater and priest of the Fagan Mithtraeum with several monuments to his name.
Centurio frumentarius probably from Tarraco, who served in the Legio VII Gemina located in Emerita Agusta.
Gaius dedicated an altar to the god Invictus in Emerita Augusta in the 2nd century.
Pater Patrum of Ostia, he officiated at the Mitreo Aldobrandini where he is mentioned in a couple of inscriptions.
Public horseman and consul under the emperor Caracalla, who completed a Mithraeum in Aveia Vestina.
Pater who offered several monuments, including a temple, in Augusta Treverorum.
Donated a krater with weekday gods to Mithras god and king in Augusta Treverorum.
Fifth Roman emperor and last of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, reigning from 54 until his death in 68.
A fragmentary red sandstone relief preserves the upper part of three-headed Hekate holding a long object in her left hand.
Limestone altar from the Trier baths, carved on four sides with a lion and serpent, flanked by Sol and Luna, and likely linked to a Mithraic context involving Hekate.
Marble statue from Intercisa representing a lion holding an indistinct animal beneath its forepaws. Found in a vineyard, the piece is now in the Hungarian National Museum.
Small votive altar in white limestone from Aquae Mattiacae, dedicated to Deo Invicto by a miles pius. The top preserves the head of Cautes with his raised torch.
The Mithraeum of Regensburg represents the earliest of the nine Mithraic sanctuaries so far documented in Bavaria, Germany.
Red sandstone altar from Stockstadt, featuring a square cavity in the front that contained a fragment of crystal and a small lamp.
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.
This tauroctony may have come from Hermopolis and its style suggests a Thraco-Danubian origin.
Late antique legendary biography of Alexander the Great (c. AD 300), where history, myth, and imperial ideology merge around figures of divine kingship and solar power.