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An interdisciplinary volume exploring the history, archaeology, and cultures of Dura-Europos from the Hellenistic to the Islamic period.
Imperial slave who, together with Successus, fulfilled a vow to Cautes, providing one of the earliest possible attestations of Mithraic worship in Hispania.
The controversial Italian journalist Edmon Durighello discovered this marble statue of a young naked Aion in 1887.
The Mithraic nature of the frescoes of Oea, according to the scholars Cumont and Vermaseren, is now questioned.
Nuzi at modern Yorghan Tepe, Iraq was an ancient Mesopotamian city 12 kilometers southwest of the city of Arrapha and 70 kilometers southwest of Sātu Qala, located near the Tigris river.
Hattusa, also Hattuşa, Ḫattuša, Hattusas, or Hattusha, was the capital of the Hittite Empire in the late Bronze Age during two distinct periods.
A Romano-Germanic woman whose inscription became central to debates on female participation in the Mithraic cult.
Rural slave devoted to Mithras on an estate near Valentia during the later second century CE.
Imperial slave attested at the sanctuary of Can Modolell, a site closely associated with the early spread of Mithraism in Hispania.
A slave of a certain Flavius Baeticus, Quintio dedicated an altar to the health of a companion.
This lost monument from Malaga, Spain, to Dominus Invictus has been linked to the cult of Mithras, although there is not enough evidence.
A comprehensive reassessment of the introduction, development and early decline of Mithraism in Roman Hispania, combining socio-historical analysis with the most complete catalogue of Hispanic Mithraic evidence currently available.
A Mithraic worshipper whose dedication to Cautes preserves a distinctive epigraphic tradition associated with the coastal communities of north-eastern Hispania.
BSc Econ in Political Science and Intelligence Studies, born in Warsaw, PL, Researcher of Cults and Mysteries, a practicing Heathen since the age of 12.
A marble standing torchbearer statue found at Torrita near Nazzano in Etruria at the beginning of the nineteenth century, formerly in Trasi's house at Torrita and later in Rome.
For the first time, a Mithraeum has been discovered in Corsica, at the site of Mariana, Lucciana (Haute-Corse).
Centurion of Legio VII Gemina Antoniniana who dedicated an altar to Mithras at Locus, honouring his freedmen Victorius Secundus and Victorius Victor.
One of the freedmen of Gaius Victorius Victorinus named in the dedication of the Mithraeum of Lugo.
One of the freedmen of Gaius Victorius Victorinus named in the dedication of the Mithraeum of Lugo.