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Restoring the Mysteries: A Conversation with Peter Mark Adams on his new book ‘Ritual & Epiphany in the Mysteries of Mithras’.
Bronze statuette of Mithras in his characteristic bull-slaying pose, though only the god has been preserved.
Pseudo-Plutarch, De fluviis. Goodwin, Ed. Plutarch. Plutarch’s Morals. Translated from the Greek by several hands. Corrected and revised by. William W. Goodwin, PH. D. Boston. Little, Brown, and Company. Cambridge. Press of John Wilson and son.
Pseudo-Plutarch, De fluviis. Goodwin, Ed. Plutarch. Plutarch’s Morals. Translated from the Greek by several hands. Corrected and revised by. William W. Goodwin, PH. D. Boston. Little, Brown, and Company. Cambridge. Press of John Wilson and son.
White marble statue of Lion-head god of time, formerly in the Villa Albani, nowadays in the Musei Vaticani.
Praeses of the Noric Mediterranean province, of equestrian rank, restaured the Mithraeum of Virunum in 311.
Callimorphus was a cashier (arkarius) of the estates of Chresimus, steward of emperors.
Thrasyllus was an Egyptian of Greek descent grammarian, astrologer and a friend of the Roman emperor Tiberius.
Actuarius and notarius, Celsianus dedicated an altar to Sol Mithras for the health of two illustrious men.
Freedman who dedicated the first monument mentioning a Pater.
Founder of the Arasacid dynasty, Tiridates I was crowned king of Armenia by Nero in 66.
Vir perfectissimus and priest of Zeus Brontes and Hekate, he erected a mithraeum in Rome.