Your search St. Egyden gave 2267 results.
We could only find the following terms of the mystae, because the preliminary Report has not yet published all the inscriptions.
"On this same bench, where the banquet scene was found, and adhering to the south wall (fig. 12, II), were many fragments of plaster decorated with green leaves and tree branches" (Report, 104).
"Several heads were found of such a large scale that they must have belonged to fairly large paintings" (See fig. 12, IO) (Report, 104).
The soffit or reveal of the arched niche had been decorated with white stars on a blue background.
Inscription carved on the pairs of columns on the backs of the five thrones, which stand on the west and east part of the terrace.
A rough-hewn statuette (H. 0.30), found at Emir Ghasi in Lycaonia, is said to be in a Museum at Oxford, where we have not been able to trace it.
Near Frasha (T&: cI>&:potcrot), situated near the Zamanti-Sou, on a considerable height a grotto has been hewn out, which can be reached by way a fly of steps.
The statue of Arimanius/Ahriman was found in 1874 under the city wall of York during the construction of the railway station.
This stone in basso relief of Mithras killing the bull was found 10 foot underground in Micklegate York in 1747.
Germania preserves some of the densest concentrations of Mithraic evidence in the Roman frontier provinces.
The temple of Mithras of Carrawburgh, Brocolita, disclosed three main stages of development, the second exhibiting two reconstructions.
Anazarbus was an ancient Cilician city. Under the late Roman Empire, it was the capital of Cilicia Secunda.
This relief of Mithras slaying the bull incorporates the scene of the god carrying the bull and its birth from a rock.
This marble fragment from Roman Dacia preserves part of a tauroctony with Sol, the raven, and Mithras dragging the bull.