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Votive sculpture of Mithras sacrificing the bull from the Mithraeum of Tarquinia.
This limestone statue of Cautes is now exposed at Great North Museum of Newcastle.
The two fellows of Mithras from Marquise, Boulogne-sur-Mer, are fully naked but for the cloak and the Phrygian cap.
The Mithraeum of Martigny is the first temple devoted to Mithras found in Switzerland.
The Mithra Tauroctonos from Syracuse, Sicily, is currently on display in the city's archaeological museum.
In the Tauroctony of Hermopolis, Cautes and Cautopates are placed over two columns at each side of the sacrifice.
The Mithraeum of Vulci is remarkable because of his high benches and the arches below them.
The Nushijan Mithraeum testifies to the worship of Mithra in the region since before the Zoroastrian reform.
Tauroctony in black marble on display at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, California.
The first members of the Wiesloch Mithraeum may have been veterans from Ladenburg and Heidelberg.
The iconography of the platter of Ladenburg might evoke the food consumed during Mithraic banquets.
The cantharus of Trier is reminiscent of the crater that often appears in tauroctony scenes collecting the blood from the slaughtered animal.
Mithras born from the rock with a snake raising in coils around it.
The sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull was transported from Rome to London by Charles Standish in 1815.
This marble relief was found in a Mithraeum in Ptuj.
The Mithraeum of Szony has the form of a grotto and the entrance is on the west side.
Szony's bronze plate shows Mithra slaying the bull and the seven planets with attributes at the bottom of the composition.
The second statue of Mithras rock-birth was found in the Mitreo di Santo Stefano Rotondo shows a childish Mitras emerging from the rock.
The underground cave which served as temple was cut into the conglomerate rock of the area, and a flight of eight steps of stone slabs led to it.