Your search Tal hal Hariri / Es-Sâlihiyeh / As Salhiyah gave 3730 results.
Stone fragment from the Mithraeum at Königshoffen preserving a human thigh against which a hand holds a bunch of grapes; probably part of a larger sculptural group.
Stone statue fragments from the Mithraeum at Mackwiller depicting Mithras's rock-birth, preserving the head in Phrygian cap, torso, and right hand holding part of a torch.
Reconstructed tauroctony relief from the Mithraeum at Mackwiller, assembled from multiple stone fragments and preserving Mithras's head, shoulders, dagger hand, flying cloak, and parts of the bull and torchbearers.
Lower-central fragment of the large cult relief from the Mithraeum at Mackwiller, preserving the forefeet of the dog, part of a serpent, and a cult vessel; the base bears a partially legible inscription mentioning an eques Romanus.
Sandstone plate from Beihingen in the Neckar valley, depicting on one side a youth in Oriental dress with a bow in an arched niche, and on the other a corresponding figure; both may represent torchbearers or Mithraic grades.
Sandstone slab from Kindenheim, Germania Superior, depicting a standing winged Aion with traces of a lion's mane on the breast and objects in both hands; the head and part of the body are damaged.
Fragmentary inscription from Fellbach, Germania Superior, preserving only the abbreviated name of Mithras.
Assemblage of plates, jugs, dishes, cups, censers, two bronze coins, and animal bones from the Mithraeum at Dieburg
Fragment of an altar from Alzey, ancient Vicus Altiajensium, dedicated to Deo invicto by Adiutorius Tertius, found in the north-west corner of the castellum in 1920
Basalt fragment preserving the skin and hoof of a bull probably belonging to a tauroctony scene.
Unusual sculptural representation of stylised flames mounted on a pedestal.
Terracotta matrix used to produce vessels decorated with the bull-killing scene of Mithras.
Pair of Castor ware vessels interpreted as ritual banquet deposits from the Mithraeum of Procolitia.
Fragmentary inscription from Pola preserving a possible reading of the name Atticus.
Group of inscriptions from Umbria including one entry reassigned to Interamna Lirenas in Latium.
Marble relief showing Mithras slaying the bull inside a vaulted cave accompanied by Sol, Luna and the torchbearers.
The tauroctonic relief from Dragus includes a naked flying figure that Vermaseren has identified as Phosporus or Lucifer.
A white marble fragment from Ocrea in Umbria bearing the name "Mitrha" (sic), possibly related to Mithraic monuments from nearby sites.
An earthen lamp bearing the name of C. Dessi along with two coins of Constantine and one of Gratianus, found in the Mithraeum at Spoleto in Umbria.
A medal in the form of a Grecian cross from the Mithraeum at Spoleto, showing busts of a bearded man and a veiled woman each with a radiate crown, identified by Cumont as Sol and Luna.