Your search Terme di Caracalla gave 2069 results.
Limestone altar fragment from Drubeta, Dacia, bearing a Mithraic dedication.
Bronze statuette from Drubeta, Dacia, depicting Mithras placing his left leg on the bull's head — the tauriphoros type — with the bull in a subordinate posture.
Unpublished tauroctony relief from Turnu Severin, Dacia, with multiple Mithraic scenes including Mithras with Sol, Mithras as archer, and Mithras as bull-slayer.
Inscription from near Mintia, ancient Micia in Dacia, dedicated to Deus Mithras by Rutus ex voto.
Inscription from Micia, Dacia, dedicated to Soli invicto Mithrae by Aurelius; the rest of the dedicant's name is lost.
Inscription from Mintia-Vețel, ancient Micia in Dacia, bearing only the brief dedication Caute.
Left portion of a large limestone tauroctony relief from Mintia, ancient Micia in Dacia, depicting Mithras killing the bull with a belt, the bull's tail ending in corn-ears, together with subsidiary Mithraic scenes.
Votive altar from Păuleni, Dacia, dedicated to Soli invicto for the welfare of Caius Iulius Valentinus, conductor salinarum, by Caius Iulius Ornucio.
Inscription from Doștat, Dacia, dedicated to Soli invicto Mithrae; only the opening formula is preserved.
Altar from Doștat, Dacia, dedicated to Invicto Soli deo genitori by Publius Aelius Artemidorus, sacerdos creatus a Palmyrenis — a priest appointed by Palmyrene worshippers.
Inscription from Oarda de Sus near Apulum, Dacia, dedicated to Invicto Mithrae by Potinus ex voto.
Inscription from the village of Șard near Apulum, Dacia, dedicated to Soli invicto for the welfare of the Emperor, the Roman people, and the ordo of the Colonia Apuli by Caius Iulius Valens.
Sandstone altar from Alsóbajom near Mediaș, Dacia, with Mithras killing the bull between Cautes and Cautopates on its front face and no animals depicted; Sol appears in the upper left corner and Luna in the upper right.
Inscription from Decea Mureșului, ancient Bruckla in Dacia, dedicated to Invicto Mithrae; the dedicant's name is only partially preserved.
Limestone votive altar from Decea Mureșului, ancient Bruckla in Dacia, dedicated to Invicto Mithrae by Surus.
Limestone base from Decea Mureșului, ancient Bruckla in Dacia, dedicated to Invicto Mithrae by Iulius Quintus, centurio.
White sandstone altar from Decea Mureșului near Aiud, ancient Bruckla in Dacia, depicting on its front the naked Mithras being born from the rock, holding a torch in his right hand and a dagger in his left, with a coiled serpent below.
Lost altar from Carevac in Glamoč Polje, Dalmatia, dedicated to Deo invicto Soli Mithrae.
Altar from Carevac in Glamoč Polje south-east of Jajce, Dalmatia, dedicated to Invicto by Sisimbrius, erected by decree of the decuriones.
Sandstone altar from Pritok near Bihać, Dalmatia, dedicated to Invicto Mithrae Soli by Cocceius for his own welfare.