Your search Via Praenestina gave 94 results.
This small altar found in Rome depicts the god Sol with five rays around his head.
An altar found in 1889 at Caldas de Reyes (ancient Iria Flavia) in Galicia, bearing a fragmentary dedication to Cautes, possibly by a person named Antonius.
This sculpture of Mithras killing the bull, which belongs to the Louvre Museum, is currently on display in Varsovia.
This monument, found in the Domus Flavia in Rome, bears an inscription by a certain Aurelius Mithres.
This altar was erected by Hermadio, who also signed other monuments in Dacia and even in Rome.
Marble torso found at Ostia in 1912 between the Decumanus and the Via dei Molini, dedicated to Mithras by a certain Atilius Glyco.
Small marble base, found in one of the private houses along the Via Sacra nearly opposite to the Basilica of Constantine, Rome.
Thessalonike became one of the principal urban centres of the Balkans and the Via Egnatia corridor.
Philippi became an important Roman colony in eastern Macedonia along the Via Egnatia.
A subterranean room with a stucco depiction of Mithras slaying the bull, probably from the fourth century, discovered at Agurzano near Ponte Mammolo on the Via Tiburtina outside Rome.
A marble slab reused as a tombstone in Comodilla's catacombs near the Via Ostiense in Rome, originally inscribed by Titus Flavius Eutychus as a gift to the Invincible and Holy god.
Wall-painting of Mithras tauroktonos in fresco, discovered in 1886 in an underground room of the house of the Nummi Albani on the Quirinal (Via Firenze); the god wears a red cap and tunic, the torchbearers wear yellow or orange tunic and cap with green or brown anaxyrides…
Small semi-round base found on the Monte Quirinale in Via Mazzarini, from a small Mithraeum, with a dedication to Mithras by T. Camurenus Philadelfus through Nonius Firmus pater.
Limestone altar from Oescus, Moesia Inferior, dedicated to Deo invicto by Tettius Plotus, veteran of Legio IIII Flavia Fidelis and pater sacrorum — one of the clearest grade attributions from Moesia Inferior.
Fragmentary inscription from Fellbach, Germania Superior, preserving only the abbreviated name of Mithras.
Small fragmentary inscription from the Mithraeum at Dieburg preserving only the abbreviated dedication D(eo) i(nvicto) M(ithrae)