Your selection in monuments gave 38 results.
Limestone altar dedicated to Sol Invictus Mithras by the governor and military commander Marcus Valerius Maximianus.
The phallus from Tiddis, Algeria, has been represented as a cock.
Limestone slab dedicated to the invincible Sun by the governor Marcus Aurelius Decimus near the temple of Aesculapius.
Small stone block inscribed to Deo Soli, found walled up in an Arabic wall near a Roman spring at Sicca Veneria (modern Kef).
Inscription dedicated to Sol Invictus for the wellbeing of Emperor Aurelianus and his dynasty, from Thagaste, dated 275 A.D.
Stone inscription dedicated to Sol Deus Augustus, found at Zraya (ancient Zarai).
Altar serving as a column base, dedicated to Deus Invictus by M. Messius Messor, prefect of a cohort, found in the house of the sheik near Lambaesis at Sidi Okba.
Altar dedicated to Deo Soli, Honori et Virtuti pro salute, found at the foot of the West gate of the Roman town at Hr. Kaussât, near Ucubi.
Inscription dedicated to Deus Sol Invictus for the wellbeing of Emperor Probus and the municipality, from Chidibbia, dated 276-282 A.D.
Two small altars dedicated to Sol and Luna by the consul Q. Aradius Rufinus, found at Sidi Adi bel-Kassem near Thuburnica, probably dated 304-321 A.D.
Inscription dedicated to Sol Invictus at Lambaesis, of uncertain Mithraic attribution.
Inscription recording the construction of a templum Invicti from the ground by Aurelius Longinianus, centurion of the Third Augustan Legion, near the Roman camp at Lambaesis.
Altar inscription dedicated to Kautopates by Eutyces, a freedman serving the two emperors, found at Mascula (modern Khenchela).
Altar inscription dedicated to Sol Augustus by the decurion Valerius Carpus, from Timgad (ancient Thamugadi).
Polychromatic marble statuette of a cross-legged figure in Eastern attire, probably a torchbearer, found near the theatre ruins at Timgad.
Inscription on a clepsydra dedicated to Sol Invictus Augustus by C. Amulius Pultarius, found on the site of the Mosque Sidi Biri Narze at Cirta.
Group of nearby religious dedications associated with soldiers of the Legio III Augusta and the wider sacred landscape around the Mithraeum.
Reworked limestone altar dedicated by the governor of Numidia during the period of the Diocletianic persecutions.
Dedication for the safety of the provincial governor erected by an actarius and notarius within the Mithraic sanctuary of Lambaesis.
The Mithraeum of Tazoult / Lambèse is one of the best preserved Mithras’s temples in Africa.