Your selection in monuments gave 30 results.
Several Mithraic scenes, including Mithras with Saturn, Mithras with Sol and Mithras' Ascension, are depicted on this fragment of a relief from Ptuj.
These fragments of a cult relief of Mithras were found at the Mithraeum II of Ptuj, Slovenia.
White marble relief, found near Aix "a la Torse dans un enclos ayant appartenu à la famille de Colonia".
The relief of Mithras killing the bull of Stefano Rotodon preserves part of his polycromy and depicts two unusual figures: Hesperus and an owl.
This relief is so well-known that it has been reproduced in nearly every handbook of archaeology and of history of religions.
The votive fresco from the Mithraeum Barberini displays several scenes from Mithras’s myth.
This marble relief, found in Sisak, Croatia, shows Mithras killing the bull in a circle of corn ears, gods and some scenes from the Mithras myth.
The relief of Dieburg shows Mithras riding a horse as main figure, surrounded by several scenes of the myth.
This Mithraic relief of the Danubian type was found in 1940 in the old town of Plovdiv.
The relief of Mithras slaying the bull at Mauls in Gallia cisalpina is a paradigmatic example of the so-called Rhine-type Tauroctony.
Currently in the Musei Vaticani, this Tauroctony includes Mithras’s birth restored as Venus anaduomene.
The image of Mithras killing the bull, found near Walbrook, is surrounded by a Zoadiac circle.
These fragments of a monumental relief of Mithras killing the bull from Koenigshoffen were reassembled and are now on display at the Musée Archéologique de Strasbourg.
Franz Cumont considers the bas relief of Osterburken ’the most remarkable of all the monuments of the cult of Mithras found up to now’.
The tauroctonic relief from Dragus includes a naked flying figure that Vermaseren has identified as Phosporus or Lucifer.
In this relief of Mithras as bull slayer, recorded in 1562 in the collection of A. Magarozzi, Cautes and Cautopates have been replaced by trees still bearing the torches.
This small magical jasper gem shows Sol in a quadrigra on the recto and Mithras as a bull slayer on the verso.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull from Apulum, now Alba Iulia, Romania, contains several scenes from the Mithras legend.
Several authors read the name Suaemedus instead of Euhemerus as the author of this mithraic relief from Alba Iulia, Romania.
This marble relief of Mithras killing the bull was made by a freedman who dedicated it to his old masters.