Your selection in monuments gave 271 results.
Fragment of a white marble tauroctony relief from Turda, ancient Potaissa in Dacia, depicting the bull-slaying with the bull's tail ending in three corn-ears, the dog, serpent, and scorpion.
Inscription from Turda, ancient Potaissa in Dacia, recording that Iulius Iulianus erected the monument ex voto.
Lost white marble tauroctony relief from Turda, ancient Potaissa in Dacia, depicting the bull-slaying with dog, serpent, and scorpion; the inscription in the lower border named the dedicant Iulius Iulianus.
Limestone altar from Cluj, ancient Napoca in Dacia, dedicated to Soli invicto Mithrae for the welfare of the ordo Augustalis.
Inscription from Cluj, ancient Napoca in Dacia, dedicated to Deo Soli invicto by Marcus Cocceius Genialis, vir egregius, procurator Augustorum of Dacia Porolissensis.
This sculpture from Dobrosloveni, Romania, depicts the petrogenesis of Mithras, with a hole through the generative rock from which water flowed.
Tauroctony relief fragment with torchbearer and scene of Mithras’ rockbirth from Romula, Romania.
This relief of Mithras slaying the bull incorporates the scene of the god carrying the bull and its birth from a rock.
This limestone altar from Roman Dacia preserves a dedication to Mithras by a commander of the Ala II Pannoniorum.
This weathered limestone statue from the Mithraeum of Apulum depicts a standing figure in Oriental attire holding the head of a bull or ram.
The remains of this Mithraeum were discovered in 1930 in the Cetatea district of Alba Iulia, ancient Apulum.
This marble fragment from Apulum preserves the head of Mithras beneath an arch together with a raven and the remains of Sol’s radiate crown.
This small weathered marble fragment preserves part of a tauroctony with Cautes, Luna, the serpent, and a leaping dog.
This small marble fragment preserves the crossed legs of a torchbearer, probably Cautopates, beside the hoof of the bull and the foot of Mithras.
This marble fragment from Roman Dacia preserves part of a tauroctony with Sol, the raven, and Mithras dragging the bull.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull was dedicated by the bearer of the imperial standard of Legio XIII Gemina, Marcus Ulpius Linus.
This altar was erected by Hermadio, who also signed other monuments in Dacia and even in Rome.
Mithraic stele, from Alba Iulia, Romania, with inscription.
This altar was erected by Hermadio, who also signed other monuments in Dacia and even in Rome.
This is one of the at least three inscriptions of Dioscorus, servant of Marcus to Mithras Invictus found in Alba Iulia, Romania.