Your selection in monuments gave 45 results.
A fragment of a circular plaque from the Mithraeum at Walbrook in London, showing the Danubian horsemen and leaping dogs.
A marble torso of a male figure from the Mithraeum at Walbrook in London, flattened at the back, probably one of the attendant deities of Mithras, which would have stood about 2 ft. in complete height.
A relief fragment from the Mithraeum at Walbrook in London, preserving the lower part of a cross-legged figure of Cautopates pointing his torch downwards.
A fragment of a white marble statue from the Mithraeum at Walbrook in London, preserving the naked torso of a reclining figure with long hair and beard, with the end of a staff visible near his left shoulder, identified as Oceanus.
A white marble statue from the Mithraeum at Walbrook in London, depicting Bonus Eventus standing in a long hanging cloak, leaning on a ship's stem, holding a cornucopia against his shoulder and a patera above a burning altar from the back of which a…
The Housesteads Mithraeum is an underground temple, now burried, discovered in 1822 in a slope of the Chapel Hill, outside of the Roman Fort at the Hadrian's Wall.
To date, there is no evidence that the so-called Mithraeum of Burham was ever used to worship the sun god.
The Mithras's head of Walbrook probable belonged to a life-size scene of the god scarifying the bull.
The head of Serapis found at Walbrook, London, is decorated with stylised olive branches.
Marble group of Dionysus accompanied by a Silenus on a donkey, a satyr and a menead.
Archaeological material from the Mithraeum of Londinium discussed in Hill’s study of Roman London.
One of the rooms in a sustantive masonry building in Hollytrees Meadow was considered to be a Mithreum, a theory that has now been discarded.
Oolitic stone statuette of the torchbearer Cautopates discovered in Drury Lane, Londinium.
Major Mithraic sanctuary in the City of London with east-west orientation, multiple building phases and rich sculptural finds.
This head was found at the east end of temple of Mithras in London.
The Caernarfon candelabrum is a reconstruction of several iron pieces found in the Mithraeum of Caernarfon.
A naked Mithra emerges from the cosmic egg surrounded by the zodiac, as always carrying a torch and a dagger.
The Mithraeum of London, also known as the Walbrook Mithraeum, was contextualised and relocated to its original site in 2016.
The image of Mithras killing the bull, found near Walbrook, is surrounded by a Zoadiac circle.
This inscription commemorates the building of a mithraeum in Bremenium with fellow worshippers of Mithras.