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The area was populated by Iberians, but the origins of Baetulo date back to the 1st century BC, when the Romans founded the city on the Rosés hill. Baetulo was famous for its vineyards, which produced wine for export throughout the Empire.
Gaius dedicated an altar to the god Invictus in Emerita Augusta in the 2nd century.
Centurion of the Legio VII Gemina Antoniana Pia Felix who erected the only known mithraeum at Lucus Augusti to date.
A slave of a certain Flavius Baeticus, Quintio dedicated an altar to the health of a companion.
The pater Artemidorus seems to be an Augustan freedman of the Claudians, of Eastern origin.
Garlic merchant, probably from Lusitania, who dedicated an altar to Cautes in Tarraconensis.
Procurator of Tarraconensis, he dedicated a monument to the Invincible God, Isis and Serapis in Asturica Augusta.
For the health of this man, a small altar was dedicated to the god Invictus in the Emerita Augusta.
Slave on a farm in Valentia, Hispania, who dedicated an altar to the invincible Mithras.
He dedicated an inscription to Cautes in Baetulo, near present-day Barcelona.
The name of this domus comes from the fact that some authors once associated one of its mosaics with the cult of Mithras, a connection that has since been dismissed.
Although the site at Cerro de San Albín is not a Mithraeum, archaeologists have found several monuments related to the cult of Mithras.
This scene of a feast from Mérida shows three persons at a table with other people standing beside them, one holding a bull’s head on a plate.