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The brick altar of the Mithraeum Menander was covered with marble slabs bearing a crescent and an inscription.
Intervention de Nicolas Amoroso, commissaire de l’exposition Le Mystère Mithra.
Intervention de Lucinda Dirven, Universiteit van Amsterdam.
The Tauroctony of Saarbourg (Sarrebourg, ancient Pons Sarravi), France, contains most of Mithras deeds known in a single relief.
Mithras rock-born from Villa Giustiniani was holding a bunch of grapes in its raised right hand instead of a torch, probably due to a restoration.
One of the altars from the Carrawburgh Mithraeum depicts the bust of Mithras or Sol.
The altar includes a slab with an inscription for the salvation of two emperors.
The head of Mithras had seven holes made for fastening rays.
The dedicant of this altar to the god Arimanius was probably a slave who held the grade of Leo.
It bears an inscription repeated on each side of the podia.
This marble slab found near the Casa de Diana in Ostia bears two inscription with several names of brothers of a same community
Mithras and Sol share a sacred meal accompanied by Cautes and Cautopates on a relief found in a cemetery from Croatia.
Another sculpture of Mithras rock-birth from the Mithraeum of Victorinus, in Aquincum.
The monument is engraved with an inscription by Cresces, the donor.
As this short inscription indicates, Aemilio Epaphorodito was both Pater and priest of the Mithraeum of the Seven Spheres.
The Mithraic fellow P. Aelius Urbanus mentions that he built the sacred area of the Mithraeum Circo Massimo.
This altar was dedicated by a son to his father, one of the few Patres Patrum recorded in the western provinces.
The dedicator of this altar was a slave in the service of a high official, the prefect Gaius Antonius Rufus, known from other inscriptions.
Antonius Valentinus, centurio, made this plaque for the salut des empereurs Septimus Severus and Marcus Aurelius.
Mithras birth from the knees upwards emerging from a rock and wearing as usual a Phrygian cap.