Consult all cross-database references at The New Mithraeum.
The sculpture includes a serpent climbing the rock from which Mithras is born.
On this slab, Gaius Iulius Propinquos indicates that he made a wall of the Mithraeum at his own expense.
It bears an inscription repeated on each side of the podia.
The House of the Mithraeum of the Painted Walls was built in the second half of the 2nd century BC (opus incertum) and modified during the Augustan period.
Slab marble indicates that Lucius Sempronius has donated a throne to the Mitreo delle Pareti Dipinte.
This marble slab found near the Casa de Diana in Ostia bears two inscription with several names of brothers of a same community
The dedicator of this marble basin could be the same person who offered the sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull in the Mitreo delle Terme di Mitra.
The Kempraten Mithraeum was unexpectedly discovered during the 2015 excavations near the vicus.
The image of the god Arimanius to which this monument refers has not yet been found.
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.
These two parallel altars to the diophores were dedicated by the Pater and a Leo from the Mithraeum of S. Stefano Rotondo.
The sculpture of Mithras rock-birth from Santo Stefano Rotondo bears an inscription of Aurelius Bassinus, curator of the cult.
The vase bears an inscription to the god but also 'king' Mithras.
The inscription mentions the name of the donor, Yperanthes, of Persian origin.
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 sculptures of Cautes and Cautopates from the Mitreo del Palazzo Imperiale may have been reused from an older mithraeum in Ostia.
The Isis of Merida is covered by a long dress that reaches down to her feet.