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The key of Nida's Mithraeum III was decorated with a lion's head.
This monument was erected by a certain Publius Aelius Vocco, a solider of the Legio XXII Primigenia Pia Fidelis stationed in Mainz.
The Tauroctony relief of Neuenheim, Heidelberg, includes several scenes from the deeds of Mithras and other gods.
Mithras galloping, in a cypress forest, carrying a globe in one hand and accompanied by a lion and a snake.
The Mithraeum of Osterburken could not be excavated bodily owing to the water of a well in the immediate neighbourhood. The monument had been covered carefully with sand.
The monument was dedicated by two brothers, one of them being the Pater of his community.
This relief of Mithras killing the bull, now on display in Stuttgart, includes a small altar with a sacrificial knife and an oil lamp.
A votive altar referring to the cult of Mithras was found more than forty years before the site was excavated and the Mithraeum discovered.
The Mithraeum of Mainz, was discovered outside the Roman legionary fortress. Unfortunately the site was destroyed without being recorded.
These two inscriptions by a certain Titus Martialius Candidus are dedicated to Cautes and Cautopates.
The Kempraten Mithraeum was unexpectedly discovered during the 2015 excavations near the vicus.
The Mithraic stele from Nida depicts the Mithras Petrogenesis and the gods Cautes, Cautopates, Heaven and Ocean.
The altar of the Sun god belongs to the typology of the openwork altar to be illuminated from behind.
A possible Mithraeum II was found in Bingen, but the few remains are not sufficient to prove it.
The lion-headed statue of Hedderneheim is a reconstruction from fragments of two different sculptures.
The two companions of Mithras carry a torch and a shepherd's staff at the third Mithraeum in Frankfurt-Heddernheim, formerly Nida.
The relief of Mithras slaying the bull from Nida's Mithraeum III was found in two pieces in 1887, destroyed during an air raid on Frankfurt in 1944, and restored in 1986.
The first members of the Wiesloch Mithraeum may have been veterans from Ladenburg and Heidelberg.