Your selection in monuments gave 125 results.
Sandstone statue of Cautopates holding two downward-pointing torches, from the Ober-Florstadt Mithraeum.
Currently in the Musei Vaticani, this Tauroctony includes Mithras’s birth restored as Venus anaduomene.
Standing stone statuette of Cautopates, the downward-torch bearer, found at Bordeaux and kept in the city’s museum of antiquities (musée d’Aquitaine ?).
The image of Mithras killing the bull, found near Walbrook, is surrounded by a Zoadiac circle.
Rich relief on display at the Virginia Museum of Fine Art showing Mithras sacrificing the bull accompanied by Cautes and Cautopates.
New evidence for the cult of Mithras and the religious practices of Legio IV Scythica at the Roman frontier city of Zeugma on the Euphrates.
The frescoes depict several figures dressed in different garments associated with the Mithraic degrees.
White marble relief depicting Mithras killing the bull, found broken in two parts in 1872 near Salita delle Tre Pile in Rome.
This terra sigillata was found in 1926 in a grave on the Roman cemetery of St. Matthias, Trier. An eyelet indicates that it could have been hung on a wall.
Franz Cumont considers the bas relief of Osterburken ’the most remarkable of all the monuments of the cult of Mithras found up to now’.
The Cautopates of Bordeaux stands as usual with his legs crossed and arms down.
The votive image was donated by a certain Verus for a mithraeum which was probably located in the hinterland of the Limes.
This heliotrope gem, depicting Mithras slaying the bull, dates from the 2nd-3rd century, but was reused as an amulet in the 13th century.
This intaglio portrays Mithra slaying the bull on one side, and a lion with a bee, around seven stars, and inscription, on the other.
This sandsotne head with a Phrygian, found in Fürth in 1730, probably belonged to a torach-bearer.
This relief of Mithras as bull slayer is surrounded by Cautes and Cautopates with their usual torch plus an oval object.
This sculpture, probably of Cautopates, now in the Musei Vaticani, was transformed into Paris.
Franz Cumont bought this relief of Mithras as a bullkiller from a dealer who claimed to have found it in a vineyard near the church of Saint Pancrace, in Rome.