The torchbearers are at work. Expect the occasional flicker while we tend the grotto.
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The v in this small altar found in Novaria has been interpreted by some commentators as qualifying Mithras as victorious.
This altar was erected by Hermadio, who also signed other monuments in Dacia and even in Rome.
This inscription on white marble by Lucius Gavidius uses the term ther cultores to refer to his Mithraic community in Stabiae, Italy.
The statue was dedicated to Mercury Quillenius, an epithet used to refer to a Celtic god or the Greek Kulúvios.
This damaged relief of Mithras killing the bull found in 1804 and formerly exposed at Gap, is now lost.
This sculpture of Mithras killing the sacred bull bears an inscription that mentions the donors.
This relief of Mithras as a bullkiller found at Vratnitsa, near Lisicici in northern Macedonia, was signed by a certain Menander Aphrodisieus.
As this short inscription indicates, Aemilio Epaphorodito was both Pater and priest of the Mithraeum of the Seven Spheres.
A dinner scene with Sabina from the Catacombe dei Santi Marcellino e Pietro, near Rome, may have been commissioned by a follower of Mithras.
The relief of Sol was found during the construction of Piazza Dante in Rome in 1874.
The relief of Mithras slaying the bull found on the Esquiline Hill includes two additional scenes with Mithras and two other figures.
Of this great relief of Mithras slaying the bull only a few segments remain.
This altar dedicated to Helios Mithras by a certain Sagaris was repurposed in the masonry of Palazzo Bagnoli, Venosa, Italy.
A certain Maximus from the Legio IV Scythica engraved his name in one of the columns of the Mithraeum of Dura Europos.
Mithraic stele, from Alba Iulia, Romania, with inscription.
This altar was erected by Hermadio, who also signed other monuments in Dacia and even in Rome.
This inscription by a certain Memmius Placidus is the first ever found signed by a Heliodromus.
White marble relief, found near Aix "a la Torse dans un enclos ayant appartenu à la famille de Colonia".
Only parts of the knees of Mithras, emerging from the rock, have been preserved from this monument of Petronell-Carnuntum, Austria.
Relief of Mithras killing the bull with an inscription from a certain Aurelius Macer who dedicates it to Sol Invictus Mithras.