Oolitic stone statuette of the torchbearer Cautopates discovered in Drury Lane, Londinium.
Major Mithraic sanctuary in the City of London with east-west orientation, multiple building phases and rich sculptural finds.
Fragmentary marble relief with the hind legs of a bull once interpreted as Mithraic but considered doubtful by Vermaseren.
Group of Mithraic finds distributed across different localities named San Zeno along the Verona–Brenner route.
Second-century Mithraeum discovered in the lower storey of the Curia complex at Cosa.
Group of Mithraic and other cult remains possibly originating from several neighbouring sanctuaries destroyed or abandoned in Late Antiquity.
Mithraic monuments associated with Ceionius Iulianus Kamenius and linked with the inscriptions discussed in entries 395A–B.
Mithraic material whose correct archaeological attribution belongs to Regio XII of ancient Rome.
Two painted decorative phases from the Santa Prisca Mithraeum whose figures became clearer after later conservation work.
Fragmentary relief from the area of the Porticus of Pompey once interpreted as Mithraic but later identified as a representation of Victoria.
Archaeological remains connected with the Praetorian camp and the presence of Mithraic worship among the imperial guard.
Marble cippus from the Quirinal residence of Ceionius Iulianus Kamenius preserving references to his Mithraic and other priestly functions.
Monumental inscription honouring the senator and Mithraic pater Kamenius together with his numerous priestly offices and initiatory roles.
Marble inscription discovered near the Via Cupa mentioning an offering to the invincible Mithras by Apollonius Tetes Syras of Marcianopolis.
Inscription now preserved in the Palazzo Ducale of Urbino whose wording may point to the existence of a Mithraic community.
Series of small bronze plaques depicting zodiac signs and planetary figures discovered in Ostia and possibly connected with the decoration of a Mithraic sanctuary.
Relief featuring an enigmatic agricultural implement interpreted either as a scythe or an early type of plough.
Group of nearby religious dedications associated with soldiers of the Legio III Augusta and the wider sacred landscape around the Mithraeum.
Reworked limestone altar dedicated by the governor of Numidia during the period of the Diocletianic persecutions.
Dedication for the safety of the provincial governor erected by an actarius and notarius within the Mithraic sanctuary of Lambaesis.