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This altar mentioning the god Arimanius was found in 1655 at Porta San Giovanni, on the Esquilino.
Mithras being born from the rock (petrogenia), acquired in Rome and formerly kept in Berlin.
The Mithraeum of the Crypta Balbi was locted in the middle of a densely populated insula near the theatre of Cornelius Balbus.
The Mithraeum under the Basilica of San Clemente made part of a notable Roman house.
This tauroctony relief is distinguished by the rare depiction of Tellus reclining beneath the bull.
This graffito seems to be an account of offerings made by Mithras worshippers in the Cassegiato di Diana.
This inscription, which doesn’t mention Mithras, was found near the church of Santa Balbina on the Aventine in Rome.
Bronze statuette of Mithras in his characteristic bull-slaying pose, though only the god has been preserved.
White marble statue of Lion-head god of time, formerly in the Villa Albani, nowadays in the Musei Vaticani.
The marble Aion from the lost Mithraeum Fagan, Ostia, now presides the entrance to the Vatican Library.
The person who commanded the sculpture may have been M. Umbilius Criton, documented in the Mitreo della Planta Pedis.
This sculpture of Mithras killing the bull was dedicated to the ’incomprehensible god’ by a certain priest called Gaius Valerius Heracles.
The frescoes depict several figures dressed in different garments associated with the Mithraic degrees.
Fragment of a greyish marble relief depicting Mithras slaying the bull beneath a rocky grotto.
Mithras and other oriental gods were worshipped in the shrine of Zeus near the Villa of the Quintilians in Rome.
Marble torso found at Ostia in 1912 between the Decumanus and the Via dei Molini, dedicated to Mithras by a certain Atilius Glycol.