Your selection in monuments gave 23 results.
This relief of Mithras slaying the bull incorporates the scene of the god carrying the bull and its birth from a rock.
This damaged monument of a certain Hostilius from Malvesiatium, now Skelani, bears an inscription apparently to Mithras transitus.
The importance of the Mithraeum of Marino lies in its frescoes, the most significant of which is that of Mithras slaying the bull, surrounded by mythological scenes.
This remarkable marble relief from the end of the 3rd century was discovered in the most remote room of the Mithraeum in the Circo Massimo.
This relief is so well-known that it has been reproduced in nearly every handbook of archaeology and of history of religions.
The votive fresco from the Mithraeum Barberini displays several scenes from Mithras’s myth.
The relief of Dieburg shows Mithras riding a horse as main figure, surrounded by several scenes of the myth.
These two fragments of a sandstone relief were walled into a house on the market square in Besigheim.
The relief of Mithras slaying the bull at Mauls in Gallia cisalpina is a paradigmatic example of the so-called Rhine-type Tauroctony.
Currently in the Musei Vaticani, this Tauroctony includes Mithras’s birth restored as Venus anaduomene.
The mithraic relief of Konjic shows a Tauroctony in one side and a ritual meal in the other.
These fragments of a monumental relief of Mithras killing the bull from Koenigshoffen were reassembled and are now on display at the Musée Archéologique de Strasbourg.
Franz Cumont considers the bas relief of Osterburken ’the most remarkable of all the monuments of the cult of Mithras found up to now’.
This small relief of Mithras killing the bull was found in 1859 in Turda, in the Cluj region of Romania.
This marble relief from Alba Iulia contains numerous scenes from the myth of Mithras.
The Tauroctony relief of Neuenheim, Heidelberg, includes several scenes from the deeds of Mithras and other gods.
The sculpture of Mithras carrying the bull includes an inscription on its base.
Sculpture depicting Mithras carrying a young bull on his shoulders.
The relief of Mithras slaying the bull of Sisak includes the zodiac and multiple scenes from the myth of Mithras.