Your selection in monuments gave 14 results.
A gold coin depicting a bearded god with a crescent facing another god with a nimbus and a radiate crown, identified as Mithras by Vermaseren.
Gold coin of the Scythian king Hooerkes, reverse showing Mithras (MIIPO) in tunic with lance and sword, north-west India, c. 87–129 A.D.
Gold coin of the Scythian king Hooerkes, reverse showing Mithras (MOPO) standing with wreath and staff, north-west India, c. 87–129 A.D.
Gold coin of the Scythian king Hooerkes, reverse showing MIOPO (Mithras) as a goddess with cornucopia, north-west India, c. 87–129 A.D.
Gold coin from Bactria depicting ΜΙΙΡΟ (Mithras) with radiate crown and military attributes.
The bronze medallion, from Cilicia, shows Mithras Tauroctonus on the revers.
These bronze medallions associates the image of several Roman emperors with that of Mithras, usually as a rider, in the province Pontus.
The small medallion depicts three scenes from the life of Mithras, including the Tauroctony. It may come from the Danube area.
This gold coin depicts Kanishka I on one side and Mithras standing on the other side.
This tauroctony may have come from Hermopolis and its style suggests a Thraco-Danubian origin.
The mithraic denarius of St. Albans dates from the 2nd century.
Coin of Istrus, Moesia Inferior, showing Caracalla on one side and a god on horseback (Mithras ?) on the other.
This medallion belongs to a specific category of rounded pieces found in other provinces of the Roman world.
This coin was deposited in the upper level of the throne in the cult niche of the Mitreo della Planta Pedis.