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The New Mithraeum Database tagged with sculpture

Mithraic monuments, temples and other objects related to Mithras and tagged with sculpture.

Your search sculpture gave 145 results.

 
  • Monumentum

    Venus of Mérida small sculpture

    The lack of attributes and its decontextualisation prevent us from attributing a specific Mithraic attribution to this small Venus pudica from Mérida.

    TNMM429 – CIMRM 785

  • Monumentum

    Naked figure from Mérida

    This sculpture may be a naked dadophorus, probably Cautopates.

    TNMM243 – CIMRM 775

  • Monumentum

    Mithras rock-born of Dobrosloveni

    The sculpture of Dobrosloveni, Romania, has a hole from where water flowed.

    TNMM281

  • Monumentum

    Tauroctony in the British Museum

    The sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull was transported from Rome to London by Charles Standish in 1815.

    TNMM328 – CIMRM 592

  • Monumentum

    Lion of Les Bolards

    The lion sculpture found near the entrance of the Mithraeum at Les Bolards is unique in its genre.

    TNMM374 – CIMRM 921

  • Monumentum

    Aion of Florence

    The sculpture of Aion from Florence, Italy, has the usual serpent, coiled six times on its body, whose head rests on that of the god of eternal time.

    TNMM330 – CIMRM 665

  • Monumentum

    Tarouctony of the Palazzo San Marco

    This sculpture of Mithras slaying the bull was bequeathed to the Republic of Venice in 1793 by Ambassador Girolamo Zulian.

    TNMM383 – CIMRM 584

  • Monumentum

    Taurcotony statue of the Esquiline Hill

    Except for the serpent, the sculpture of the taurcotony found on the Esquiline Hill lacks the usual animals that accompany Mithras in sacrifice.

    TNMM380 – CIMRM 352

  • Monumentum

    Lion of Carnuntum III

    Exceptional sculpture of a lion devouring a bull's head founded in 1894 in Carnuntum, Pannonia.

    TNMM495 – CIMRM 1690

  • Monumentum

    Lion-headed Aion from Sidon

    The controversial Italian journalist Edmon Durighello discovered this marble statue of a young naked Aion in 1887.

    TNMM157 – CIMRM 78, 79

    Φλ. Γερόντιος, πατὴρ νόμιμος, ἀνεϑέμην τῷ φ̕ ἔτι.