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- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 first "M. J.".
- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 isCitedBy Mithraic_mysteries.
- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 isCitedBy Mitra.
- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 last "Vermaseren".
- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 location "London".
- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 page "29".
- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 publisher "Chatto and Windus".
- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 quote "Other early evidence of the first decades B.C. refers only to the reverence paid to Mithras without mentioning the mysteries: examples which may be quoted are the tomb inscriptions of King Antiochus I of Commagene at Nemrud Dagh, and of his father Mithridates at Arsameia on the Orontes. Both the kings had erected on vast terraces a number of colossal statues seated on thrones to the honour of their ancestral gods. At Nemrud we find in their midst King Antiochus".
- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 title "Mithras: the Secret God".
- e418592f42aff2e689602598e2a407bfa6c6811be4250809851b27f325e11873 year "1963".