Difference between revisions of "Mithras Shrine I in Spodnja Hajdina"

From Culture.si
(imported from XML by extractor/importer)
 
(dir.change)
 
(19 intermediate revisions by 7 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Article
 
{{Article
| status      = ROBOT INFOBOX TOPROOFREAD NIFERTIK!
+
| status      =  
| maintainer  =  
+
| maintainer  = Janez Premk
 
}}
 
}}
 
{{Infobox
 
{{Infobox
Line 8: Line 8:
 
| street              = Spodnja Hajdina
 
| street              = Spodnja Hajdina
 
| town                = SI-2250 Ptuj
 
| town                = SI-2250 Ptuj
| telephone          = 386 (0) 2 784 0350
+
| telephone          = 386 (0) 2 787 9230
| email              = muzej-ptuj.uprava@siol.net
+
| fax                = 386 (0) 2 787 9245
| website            = http://www.pok-muzej-ptuj.si
+
| email              = uprava@pmpo.si
| proprietor         = Ptuj Regional Museum
+
| website            = http://pmpo.si/
 +
| managed by         = Ptuj – Ormož Regional Museum
 
| contacts = {{Contact
 
| contacts = {{Contact
| name                = Aleš Arih
+
| name                = Aleksander Lorenčič
 
| role                = Director
 
| role                = Director
| email              = ales.arih@pok-muzej-ptuj.si
+
| email              = aleksander.lorencic@pmpo.si
 
}}
 
}}
 
}}
 
}}
  
{{Abstract|
+
{{Teaser|
The oldest temple of Mithras in Rome's Danubian provinces was discovered in the western area of Roman Poetovio, which is in present-day Spodnja Hajdina. The temple was unearthed in 1898-1899 by archaeologist Dr Wilhelm Gurlitt and a protective shed was erected over it immediately after its discovery. Votive inscriptions indicate that the temple was erected in the mid-2nd century by Illyrian customs officers who were based in Poetovio.
+
The [[Mithras Shrine I in Spodnja Hajdina|Mithras Shrine I]] in Spodnja Hajdina was unearthed in 1898 and 1899 in the western area of Ptuj, nowadays known under the name of Spodnja Hajdina. It is the oldest Mithras Shrine in the Roman Upper-Danube Provinces. A new issue of the serial publication ''Archaeologia Poetovionensis'', published by [[Ptuj – Ormož Regional Museum]] in 2010, is dedicated entirely to Ptuj Mithraism.  
 
}}
 
}}
  
The temple is divided into an anteroom and a central area with three sections, the central one of which is lowered. In the western wall of the central area a niche is preserved, into which the main altar-piece was built. The central temple area contains 12 votive stones with inscriptions and reliefs depicting, among others, myths and attributes connected with the individual degrees of promotion of the dedicators. At the entrance to the central room stand two sacrificial altars, dedicated to Cautes and Cautopates, the deities of the East and West. The central lowered area has several sacrificial altars and on one of them is a full-size sculpture representing the birth of Mithras. The principal section of the temple is the pillared altar with a sculpture of a bull-slayer, dedicated to the transition (transitu) cut from a single stone block.
+
== History ==
 +
The temple was unearthed by archaeologist Wilhelm Gurlitt and a protective shed was erected over it immediately after its discovery. Votive inscriptions indicate that the temple was erected in the mid-2nd century by Illyrian customs officers who were based in Poetovio.
  
 +
The temple is divided into an anteroom and a central area with three sections, the central one of which is lowered. In the western wall of the central area a niche is preserved, into which the main altar-piece was built. The central temple area contains 12 votive stones with inscriptions and reliefs depicting, among others, myths and attributes connected with the individual degrees of promotion of the dedicators. At the entrance to the central room stand two sacrificial altars, dedicated to Cautes and Cautopates, the deities of the East and the West. The central lowered area has several sacrificial altars and on one of them is a full-size sculpture representing the birth of Mithras. The principal section of the temple is the pillared altar with a sculpture of a bull-slayer, dedicated to the transition (transitu) cut from a single stone block.
  
 +
 +
== See also ==
 +
* [[Mithras Shrine III in Zgornji Breg]]
 +
* [[Ptuj – Ormož Regional Museum]]
 +
* [[Municipality of Ptuj]]
 +
 +
== External links ==
 +
* [http://pmpo.si/en/ Ptuj – Ormož Regional Museum website]
 +
 +
[[Category:Monuments and sites]]
 
[[Category:Museums]]
 
[[Category:Museums]]
 +
 +
[[Category:Roman archaeological findings]]

Latest revision as of 23:21, 13 October 2015




Contact

This logo is missing!

If you have it, please email it to us.

Mitrej I v Spodnji Hajdini
Spodnja Hajdina, SI-2250 Ptuj
Phone386 (0) 2 787 9230




The Mithras Shrine I in Spodnja Hajdina was unearthed in 1898 and 1899 in the western area of Ptuj, nowadays known under the name of Spodnja Hajdina. It is the oldest Mithras Shrine in the Roman Upper-Danube Provinces. A new issue of the serial publication Archaeologia Poetovionensis, published by Ptuj – Ormož Regional Museum in 2010, is dedicated entirely to Ptuj Mithraism.


History

The temple was unearthed by archaeologist Wilhelm Gurlitt and a protective shed was erected over it immediately after its discovery. Votive inscriptions indicate that the temple was erected in the mid-2nd century by Illyrian customs officers who were based in Poetovio.

The temple is divided into an anteroom and a central area with three sections, the central one of which is lowered. In the western wall of the central area a niche is preserved, into which the main altar-piece was built. The central temple area contains 12 votive stones with inscriptions and reliefs depicting, among others, myths and attributes connected with the individual degrees of promotion of the dedicators. At the entrance to the central room stand two sacrificial altars, dedicated to Cautes and Cautopates, the deities of the East and the West. The central lowered area has several sacrificial altars and on one of them is a full-size sculpture representing the birth of Mithras. The principal section of the temple is the pillared altar with a sculpture of a bull-slayer, dedicated to the transition (transitu) cut from a single stone block.


See also

External links

Mitrej I v Spodnji Hajdini +
Mitrej I v Spodnji Hajdini +
SI-2250 Ptuj +
Spodnja Hajdina +
+386 / 2 784 0350 +
SI-2250 +
EmailThis property is a special property in this wiki.