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The Narrative History of Mithras Cult

Belief, Ritual, and Daily Life Beneath the Roman World

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The Narrative History of Mithras Cult

By: Dakikon Publishing
Narrated by: Greg Buotte
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In the Roman Empire, beneath crowded streets and busy markets, there were hidden rooms carved into stone.

No windows.

Low ceilings.

Oil lamps flickering against carved reliefs.

Here, men gathered in silence.

They called their god Mithras.

This audiobook takes you inside one of the most mysterious religious movements of the ancient world. Not through lectures or abstract theology, but through lived experience. Through the daily routines of soldiers on distant frontiers. Through whispered initiations. Through shared meals eaten in the glow of underground firelight.

You will enter the mithraeum.

You will stand beside a young recruit preparing for initiation.

You will trace the meaning of the famous image of Mithras slaying the bull.

You will witness the seven stages of belonging.

You will feel the quiet strength of brotherhood in uncertain times.

The Mithras cult spread across the Roman world for centuries. It shaped the inner lives of thousands of men. Then, slowly, it disappeared.

What remains are stone chambers beneath cities like Rome and Ostia. And questions.

Why secrecy?

Why only men?

Why caves?

Why the bull?

Told in a calm, reflective narrative style, this audiobook invites you to slow down and step into a hidden world. It is not dramatic. It is not sensational. It is intimate.

If you enjoy immersive history, ancient religions, and the human side of the Roman world, this journey into the underground cult of Mithras offers something rare.

A quiet descent.

A shared flame.

And the echo of a door closing long ago.

©2026 Dakikon Publishing (P)2026 Dakikon Publishing
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