Male and female figures

A fragment of a relief with two superposed registers. The lower one originally showed separate scenes from the Buddha’s Life Existence, of which only two male figures on the right remain. The upper one preserves traces of a male and a female figure. The registers are divided by a row of vertical separate acanthus leaves with plain leaves behind. Tool marks are seen on the back face. In the lower register, two male figures are carved in the right three-quarter view. The first figure is holding an indistinct object in his left hand, and the second figure has joined hands. They both wear a skull-cap turban. The scenes were separated by a framed semi-column of the Gandharan- Corinthian type. In the upper register, on the right, a male figure is standing in the right three-quarter view and possibly with the right hand open up. He wears a short tunic with a mantle. On the left are the remains of a female figure wearing a long tunic spreading at the feet.