Unidentified scenes; male figures

Part of a frieze relief with two superimposed registers, the lower one two unidentified scenes, the upper one two generic scenes. The registers are separated by a straight festoon of lanceolate leaves between plain fillets. The base consists of a projecting plain band topped by a plain fillet. The cornice is decorated with a row of upright ogival leaf-and-dart. There are large parallel almost vertical chisel marks on the back. The lower register depicts two scenes separated by an encased semi-column of the Gandharan-Corinthian type, on the right there is another identical dividing element. The scene on the right is completely lost, remnants of two heads on the sides of a three crown (?) are visible on the top of the scene, suggesting the scene depicted originally a central figure of buddha with devotees. The scene on the left depicts the adoration of the turban. Two devotees in left profile are depicted on the right. They both wear a turban and large globular earrings. A large turban, of which only part of the outline is still visible, was placed on a throne with turned legs and covered with a draped cloth. On the upper registers there were originally two generic scenes separated by a tree with branches going upward and downward. The group on the right depicts five figures, of which only one woman, in various attitudes. The male figures wear short tunics with a shawl or short mantle wrapped around the shoulders. The last figure on the left is in right profile with the right hand taken to the mouth and leaning with the left on an object, probably a shield. The female figure in the centre is wrapped in a long tunic with mantle and has a large wreath on the head. She is standing frontal with the weight resting on the left leg and the outthrusted right hip. The second generic scene only preserves a male figure similar to those in the previous scene.