Male devotee
A fragment of a relief preserving a male devotee.
On the left is a framed semi-column of the Gandharan-Persepolitan type with zoomorphic (back-to-back bulls?) capital. The base consists of a plain fillet. The cornice was originally decorated with a row of saw teeth, of which only a portion remains on the right-proper side of the relief. Two sockets are carved on the top face. The back face shows vertical tool marks.
A male figure is standing in a three-quarter view with joined hands. He wears a paridhāna and an uttarīya. This latter is waving on his right side.
On the right are the remains of the trunk and the crown's outline of a tree.