Unidentified scenes
A relief with two unidentified scenes separated by a pilaster. The base is plain, the cornice had originally two decorative registers with motifs that are now not discernible. On the back of the relief there are large almost vertical chisel marks and, on the right, a long vertical socket. The proper left side bears traces of a continuous vertical socket. On the top, to the right side, there is a continuous socket running parallel to the shorter side, while on the left there is a small rectangular socket perpendicular to the shorter side.
The first scene depicts the Buddha seated in padmāsana on a low seat under an umbrella shaped tree crown. His right hand is raised in abhayamudrā, the left probably holds a hem of his saṃghāṭi. The Buddha is surrounded by devotees, three on each side. Those in the foreground all wear long garments and a turban. The first one to the right of the Buddha joins his hands in a gesture of adoration. The figure on the extreme left holds an object (probably a lotus flower) in his raised right hand, while the left rests on the abdomen. Two more figures emerge from the background.
This scene is separated from the next by a pilaster of the Gandharan-Corinthian type with a modillion decorated with a row of saw-teeth and a standing figure on the shaft. This figure has the left hand on the hip and holds a long object with his raised right hand.
The second scene represents a standing haloed Buddha surrounded by five devotees and donors. The two figures besides the Buddha are tilted in his direction with joined hands. The next figure on each side holds unidentified objects. Two more figures emerge from the background above the devotees.
The scene is closed by a corner pilaster of the Gandharan-Corinthian type with modillion decorated with a row of saw-teeth. The shaft of the pilaster bears a simplified tree with upward branches on the front side, and a standing figure holding a lotus flower in his raised right hand on the other side.