Loriyan Tangai is an archaeological site in the Gandhara area of Pakistan, consisting of many stupas and religious buildings where many Buddhist statues were discovered.
The stupas were excavated by Alexander Caddy in 1896, and the many statues of the site sent to the Indian Museum of Calcutta. /photocoll/b/019pho000001003u01034000.html British Library Online
The inscription at the base of the statue is:
+ Inscription of the Buddha of Loriyan Tangai CKI 111 — Loriyan Tangai Pedestal of the Year 318 | |||
Line 1 | In year 318, the day 27 of Prausthapada, gift of Buddhaghosa, | ||
Line 2 | the companion of Saṃghavarma |
This would make it one of the earliest known representations of the Buddha, after the Bimaran casket (1st century CE), and at about the same time as the Buddhist coins of Kanishka.
The two devotees on the right side of the pedestal are in Indo-Scythian suit (loose trousers, tunic, and hood). Greco-Buddhist Art of Gandhara p.491Detailed photograph in Their characteristic trousers appear clearly on close-up pictures. The statue is now in Indian Museum of Calcutta.
Another statue of Buddha, the Buddha of Hashtnagar, is inscribed from the year 384, which is thought to be 209 CE. Only the pedestal is preserved in the British Museum, the statue itself, with folds of clothing having more relief than those of the Loriyan Tangai Buddha, having disappeared.
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