RT Article T1 The Art of Storytelling: Scenes from the Ramayana on Panels from a Lost Post-Gupta Temple at Rajaona, Bihar JF Religions of South Asia VO 16 IS 2/3 SP 249 OP 295 A1 Greaves, Laxshmi Rose LA English PB Equinox YR 2022 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1830639722 AB This article focuses on two exquisitely carved stone panels from Rajaona in Lakhisarai district, Bihar, depicting animated scenes from the Ramayana. The panels were first reported by Frederick Asher in 1986 and since his concise overview no further analysis has been forthcoming. This article seeks to identify the seven Ramayana episodes represented across the two panels and to analyse them within the broader context of early visual Ramayanas, and especially those from Bihar and Bengal. Contrary to what has previously been suggested, the scenes depicted are from the Yuddhakanda of the Ramayana, and of the seven parts, most comprise the earliest extant visual renderings of these stories. The panels have previously been dated to the Gupta period (c.319-550 ce) but following a stylistic analysis I propose instead an early post-Gupta date. This suggested dating conforms with the trajectory of Ramayana imagery in early India, which otherwise does not seem to have been adopted on temples in the eastern regions of the Indian subcontinent until the late sixth/early seventh century. K1 Rājaona K1 early Latina shrine K1 temple iconography K1 temple sculpture K1 visual Rāmāyaṇa DO 10.1558/rosa.24404