He has a topknot as if crowned with a flower garland.
topknot is as if crowned with flower garland (You have to distinguish with a Buddha image what you are looking at -- whether it is the physical body of the Buddha which has a topknot like a garland or whether it is the Body of Enlightenment [dhammakaaya] of the Buddha which also has lotus bud on the topknot.)

bodom wrote:He has a topknot as if crowned with a flower garland.
This is one of the 32 or 80 marks of a great man which the Buddha is said to have possessed.
Physical characteristics of the Buddha
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_c ... the_Buddhatopknot is as if crowned with flower garland (You have to distinguish with a Buddha image what you are looking at -- whether it is the physical body of the Buddha which has a topknot like a garland or whether it is the Body of Enlightenment [dhammakaaya] of the Buddha which also has lotus bud on the topknot.)
The Signs of a Great Man
http://www.onmarkproductions.com/Signs- ... -32-80.htm
32.His head is like a royal turban (Pali: u nahisiso). Note that this denotes his cranial protrusion, visible on Buddhist iconography.

Refugee wrote:Also thanks to Kenshou. I did some search following your comment and found that the conquests of Alexander the Great could have resulted in Hellenistic (Greek) culture being fused with Indian culture including Buddhism. This could have influenced the Buddhist icongraphy to some extent.
Kim O'Hara wrote:Refugee wrote:Before those first statues, the Buddha and dhamma were represented more symbolically, e.g. the wheel.

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