Two Nāgarājas (dragon kings)
14 13

This monarch is like the preceding one except that he has nine snake heads above his human one, and is attended by six Nāginis, one of whom has three snake heads above her human one. She holds a red vase full of jewels.
Immediately in front are the same two attendants as in the preceding picture, in this case far enough above the surface of the water to show their bodies merging into those of snakes. The cock-headed personage is holding a spear in his right hand and three jewels, without a dish, in his left. The Nāga holds a dish of jewels. Between the two is a conch shell from which a snake's head emerges. The cock- and snake-headed personages recur in frame 123.
Below to the right is an ox-headed, red-bodied, hairy individual holding a trident in his left hand. To the right is a flesh-colored personage with a tiger's head; both sit on rocks. The ox and tiger-headed beings, who sit on dry land, are perhaps local water deities who were worshipped in shrine on the north and east shores of the Dali lake.

莎竭海龍王 The Dragon King of the Shajieh (Sagara) Sea

The dragon king has a human body, gold-colored, and a hood of five snakes, each head surmounted by a jewel. He is seated in lalitāsana on his own tail, which rests on the surface of the water. He holds a cluster of flowers in his right hand.
In attendance on him are two Nāgas with heavy eyebrows, mustaches, and beards, whose noses have a Jewish contour; and four Nāginis, of whom the principal wife alone has three snake heads above her human one, the others having only one each. She holds in both hands a vase containing jewels. All these attendants are flesh- colored.
Below are two servants: to the viewer's right, a cock-headed individual holding a dish of jewels in his right hand and a spear in his left; and to the left, a Nāga holding a red box. Between them is a Nāga's head appearing above water.

白難陀龍王 The Dragon King Upananda