I shall restrict my review to these main points. It may be sufficient to give an idea of the wealth of material the Barabudur reliefs possess for the study of details and at the same time how little we really know which points among what we see before us, are those that should form the data for further investigation and which are of minor importance. For this reason I have refrained from mentioning all kinds of particulars and given only the general outlines. Leemans treats the matter differently as will be seen on referring to pag. 562-52 of his monograph, where all the minute details found on the reliefs—or rather all those that appear on Wilsen's drawings, which is not at all the same thing— are carefully enumerated. I have thought it better to avoid crowding out the general view with too much detail and in a work of this kind I consider a comprehensive review will be more to the purpose, anticipating that future research will be able to give the data gathered from Barabudur their right value for our knowledge of the Hindu-Javanese community.