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Famous sentences of official script in Han dynasty
Famous Inscriptions on Lishu in Han Dynasty: Yi Yingbei and Cao Quanbei.

1, "One Camp North"

"Ying Ying Monument" was carved in the first year of Yongxing in the Eastern Han Dynasty (AD 153), and the original stone is now in the Confucius Temple in Qufu, Shandong Province. It is also called "Three Monuments of Confucius Temple" with Book of Rites and Shi Chen, which is valued by calligraphers. Yang Shoujing's comments in the Qing Dynasty: The stele method is good, Weng Xiqin (Weng Fanggang) is full of sound and emotion, and his writing is fluent. I really don't flatter, but its waves have opened the way for the Tang people to flatter the vulgar.

2. Cao Quanbei

The full name "Hanyang Caolinquan Monument" is an important inscription in the Eastern Han Dynasty, which was established in the second year of Zhong Ping in the Eastern Han Dynasty (185). The monument is about1.7m high and 0.86m wide. It is rectangular, has no forehead, and the stone is very strong. On both sides of the monument, there are 20 lines of official script inscriptions on Beiyang, which are 45 words long. The inscription on the monument is divided into 5 columns, each with different words. In the early years of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty, the monument was unearthed in the old town of Yangxian County, Shaanxi Province.

It is said that the stone tablet broke in the late Ming Dynasty, and what people usually see is the rubbings after the break. 1956 moved into the forest of steles of Xi Museum in Shaanxi Province for preservation. Cao Quanbei is a representative work of official script in Han Dynasty. It is famous for its elegant style and neat structure and is highly praised by calligraphers in past dynasties.

Official script of Han dynasty

The general name of official script in Han dynasty. The official script on the inscriptions in the Eastern Han Dynasty has vivid brushwork and diverse styles, while the official script in the Tang Dynasty is called the Tang calendar because of its rigid font. Therefore, people who learn to write official scripts attach great importance to the inscriptions in the Eastern Han Dynasty, and call all kinds of official scripts in this period Han Li, which is different from those in the Tang Dynasty. The period of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty was a turning point in the development of official script, at which time official script changed from ancient style to Korean three-dimensional style.