[Zhugui Stele]
Vertical: 33 cm, horizontal (half open): 19.5 cm. Donated by Zhu Yiyu and his family
This is a copy of the Song Dynasty, a rubbings of the Ming Dynasty, and a six-and-a-half postscript. Huang Yi Jiancang, autograph and postscript
The monument was erected in the second year of Hanzhong Ping (185). The inscription records the life story of Zhu Gui. Weng Fanggang said: “It is the most close to the seal script in the Han Dynasty because of its changeable shape and round shape.” Yang Shoujing said: “It is beautiful and beautiful, and it is also a good product.”
Huang Yi’s description of the Little Penglai Pavilion’s Stone Catalogue. “Zhu Gui Stele” is one of Huang Xiaosong’s “Five Steles of the Han and Wei Dynasties”, which is a translated version. Huang Yi believed that “the inscription on the old paper of the Song Dynasty is rare even if it is re-carved”, and was designated as “the inscription on the Song Dynasty rubbings of Zhu Jun, the ancient governor of Youzhou, who was re-carved in the Han Dynasty”. Later generations are more inclined to think that it is the Song Dynasty and the Ming Dynasty
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