Fan Min Stele in the Eastern Han Dynasty

[The Stele of Fan Min in the Eastern Han Dynasty]

The Stele of Fan Min in the Eastern Han Dynasty has a rubbings of 255 cm vertically and 117 cm horizontally, official script, 22 lines, and 29 lines. There are two lines of 12 characters in the inscription of “The Stele of Fan Fujun, the governor of Bajun County, the leader of the Han Dynasty” on the seal forehead. The inscription of Qiu Chang in the Northern Song Dynasty and Cheng Qinmao in the Southern Song Dynasty are inscribed in the inscription
In March of the tenth year of Jian’an in the Eastern Han Dynasty (205), this monument was erected in Lushan (now Lushan County), Sichuan Province, with Liu Shengke and Xi Shushu. Although it was recorded in the Song Dynasty, the monument was once lost, and was unearthed again in the light of the Qing Dynasty
Yang Zhenfang commented on this tablet in his “Tablet Description”: “The stone is thick and sharp, and there is no way to determine its writing skills, and a kind of ancient and solemn spirit will not be erased.”
The Qing Dynasty rubbings of the “Fan Min Stele” hidden in the Forbidden City, in which the word “big” is not damaged, there is the inscription of Zhu Yiyu, and there are seven seals such as “Shizeng Eyes Blessing”
This tablet is recorded in the Jinshi Record of Zhao Mingcheng of the Song Dynasty, Li Shi of Hong Shi, Sun Chengze of the Qing Dynasty, and Lu Zengxiang’s Supplement to the Jinshi of the Eight Qiongshi.
图片[1]-Fan Min Stele in the Eastern Han Dynasty-China Archive

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