In addition, there are the inscription of "Xin Yue Tie" by Wang Huizhi, the fifth son of Wang Xizhi, the inscription of "Wei Zhi Zhou Sang Bai Shi Yi" by Xie An, a famous calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, the inscription of "Xing Hu Wen" by Huan Wen, a powerful official in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, and the inscription of "Sanfen Ji" in seal script by Li Yangbing, a famous seal calligrapher in the Tang Xuanzong era. It is worth mentioning that the "Sanfen Ji" incomplete stele currently existing in the Xi'an Stele Forest is a re-engraved version from the Song Dynasty.
There are more than twenty pieces of inscriptions, and although they are all absolute national treasures, after appreciating so many of them in a row, Yang Jing has become somewhat numb, no matter how precious these inscriptions are.
And the one in the middle of these inscriptions, which was the one Yang Jing admired last, actually gave the somewhat numb Yang Jing another big surprise.
"Xizhi bows his head: The mourning and chaos are extreme. The tomb was first torn and then torn apart. I recall how cruel it was. I am heartbroken and grief-stricken. What can I do about the pain? Although the tomb has been repaired, it has not been able to be restored. The grief is even deeper. What can I do? I am choked up as I write this. I don't know what to say! Xizhi bows his head and bows his head."
This stele engraved with extremely beautiful cursive script turned out to be Wang Xizhi's "Sangluan Tie"!
The answer given by the Holy Ring also confirmed Yang Jing's guess.
"Inscription on the stele of "Sangluan Tie", Wang Xizhi and Hu Meng, 356."
There is no need to mention the inscriptions on the stele. The author is Wang Xizhi, so there is no need to mention it. As for Hu Meng, he is probably a stone carver. The year 356 AD was exactly the 12th year of Yonghe in the Eastern Jin Dynasty.
When Wang Xizhi wrote "Sangluan Tie", it was because his ancestral tomb was destroyed again and again, and he could not rush to repair the tomb, so he wrote a letter to express his helplessness and grief. Not only in the Han Dynasty, but even in the Eastern Jin Dynasty where "Li Xuan Shuang Xiu" was practiced, this was extremely painful and intolerable.
Based on this situation, historians judged that Wang Xizhi created "Sangluan Tie" in August of the 12th year of Yonghe in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, which was 356 AD.
The earliest existing copy of the "Sangluan Tie" is a copy from the Tang Dynasty, but it is kept in Japan. It should have been brought back to Japan from the Tang Dynasty when the Tang Dynasty sent envoys to the Tang Dynasty.
As a result, even copies from the Tang Dynasty have now become rare treasures.
Now he had discovered the inscription of the "Sangluan Tie", which was obviously a hundred times more advanced than the Tang copy. As long as this inscription was published, China would no longer have to worry about the Tang copy.
What's so great about you Japanese? What you collect are just Tang Dynasty copies. Look what we have here? This is the genuine inscription of "SangluanTie" written by Wang Xizhi!
These inscriptions, especially the last one, "SangluanTie", were truly an unexpected harvest.
Yang Jing estimated that these inscriptions should have been given to Yue Chengzi by Li Congke, or some of them were collected by Yue Chengzi himself. After all, judging from the two stone tablets before, Yue Chengzi was very fond of inscriptions, and even told his funeral affairs through inscriptions.
A Taoist who loves inscriptions so much, as he is deeply trusted by Li Congke, the last emperor of the Later Tang Dynasty, would definitely collect a large number of inscriptions.
In history, there are almost no intact inscriptions from the Wei, Jin, Sui and Tang dynasties, and even the broken inscriptions are extremely rare. However, Yuechengzi left these precious inscriptions in this mausoleum, and they have been preserved intact for more than a thousand years!
As the saying goes, "There is a purpose in everything", "Every blade of grass and every tree has its own destiny, every drink and every bite has its own destiny". If Yue Chengzi had not loved inscriptions so much, and if he had not kept all the inscriptions he collected with him as burial objects, it is estimated that these inscriptions would have disappeared in the long river of history, and the inheritance of the Chinese ancestors would have lost a very wonderful part.
Yang Jing suddenly felt that this Yue Chengzi was really his benefactor. Not only did he get the legendary imperial seal, but he also got so many precious inscriptions. Could it be that when Yue Chengzi was alive, he owed him a lot of money in his previous life? So he used this method to repay him a thousand years later?
Yang Jing had no choice but to think so. His gains tonight were really too great, so great that Yang Jing himself became a little suspicious.
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