The Immortal Traces of Wang Zushi in Chongyang, a Taoist inscription, was carved in the 26th year of Yuan Shizu Zhiyuan (1289), originally collected in Dawei Village, Zhao Shuang Township, Xianyang City, Shaanxi Province, and moved to Xianyang Museum in 1963. The decapitated head is square, with a height of 332 cm, a width of 127 cm and a thickness of 34.3 cm. The official script "The Fairy Tale of the Ancestor of Chongyang" has 27 lines, each with 57 words. Written by Liu Zuqian, Liu Fen and Yang Zhichun. This tablet describes the life of Wang CuO (Daoming Chongyang) in Daxu Village, Xianyang, and his deeds of founding Quanzhen Taoism. The inscription first thinks that "Confucianism and Taoism are one school", and China's teachings of Confucius and Laozi are the words of saints. Then he began to describe the deeds of Wang Zhongyang. The process is as follows: Wang Zhongyang changed from Confucianism to Taoism. When he was a teenager, he was very diligent. Later, I was taught by a teacher and drank divine water. After that, he pretended to be crazy and called himself "the tomb of the living dead." After he became a monk, he received seven true disciples; Wang Zhongyang died at the age of 58, and his disciples further developed Quanzhen religion. Through the description of Wang Zhongyang's life, the author praised Wang Zhongyang's great achievements in establishing Quanzhen religion. This inscription is of great value to the study of the early Quanzhen Taoist history, and is included in the Taoist Epigraphy edited by Chen Yuan.
Chen Yuan: Introduction to Taoist Epigraphy (Beijing: Cultural Relics Publishing House, 1988).