The most famous official script copybook

The top ten most famous official script copybooks are as follows:

1. Cao Quanbei: "Cao Quanbei" was written by Wang Chang and others in the Eastern Han Dynasty to praise Heyang Cao Quanji. Regular script is an official script, which is one of the representative works of official script in the late Eastern Han Dynasty. It is an important historical material for studying the peasant uprising at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, and it is also one of the few works with relatively complete preservation and clear fonts in the existing stone tablets of the Han Dynasty in China.

2. Zhang Qianbei: Zhang Qianbei is a calligraphy work carved by Sun Xing, a stonemason in the Eastern Han Dynasty. It was carved in Zhong Ping in the Eastern Han Dynasty for three years and unearthed in the early Ming Dynasty. Now it is collected in the tablet gallery of Daimiao Temple in Taishan Mountain, Shandong Province.

3. Li Bei: Li Bei was published in the second year of Yongshou in the Eastern Han Dynasty. The inscription describes the achievements of Lv Xiang and Han Yu in making Confucian temple ritual vessels, decorating Confucius' house and Confucius' temple, and making two cars to preserve the hair of Confucius' granduncle Yan and his wife. This is a calligraphy work of official script, which is now in Qufu Han Wei Monument Exhibition Hall.

4. Yiying Monument: the annual edition of Yongxing Yuan in the Eastern Han Dynasty. According to the inscription, Lu Xiangyi wrote to ask for a hundred stone pawns for the Confucius Temple to be responsible for the sacrificial ceremony of ritual vessels. It belongs to the calligraphy works of Lishu, and is now in the exhibition hall of Han and Wei Dynasties in Qufu. It is also called the "Three Monuments of Confucius Temple" with Libei and Shi Chenbei.

5. Shi Chenbei: Shi Chenbei was published in Jianning two years in the Eastern Han Dynasty. The inscription describes the memorial tablet presented to the imperial court by Chen Shi in Lu Xiang when he offered sacrifices to Confucius, followed by a four-character inscription with 24 rhymes of 12. It belongs to Lishu calligraphy works, and the existing Han and Wei steles exhibition hall. It is also known as the "Three Monuments of Confucius Temple" with the Ritual Monument and the Yiying Monument.

6. Ode to Shimen: Ode to Shimen is a cliff stone carving carved by Wang Dan on the west side of the inner wall of Shimen, which is now in Hanzhong Museum.

7. Huashan Monument: Huashan Monument, the full name of Xiyue Huashan Temple Monument, was published in Yan Xi in the Eastern Han Dynasty for four years. The monument was originally in Xiyue Temple, Huayin County, Shaanxi Province, and was later destroyed by the earthquake. There are four kinds of rubbings handed down: Changyuan, Huayin, Siming and Li Wentian.

8. Monument to the Immortal Jade Emperor: The Monument to the Immortal Jade Emperor was published in Yan Xi in the Eastern Han Dynasty for eight years. The inscription describes the life of Xian Huangyujun, the satrap of Yanmen in Han Dynasty. It is a calligraphy work of Lishu, which is now in Tianjin Museum.

9. Fang Heng Monument: The Monument to Fang Heng was published in the first year of Jianning in the Eastern Han Dynasty. The inscription describes Fang Heng's ancestors and achievements in his life. It is a calligraphy work of Lishu, which is now hidden in Daimiao Monument Gallery, Tai 'an City, Shandong Province.

10. Xiqiao Fu: Xiqiao Fu is a cliff carved by autumn scenery in Jianning four years in the Eastern Han Dynasty, located in Xia Yuqiao, Tianjingshan, Chengxian County, Gansu Province. It ranks alongside Shimen Fu and Gaoge Fu as the "Three Fu" of calligraphy in Han Dynasty, and it is also the most complete cliff stone carving among the three Fu tablets.