The full name of Zhang Qianbei is Ode to Zhang Jun, also known as Ode to Zhang Qian. In February of the third year of Emperor Han Ling, a monument was erected in Dongping County, Shandong Province. The monument is 270 cm high and 115 cm wide, with fifteen rows of 42 words each. The monument is listed, with 19 rows in the first two columns and three rows in the last. At the top, there is a seal cutting "So the Han Gucheng Chang Dang seal made Zhang Jun pay tribute", and the inscription has the names of those who contributed to the monument. Dai Temple in Tai 'an, Shandong Province was unearthed in Dongping County in the early Ming Dynasty. The content of the inscription is the life story and behavior of the old official Wei Mengji, the county magistrate Zhang Qian. As we all know, Zhang Qian died three years ago in Zhong Ping, the emperor of the Eastern Han Dynasty.
The monument was unearthed late and has been well preserved so far. It is also a masterpiece in the history of calligraphy. The pens used in Zhang Qianbei are mainly Fang Bi, but there are also round pens. The strokes are rigorous, plump but not flat, rigid and clumsy but not stiff and stupid, and the pitch of the straight line changes; The structure is neat, tall, straight, simple, flat, full of dangers, and it folds out and folds in; Font size is eclectic, square and natural; The overall layout echoes up and down, and the left and right are coherent. The whole monument is magnificent and can be called the top grade in the Han monument. Calligraphers at all times spoke highly of this monument.