1 "Jiang Tie", named after it was carved in Jiangzhou, was carved by Shang Pan in his hometown Jiangzhou during the Chunhua period.
2. In the third year of Emperor Taizong's reign in Song Chunhua (992), Zhao Kuangyin ordered the imperial palace to collect the ancient ink, and ordered the Hanlin division Shu Wang to compile the stones in the restricted area and named it Chunhua Pavilion. Volume *** 10 contains China's calligraphy ink for more than 1000 years from pre-Qin to Sui and Tang Dynasties, including 420 works by emperors, courtiers, famous calligraphers and others 103, which was praised by later generations as the crown of calligraphy posts in China and the "ancestor of cluster posts".
3. Ge Tie, in the primary stage of pure Ge Hua Tie, Ge Tie's carving skills are not good enough and distorted; There are also many academic mistakes in editing (many predecessors blamed these mistakes on Wang Zhu, but according to the research of Mr. Qi Gong, Li Yu, the queen of the Southern Tang Dynasty, used the method of "Xiang Tuo" to collect and copy ancient calligraphy books into ten volumes. This is the last version of "Ge Tie", according to which Wang Zhu can't be responsible for his mistakes. It is even more regrettable that the "pavilion post" is engraved on the jujube board and cannot be durable. After a hundred years, it cracked in Song Huizong, and it was impossible to expand (it was said to have been burned). Therefore, Song Huizong revised and republished Ge Tie.
4. Rutie is one of the three treasures in Ruzhou, with a total volume of 12. In the third year of Daguan in the Northern Song Dynasty (1 109), Ruzhou Zhou collected 8 kinds of pre-Qin inscriptions and 94 kinds of famous calligraphy of Qin, Han, Sui and Tang Dynasties, totaling 109 posts. Bronze inscriptions, seal script, official script, regular script and cursive script are the treasures of ancient inscriptions in China.