Which dynasty was the earliest thousand-character seal script written?

Li Ben is the earliest thousand-character seal script in Tang Dynasty.

Li (date of birth and death unknown) was a writer and calligrapher in the Tang Dynasty. The word Shaowen and Wen Zhong were from Qiaoxian County (now Bozhou, Anhui Province) and Hezhou County (now Hechuan, Chongqing) (see "Unified Record"). Li's fifth ancestor, Li Shanquan, was later the satrap of Wei Qiaoxian County, and his family moved to Qiaoxian County (now Bozhou, Anhui Province), so he was a descendant of Zhaojun Li in Bozhou, Anhui Province. Uncle Li Bai.

Qian Zi Wen is a rhyming style composed of 1000 Chinese characters compiled by Zhou Xingsi, assistant minister of Liang Dynasty in the Southern and Northern Dynasties (before Sui and Tang Dynasties, words that didn't rhyme or contradict were called "pen" instead of "text"). Liang Wudi (502-549) ordered 65,438+0,000 non-repetitive Chinese characters to be selected from Wang Xizhi's calligraphy works, and ordered Zhou Xingsi, an assistant minister riding a horse outside Yuan Dynasty, to compile them. The full text consists of four sentences, which are neat, clear and brilliant. Qian Wen Zi is an influential children's enlightenment book in China. It has simple sentences and is easy to recite and remember, and has been translated into English, French, Latin and Italian.