The Dai Temple preserves the sacrificial vessels, offerings, and handicrafts used by emperors of all dynasties to worship Mount Tai. What is more precious is that there are 184 steles from past dynasties and 48 Han portrait stones, making it the third forest of steles in my country after Xi'an and Qufu.
There are many steles in Hanbai Courtyard, totaling more than 90 pieces. Among them are "Poems of Four Sorrows" by Zhang Heng of the Eastern Han Dynasty and "Fei You Pian" by Cao Zhi, which were later written in official script. There are also "Yin of Mount Tai" written by Lu Ji and "Yin of Mount Tai" by Xie Lingyun in seal script, as well as "Yin of Mount Tai" by Mi Fu, a great calligrapher of the Song Dynasty. "A Mountain", the "Han Cypress Pictures" inscribed by Chen Changyan and Zuo Peixuan during the Chongzhen period of the Ming Dynasty, the "Han Cypress Pictures" made by Emperor Qianlong and the ink marks left by many contemporary celebrities.
A stone tablet is erected under the platform of the palace, covered with glass. This is the Qin Keshi, the famous "ancestor of famous mountain carvings" at home and abroad. "Taishan Qin Carving Stone" is engraved with the merit inscriptions of Qin Shihuang and the edict of Qin II, and was written by Prime Minister Li Si. He replaced the large seal script with complicated strokes at that time with concise and elegant small seal script. His handwriting was strong and straight, which wiped away the fatness and stupidity of many other families. The inscription on the stele had 222 characters, which gradually disappeared. During the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty, there were still 29 characters left. Next to the Jade Girl Pool in Daiding, it has been lost and recovered several times. Today, there are only 10 incomplete characters left, and seven are complete. It can be called a rare treasure and is listed as a national first-class cultural relic.