Weibei is the general name for writing stone carvings in the Southern and Northern Dynasties in China. Wei Bei's calligraphy is rigorous and simple, which was developed on the basis of Han Li and Kincaid. It not only has the charm of Kai Lee, but also can be called the top grade in the Han tablet.
The regular script in Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties is also called Wei Ti: Wei Ti refers to the regular script in the Northern Dynasties, Yuan and Wei Dynasties, which was found in stone carvings and cliff statues at that time. When regular script first appeared, it broke away from the official law, so its appearance changed. It was called "Northern Monument Style" internationally, or "Wei Ti" at the highest level in the Yuan, Wei and Three Dynasties. From the perspective of the history of calligraphy, "Wei Ti" was the development period of regular script, and was later called "real script". Its glyph is square, unlike the flat one written in official script.
Regular script is still the reference standard of modern calligraphy in China, and another kind of calligraphy, pen-and-ink, has also developed.