The tablet of Yan Long is more natural than the tablet of Yan Baozi, and the word potential has changed a little. The structure of Cong Baozi stele is open, and the strokes contain rational meaning. The structure of Conglong inkstone tablet is tight inside and loose outside, and the strokes are thick and changeable.
Congbaozi Monument and Conglongyan Monument are both called "Congbei" and "Ercong", which are the treasures of the South Monument. It not only has important historical value, but also has important cultural relics value.
"Filial Piety", namely "Congbaozi Monument", mainly records the life of a leader of Cong tribe named Congbaozi. It is said that this monument was originally used by a farmer to make a pressing plate for grinding bean curd. In the second year of Xianfeng, the magistrate of Qujing found handwriting on tofu, and sent someone to find the seller of tofu before transporting the tablet back to the government for careful protection.
This large stone tablet, the "Dragon Stone Tablet", was discovered on the barren hill of Zhenyuanbao in 1827 by Ruan Yuan, a geometer and governor of Yunnan and Guizhou. The inscription mainly records the origin of cuan clan family, and it is also an important cultural relic to study the local history of Yunnan, especially the history of cuan clan tribe. Daxian was once regarded as a god by local people. It is said that when someone in his family was seriously ill, he secretly knocked on the corner sand of a stone tablet and went home to decoct water to cure the disease.
These two tablets, with strange fonts, are neither officials nor officials, but their status in the history of calligraphy is very high, and they are all related to one word, that is, the word "four"
"cukàn" (pinyin: cukàn) originally meant cooking with fire. Related to this meaning, it can be said to be "sweet". For example, in ancient times, the kitchen was called "Cuan Room" and the cauldron used for cooking was called "Cuan Pot". "Cuan" is also used as a surname, for example, in these two calligraphy inscriptions with the word "Cuan".