Huashan Temple tablet in Xiyue was carved by Yuanfeng in the Eastern Han Dynasty?

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Xiyue Huashan Temple Monument is an inscription in the eighth year of Yan Xi in the Eastern Han Dynasty (AD 165). Also known as Huashan Temple Monument and Huashan Monument. There are four words in the inscription: Guo Xiangcha is a calligrapher and Guo Xiangcha is a calligrapher. There is no conclusion yet. Belongs to Lishu calligraphy works.

In the thirty-fourth year of Jiajing in Ming Dynasty (1555), it was destroyed by an earthquake. It is said that the original stone was still there in the middle of Jiajing, and a county magistrate broke it into bricks when repairing the Shimen of Xiyue Temple. Now the stone tablet is stored in the Lingguan Hall of Xiyue Temple in Shaanxi.

The re-engraved inscription is based on the typography of "Siming Edition", with four editions of newspaper clippings published by Cultural Relics Publishing House as the content, selecting the font with the best shape and pasting it according to the original size.

The inscription records that the rulers of the Han Dynasty sacrificed mountains, built temples and prayed for rain.