1986 excavated in the former site of Jiufeng Temple in Zhangpo Village, Shanwangzhuang Township, Qinyang City. The tablet was inscribed by his son Zhu He thirteen years after his father's death, because after Zhu Zaiyu's will died, there was no tombstone or word tablet. So the inscription was not made, and only Chen Fang lived under the eaves of Jiufeng Temple where Zhu Zaiyu lived. /kloc-in the winter of 0/938, the Japanese invaders invaded Qinyang and burned Jiufeng Temple, causing hundreds of pieces of this monument to burst (the largest remnant monument). Later, in order to protect the remaining monument, the local people dug a pit and buried it underground. By April of 1986, it was excavated by the county museum and moved to the museum for collection. Ming dynasty. 43cm thick, 109cm wide and16 cm high. The tablet is a cuboid and incomplete. The existing tablet surface is an irregular quadrilateral with 17 lines and 25 characters. Wang Duo wrote an article and wrote Dan in cursive. This paper briefly narrates the family background and life of Zhu Zaiyu, especially the year of Zhu Zaiyu's death in September, 1976, and the time and place of mourning "March 26th, the source of Jiu Feng Renzi's burial".
This tablet was written by Wang Duo, a calligrapher in Ming Dynasty, and inscribed with calligraphy. Full text 1774 words. Zhu Zaiyu's birth and death years and brilliant achievements in his life are recorded, the titles of eight lost articles are described in detail, and some historical materials about Zhu Zaiyu are supplemented and revised, thus solving the important problems such as resignation, abdication and seclusion that have been discussed for a long time in academic circles. It is a precious historical material to study Zhu Zaiyu's life and the history of science and culture in Ming Dynasty, and it has important historical, scientific and calligraphy artistic value.