There are very few stone carvings of the Western Han Dynasty discovered before the Qing Dynasty. According to "Yanbei Miscellaneous Notes" by You Miao of the Song Dynasty: "I heard that Xin Mang evilly called Han De, and if there are stone carvings, they are ordered to be polished by servants, and they are still strictly prohibited." Zhao Mingcheng, "Inscriptions on Stones" "Records" only records two types: "Ju She Liang Tomb Altar" and "Five Phoenix Carved Stones". The seal script "Ju She Liang Tombs Engraved Stones" now stored in the Confucius Temple in Qufu is extremely precious.   

  Fang Shuo of the Qing Dynasty commented on calligraphy at this time: "The seal method is ancient and graceful, and the number of strokes follows the trend, not limited to vertical and horizontal squares. According to his handwriting, it surpasses the two stone inscriptions of "Songyue Shaoshi" and "Kai Mu" in Han seal script. On top of that, Zhou drums and Qin carves, and then this is the staying power."