"The Epitaph of Princess Day" was buried in the 10th year of Zhenguan in the Tang Dynasty (636 AD) and was unearthed in the southern suburbs of Xi'an in 2011. The height and width of the stone rubbing are 56 cm, with 23 lines of European writings and square borders. It is collected by the Xi'an Forest of Steles Museum.


Epitaph for Queen's Day


The epitaph records that she is a descendant of Wang Dao. Her great-grandfather Wang Quan served as the Minister of Liang Libu; her grandfather Wang Pu served as a regular attendant of Chen Sanqi; her father Wang Youli served as the concubine of Chendong Palace and was named Xinchang County Duke. A poem that can still be seen today. Wang Nujie was born in the fourth year of Taijian of Emperor Chen Xuan (572). In the first year of Chen Shubao's Zhide (583), she married Chen Shuda, the seventeenth son of Emperor Chen Xuan and the younger brother of Chen Shubao, when she was only twelve years old. A few years later, In the first year of Zhenming (587), she became Princess Yiyang at the age of sixteen. After the fall of the Chen Dynasty, they were all captured by the Sui Dynasty. After the rise of the Tang Dynasty, because her husband Chen Shuda became the prime minister, in the eighth year of Wude (625), Emperor Gaozu of the Tang Dynasty, he was granted the title Mrs. Jiang Guo from her husband at the age of fifty-seven.


Epitaph for Queen's Day


He died in the Shanheli residence in Chang'an on July 7, the tenth year of Zhenguan (636), at the age of sixty-five. Gengshen was buried in a mountain in Xingshouli, Yishan Township, Wannian County, Yongzhou on the third day of Wuwu and Shuo in August of the same year. , her son Chen Zhengde asked someone to write an epitaph. Some people believe that Ouyang Xun had contact with Wang Nujie's family and wrote an epitaph for him.


Epitaph for Queen's Day


Please see the list of words