Fortune Telling Collection - Ziwei fortune-telling - Wei Zi looked up trembling.

Wei Zi looked up trembling.

Where did Zhang's "Seven Killing Monuments" fall? 1924, Yang Sen was appointed as "Sichuan Military Affairs Aftercare Supervisor", stationed in Chengdu, supervised civil affairs, demolished houses and built roads, transformed Guatai Yamen in Qing Dynasty into Chunxi Road, opened a public education hall in Shaocheng Park, built a stadium (today's open-air dance hall) in it, and opened an exhibition hall, appointed Lu Zuofu as the first curator, and transformed temples and yamen in Chengdu at that time. The No.21issue of "Old Chengdu" featured "Why can't Zhang Qi's tablet be copied?" "Sometimes I go to Shaocheng Park (now People's Park) to have a look. Beside the lotus pond surrounded by willows, there is a showroom of the People's Education Museum (formerly known as the Universal Education Museum). On both sides of the main building, a bungalow on the right is a weapon room, and the bungalow on the left is a stone and stone cultural relics exhibition hall. There are seven killing tablets inscribed by Zhang, the leader of Daxi farmers in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties. The monument is about one meter high, and its surface seems to be painted in ink. The stone carving handwriting has begun to weather, and

In 1930s, Mr. Lin Mingjun from the Museum of West China University wrote a tablet in Sichuan (see Book of Changes, No.33, July, 1937), which recorded the seven kills of this tablet: "When I was young, I went to Chengdu County, and when I saw a tablet, I held it in the earth, and there was a fence around it, saying it was the' seven kills of the tablet'. People are superstitious and occasionally enlightened, which is not conducive to county officials, so many people dare not watch. "

After the Houminjiao Hall was bombed by Japanese planes, the original exhibition building was completely destroyed (now this building was rebuilt on the original site in the 1950s), but the "Seven Killing Monuments" survived. Zhou Shuren (Guang 'an), the curator of the museum, moved it to the empty house of the original zoo (now the bonsai garden) together with the Song Dynasty trunk road monument and put it on hold until the liberation of Chengdu in 1949 and 65438+February. /kloc-in the spring of 0/950, all the objects in the museum and this monument were catalogued one by one and handed over to the military representative Zhang Zhui who received it. At that time, the museum handed over these antiquities to the Western Sichuan Museum (now the Sichuan Provincial Museum). At present, the bronze statue of Prince Jiangdu and his two concubines cast in Ming Dynasty and a big clock still exist on the empty dam of the dormitory in the north of Renmin South Road Provincial Museum. However, Zhang's "Seven Killing Monuments" has never been heard from again, and no one has ever seen its true face. The "Seven Killing Monument" written by someone is still in the Sichuan Provincial Museum, but in fact there is only one tablet without words in the Sichuan Provincial Museum, which is not only wordless, but also wordless. According to historical records: "In the third year of the Republic of China, Anggang served as the governor, and Chengdu County made Tang and my brother friends. One day, my brother went to Chengdu county to see the Seven Killing Monuments. Tang Junyun said,' Because all the students got rid of superstition, they were smashed and abandoned.' "

The Oracle tablet is located in Fanghu Park, Guanghan City, Sichuan Province. It was set up by Zhang, the leader of the peasant uprising army in the late Ming Dynasty, after he conquered Chengdu and established the Daxi regime. This monument is not Zhang's "Seven Killing Monuments" publicly exhibited in Chengdu Shaocheng Park before liberation. This Oracle Bone Inscriptions Monument, which only exists in Guanghan at present, is a precious material for studying Zhang Uprising, and has been included in China Dictionary of History and Geography. 1991April was announced by Deyang Municipal People's Government as a cultural relics protection unit in Deyang City. The monument is 2. 1m high, 1m wide and 0.20m thick. There is a dragon pattern on the head of the tablet, with the title "Oracle". There is a vertical inscription in regular script on the front: "There is everything in heaven and man, and there is nothing in heaven. Ghosts and gods are bright, thinking about themselves." The word diameter is 0 0. 10/0m, and the word spacing is 3cm. The signature is "February 13th, the second year of Dashun (1645)". The back of the monument was originally a six-character annotation written by Yan Suo, the Prime Minister of Zhang, and was later carved into a mass grave monument by General Pingkou of Nan Ming in the second year of Longwu of Ming Dynasty (1646). The inscription reads: "In the seventeenth year of Chongzhen (1644), the traitor Zhang entered Shu and killed hundreds of thousands of people in Hanzhou. Ordered to recover Pingkou, the soldiers were covered in yellow mud. So the title is "mass grave", which is made of standing stones. Hangpingkou, Zongyin, ZuoDuDu, Yang Zhan. In the second year of Longwu, it was mid-winter and auspicious. " Before liberation, there was a priest named Dong in Guanghan Christian Gospel Church in Sichuan. He is Canadian. He joined the army during World War I and later became a devout Christian. During his stay in Guanghan, he liked Chinese studies and visited historical sites. In Xi 'an, he saw the monument to the popularization of Nestorianism in China. He wanted to find an ancient monument similar to Nestorianism in the old suburbs of Guanghan at that time, so he often went for a walk in the suburbs. "One day, I happened to find a tablet in the wall of a hut attached to Guo. It was very strange and old. After that, I made an appointment with Deng Hao, the editor-in-chief of the local New Han Weekly, to visit the monument called Zhang. Masonry is planning to destroy the road, and it is urgent to tell the county government (county magistrate Luo Yanyan) to try to transport it to the park for preservation. Before liberation, this monument was displayed on the right side of Xingxingmen in Guanghan Park (now Fanghu Park), exposed to the sun and rain. After liberation, it was moved to the left side of Lingxingmen, a specially built pavilion with shade and shade, which has been preserved to this day.