The Qin Taishan Stone Carving is located in the East Imperial Seat of the Dai Temple Scenic Area, No. 7 Chaoyang Street, Taishan District, Tai'an City, Shandong Province. It is the earliest work among the Taishan stone carvings. The inscriptions are the Qin Shihuang Merit Inscription and the Qin Ershi Edict, written in seal script by Prime Minister Li Si. The original text of the stone carving has 222 characters, and after vicissitudes of time, only ten characters remain. It has been listed as a national first-class cultural relic and can be called a rare treasure.




The Qin Taishan Stone Carving is located in the East Imperial Seat of the Dai Temple Scenic Area, No. 7 Chaoyang Street, Taishan District, Tai'an City, Shandong Province. It is the earliest work among the Taishan stone carvings. The inscriptions are the Qin Shihuang Merit Inscription and the Qin Ershi Edict, written in seal script by Prime Minister Li Si. The original text of the stone carving has 222 characters, and after vicissitudes of time, only ten characters remain. It has been listed as a national first-class cultural relic and can be called a rare treasure.
The Dai Temple is located at the foot of Mount Tai. There are many stone carvings here, from various dynasties, with a very long history. There is also a forest of steles. Walking among the stone carvings of Mount Tai, you can feel the solemnity of the Five Sacred Mountains and better understand the history of Mount Tai.
Dai Temple has become a scenic spot for strange rocks. Standing on the Dai Temple wall, which is comparable to the wall of the Forbidden City in Beijing, looking at the strange rocks in various postures under my feet, I couldn't help but laugh. Is this considered to compensate for the ticket price?
A place worth seeing!!! The scenery of Mount Tai can only be truly felt when you are there.
Simple, elegant and generous! The scenery is beautiful and matches! I recommend this place to everyone! Mount Tai is the first must-see scenery in Shandong! The culture of Mount Tai is even better! Don't take the cable car! If you climb Mount Tai on foot! You are the best!