Fù Xuán 傅玄 (217–278), Xiūyì 休奕, enfeoffed as Chúngūzǐ 鶉觚子, was a Wèi-Western Jìn court literatus and statesman of Běidì 北地 (Líyáng 泥陽 county). His official biography is Jìn shū j. 47. Beginning his career under late Wèi, he transferred to the Western Jìn at the foundation in 265, rising to Inspector of the Sīlì circuit (Sīlì xiàowèi 司隸校尉) — the censorate of the metropolitan area. His memorials to Jìn Wǔdì on government, frugality, agriculture and mores are preserved in the Jìn shū biography and have been heavily mined for early-Western-Jìn social history. His major work Fùzǐ 傅子 (KR3a0013) was originally in 140 shǒu (頭 / chapters) across four sections and six registers (四部六錄), totalling several hundred thousand characters, but had already been heavily reduced by the Northern Sòng and was reconstructed from the Yǒnglè dàdiǎn by the SKQS editors into a single juan of twenty-four 篇 plus an appendix of forty-plus citations. He was also a major -poet — his Yùmén guān fù 玉門關賦 and Pínghuái fù 平淮賦 are extant in part — and one of the principal post-Wáng-Sù classicists. CBDB id 11155 (d. 278, no birth year).