Liú Xún 劉恂 (fl. 890s–early 10th century). Late-Táng / early Five-Dynasties official. The principal source for his career is the Sǔnpǔ of the Sòng monk Zànníng 贊寧, which records that under Zhāozōng (r. 888–904) he was sent forth as Sīmǎ of Guǎngzhōu 廣州, and that on completing his term — when Cháng’ān was disturbed by the late-Táng political collapse — he settled in Nánhǎi 南海 (Guǎngzhōu) rather than return north. There he composed the Lǐngbiǎo lùyì 嶺表錄異 (KR2k0108). The Sìkù tíyào, noting the work’s references to Zhāozōng by his posthumous title, infers that the text was completed only in the Five-Dynasties period (ca. 905–940). Otherwise undocumented.