Wú Jiōng 吳坰 (fl. 1090–1143; d. 1154 per CBDB id 1964) was a Sòng bǐjì writer of Yuán-yòu-faction descent — grandson of an yùshǐ (censor) under Rénzōng (who memorialised to behead a senior official to apologise to the empire, and was honoured by Rénzōng with the imperial calligraphy “Tiě yùshǐ” 鐵御史 “Iron Censor”); father a mùlǐ (private secretary) in Lǐ Bāngzhí’s 李邦直 establishment, and exiled to Jīngnán in Chóngníng 4 (1105). His own career is poorly attested; the Sòng shǐ does not include him. By his preface to the Wǔ zǒng zhì (KR3j0109), dated Jiànyán gēngxū (1130), Wú had then taken refuge from the Jīngkāng catastrophe in Wúzhūchéng 無諸城 (Fújiàn) and was writing at the Xiāosì Dàoshāntíng. He had earlier been with Sū Guò 蘇過 (Shūdǎng 叔黨, Sū Shì’s son) on the journey from Tàiyuán to the trans-river region, and was robbed in Jīngzhào in the Jǐngkāng bǐngwǔ (1126). His one surviving work is the Wǔ zǒng zhì 五總志 (KR3j0109) in 1 juàn — a Northern–Southern Sòng transition bǐjì, taking its title from the Lǐ Jì “the turtle generates the wǔ zǒng (five gatherings) and so knows affairs,” a metaphor for its compendious aim. The book is regarded as a partisan of the Jiāngxī school of poetics (especially of Huáng Tíngjiān 黃庭堅).