Yīng Jùn 應俊 (fl. 1269; CBDB id 96765), a Tāizhōu 台州 (Tiāntái 天台) man, was Yífēng lìng 宜豐令 in Xiánchún xīnyǒu (1261; the preface to the Qín táng yù sú biān is dated xīnyǒu / autumn / Ruìzhī tíng). He compiled the Qín táng yù sú biān (KR3j0126) in 2 juàn — combining and supplementing 鄭玉道’s Yù sú biān and 彭仲剛’s Yù sú xù with his own additions of xíngyǐ (received conduct) anecdotes from past and present, organising the entire moral-instructional corpus into a unified work aimed at the common people of his rural Yífēng (Jiāngxī) district. His own preface explicitly affirms the principle “xiān jiàohuà hòu xíngfá” (instruction first, punishment second) inherited from Zhèng and Péng, and addresses the wider social-economic deterioration of late-Southern-Sòng rural life — xiāngqī xiānglíng xiāngdòu xiāngduó (mutual deception, oppression, fighting, and seizure).