Wén Yànbó 文彥博 (1006–1097), zì Kuānfū 寬夫, posthumous Zhōngliè 忠烈 — Lùguógōng 潞國公 from his enfeoffment, hence the customary title Wén Lùgōng 文潞公. Of Fénzhōu Jièxiū 汾州介休 (Shānxī). Tiānshèng 5 / 1027 jìnshì. The longest-serving of the early-to-mid Northern-Sòng senior statesmen — zǎixiàng / Tóngzhōngshū ménxiàpíngzhāngshì across four reigns (Rénzōng Huángyòu 1049, Zhìhé 1054; Yīngzōng; Shénzōng Xīníng 1071; Zhézōng Yuányòu 1086 (as Píngzhāng jūnguó zhòngshì) — and one of the principal Yuányòu counterweights to the New Policies. Memorable as the founder of the Luòyáng Qíyīng huì 洛陽耆英會 (1080) — the gathering of thirteen retired senior officials in the Luòyáng phase of post-1071 retreat from court — and of the zhēnshuài huì 真率會 with Zǔ Wúzé 祖無擇 祖無擇 and others (the “Luòyáng Jiǔlǎo”). At the Yuányòu recall served as Píngzhāng jūnguó zhòngshì (the senior advisor’s restored title); retired again, eventually died age 92. Sòngshǐ 313. His Lùgōng wénjí 潞公文集 KR4d0061 in 40 juǎn survives in fragmentary form; it was first re-edited after the Nándù by his youngest son Wén Wéizhōng 文維中 / Wéishēn 維申 (in fact the zì of Wén Jífǔ 文及甫, as the Sìkù tíyào notes by correction) into a 20-juǎn Lüèjí prefaced by Yè Mèngdé 葉夢得 — but neither the original 40-juǎn nor Yè’s 20-juǎn recension matches the present text exactly. Wáng Shìzhēn 王士禛 in Chíběi ǒután praised Wén’s poetry as wǎnlì nóngfǔ, jué sì Xīkūn (delicate-elegant, indeed resembling the Xīkūn manner).