Fāng Fèng 方鳳 (1240–1321; the catalog meta gives 1241–1322, the standard YuánMíng difference of one-lunar-year), zì Sháoqīng 韶卿, alternate zì Jǐngshān 景山, known to his time as Yánnán xiānshēng 巖南先生, native of Pújiāng 浦江 in Wūzhōu 婺州 (Jīnhuá 金華). Tested for the Imperial University in his youth; raised to the Lǐbù examination but did not pass; later by special imperial favor (tèēn) was appointed wénxué (Confucian Lecturer) of Róngzhōu 容州. After the Sòng surrender in 1276 he refused all Yuán recruitment and retreated to Xiānhuá Shān 仙華山 in his native Pújiāng, where his fellow-villager and magistrate of Yìwū Wú Wèi 吳渭 (organizer of the Yuèquán yínshè) had built a family-school for his use. As death approached he had his son Fāng Chū 方樗 inscribe his banner with the office-title “Róngzhōu” — to show he had not forgotten the Sòng grace. Co-organizer (with Xiè Áo 謝翺 and Wú Wèi) of the Yuèquán yínshè 月泉吟社 poetry contest of 1286 — the largest Sòng-loyalist literary contest of the early Yuán. Teacher of Liǔ Guàn 柳貫, whose pupil Huáng Jìn 黃溍 supplied the original preface to Fāng’s collected works. The original Cúnyǎtáng gǎo in 380 poems was lost; the surviving fragments — supplemented by his son Fāng Chū’s verse — were reassembled in 1654 by the Pújiāng man Zhāng Suì 張燧 as the Cúnyǎtáng yígǎo KR4d0407. CBDB person 20059.