Zhū Hóng 朱肱 ( Yìzhōng 翼中, hào Wúqiúzǐ 無求子 / Dàyǐn Wēng 大隱翁; conventional lifedates ca. 1050 – ca. 1125, 北宋), late-Northern-Sòng scholar-physician of Hángzhōu, jìnshì of Yuányòu 元祐 3 (1088). A colleague of 黃庭堅 and other Yuányòu literati, Zhū chose a medical career over administrative office and became one of the foremost Sòng Shānghán commentators. His magnum opus is the Lèizhèng huórén shū 類證活人書 (KR3ef010), composed in 1107 and elaborated through the early 1120s — the most widely-circulated Shānghán-derivative work of the entire Sòng dynasty. Other works include the Nányáng huórén shū 南陽活人書 (prescription companion), the Wúqiúzǐ jiǔ jīng 無求子酒經 (a brewing manual), and the Yīrén shū 醫人書 (clinical synthesis). In 1118 he was appointed to a court medical post by Huīzōng. Zhū’s son 朱壬 Zhū Rén also practiced medicine. No CBDB record.