Liǔ Guàn 柳貫 (1270–1342), Dàochuán 道傳, native of Pǔjiāng 浦江 (Wūzhōu, Zhèjiāng). One of the Jīnhuá sìxiānshēng alongside Huáng Jìn 黃溍 and Wú Lái 吳萊. Recommended in Dàdé 4 (1300) as Jiāngshān xiàn jiàoyú; Yányòu 4 (1317) Húguǎng rúxué fùtíjǔ; Yányòu 6 (1319) Guózǐ zhùjiào; Zhìzhì 1 (1321) bóshì; Tàidìng 1 (1324) Tàicháng bóshì; Tàidìng 3 (1326) Jiāngxī rúxué tíjǔ; Zhìzhèng 1 (1341) Hànlín dàizhì jiān Guóshǐyuàn biānxiūguān (whence the title of his collection Dàizhì jí KR4d0505 and the shìchēng “Liǔ Dàizhì”), serving only seven months before death. Classical learning from Jīn Lǚxiáng 金履祥; wénzhāng from Fāng Fèng 方鳳, Xiè Áo 謝翱, Wú Sīqí 吳思齊, Fāng Huí 方回, Gōng Kāi 龔開, Qiú Yuǎn 仇遠, Dài Biǎoyuán 戴表元, Hú Chángrú 胡長孺; historical learning and zhǎnggù from Móu Yīnglóng 牟應龍 — an unusually well-documented teacher network preserved in Sòng Lián’s 宋濂 xíngzhuàng. Teacher of Sòng Lián and Dài Liáng 戴良. Posthumously enfeoffed Bāodé hóu, posthumous name 文肅 Wénsù. The Sìkù tíyào judges his prose comparable to Huáng Jìn (“Jīnhuá Huáng Jìn xiāng shàngxià”).