Téng Fǔ 滕甫 / Téng Yuánfā 滕元發 (1020–1090), zì Dádào 達道, posthumous title Zhāngmǐn 章敏, of Dōngyáng 東陽 (Wúzhōu 婺州, modern Zhejiang). His original courtesy name was Yuánfā 元發; he later took Yuánfā as his given name and adopted Dádào as courtesy name in order to avoid the personal-name taboo of the imperial relative GāoLǔwáng 高魯王 (Zhào Yǔnbì 趙允弼, posthumously GāoLǔwáng) — and then resumed his original name Yuánfā once the taboo lapsed. He passed the jìnshì and rose through Northern Sòng officialdom: Tōngpàn Húzhōu (in which capacity he composed the Zhēngnán lù KR2g0053, probably 1052–54), then Zhī Hángzhōu, Hànlín Xuéshì, and ultimately Lóngtúgé Xuéshì. His career spanned the RénzōngYīngzōngShénzōngZhézōng reigns. Téng’s reputation rests primarily on his political alignment with the Bāo Zhěng / Sīmǎ Guāng moderate-conservative faction during the Wáng Ānshí reform years, his prefectural administration in Lǐngnán during the Nóng Zhìgāo crisis, and his vindication of his patron Sūn Miǎn 孫沔 in the Zhēngnán lù. His full biography is in Sòng shǐ j.332. CBDB has the personid 468843 but no birth/death dates; the lifedates 1020–1090 are standard from the Sòng shǐ and Cháo Gōngwǔ’s 晁公武 Jùnzhāi dúshū zhì 郡齋讀書志.