Huángfǔ Mì 皇甫謐 (215–282), zì Shì’ān 士安, hào Xuányàn xiānshēng 玄晏先生, native of Cháonà 朝那 in Āndìng 安定 (modern Gānsù). A reclusive Confucian scholar who refused all offers of office under the Wèi and Western Jìn courts despite repeated summonses, Huángfǔ devoted himself entirely to scholarship and to writing. He suffered from a severe wind-induced disease (fēng 風) — the “Gānlù 甘露 [256–260] illness” — that left him partially paralyzed and deaf, and which led him to study medicine: out of this study came the Zhēnjiǔ jiǎyǐ jīng 鍼灸甲乙經 (KR3e0005), which assembles the Sùwèn, the Zhēn jīng (= Língshū), and the lost Míngtáng kǒngxué zhēn jiǔ zhì yào 明堂孔穴鍼灸治要 into a systematic acupuncture canon. He is also the compiler of the Gāo shì zhuàn 高士傳 (a collection of biographies of recluses, which the SKQS editors note in their headnote on the Jiǎyǐ jīng) and is traditionally credited with the Dìwáng shìjì 帝王世紀 (an early-medieval framework chronology of the legendary and historical emperors). His biography is in Jìn shū 晉書 j. 51.