Zhēn Guìfāng 眞桂芳 (also written 真桂芳; lifedates uncertain, fl. c. 1270–1300), better known by his hào Zhēn Shānmín 真山民 (“True Mountain-Man”), traditionally identified as a late-Sòng jìnshì of Kuòcāng 括蒼 (Lìshuǐ 麗水, Zhèjiāng). After the Sòng surrender he refused all Yuán recruitment and lived as a wandering yímín, leaving inscriptions and verse at the sites he passed. The Sìkù editors of the Zhēn Shānmín jí KR4d0403 explicitly note that the author’s actual identity (including the very surname) was disputed: candidates included a clansman of Zhēn Déxiù 真德秀 (whose shì was Wénzhōng), or simply someone who styled himself “Mountain-Man” as a pseudonym, or specifically Zhēn Guìfāng of Kuòcāng. Modern scholarship generally accepts the Kuòcāng identification on the strength of Yuán-and-later local tradition. No CBDB record. The verse is in the late-Sòng wǎnTáng pài manner.