Ài Xìngfū 艾性夫 (lifedates uncertain; fl. Xiánchún 1265–1274 through Yuánzhēn / Dàdé 1295–1307), zì Tiānwèi 天謂, hào Gūshān 孤山, native of Fǔzhōu 撫州 (Jiāngxī). One of the “Three Àis” 三艾 of Fǔzhōu — a documented Confucian literary clan, with his uncles Ài Shūkě 艾叔可 and Ài Xiànkě 艾憲可. A Sòng Xián-chún-era xiānggòngshì. Opened his home as a private academy in his middle years and gathered Confucian disciples (“hémén jiàoshòu, zhíjīng zhě yíngmén”). His daughter married Gāo Yīkuí 高一夔 (per Wú Chéng’s preserved epitaph). In late life accepted Yuán recruitment as JiāngZhè dào tíjǔ (Supervisor of Jiāngzhè Circuit); Guàn Yúnshí 貫雲石 composed a preface to his now-lost Yuán recension. His surviving works are the two-juàn Shèngyǔ KR4d0432, reconstructed by the Sìkù editors from the Yǒnglè dàdiǎn (originally titled Gūshān shījí or Gūshān wǎngǎo). CBDB person 20763.