Fú Lǎng 苻朗 (d. 389 CE), zì Yuándá 元達, was a clansman of the Former-Qín 前秦 ruling house (nephew of the emperor Fú Jiān 苻堅) and one of the more striking literary-philosophical personalities of the late 4th century. The Jìn shū (j. 114, in the Fú Jiān biography appendix) records that he served as Qīngzhōu cìshǐ 青州刺史 and was a man of conspicuous wit, gastronomic refinement (the SòngYuán 雜俎 tradition preserved many anecdotes of his palate), and an aloof, xuánxué-flavoured Daoist temperament. After Fú Jiān’s catastrophic defeat at the Féi River 淝水 (383) and the dissolution of Former-Qín authority, Fú Lǎng surrendered to the Eastern Jìn 東晉 (385); he was put to death at Jiànkāng 建康 in 389 on charges raised at the instigation of Sīmǎ Dàozǐ 司馬道子. The Jìn shū explicitly credits him with a treatise — Fúzǐ 苻子 in “several tens of piān” — which circulated in Six-Dynasties and TángSòng literary culture before being lost; the work survives only in encyclopedia fragments, principally in Tàipíng yùlǎn 太平御覽 and Běitáng shūchāo 北堂書鈔. He is the attributed author of KR3b0021 Fúzǐ 苻子 (received as a Qīng reconstruction). No CBDB record found.