Zhūgě Liàng 諸葛亮 (181–234 CE), Kǒngmíng 孔明, posthumous title Zhōngwǔhóu 忠武侯, hào Wòlóng 臥龍 (“Sleeping Dragon”) — the ShǔHàn prime minister of Liú Bèi 劉備 and (after 223) of Liú Shàn 劉禪, one of the most-celebrated Chinese historical figures from his contemporary biography in San guó zhì through the San guó yǎn yì historical-romance and the broad cult-tradition of late-imperial popular religion. Major preserved writings include the Chū shī biǎo 出師表 (“Memorial on Sending out the Army”) and the Hòu chū shī biǎo (the latter’s authenticity disputed); much else of military theory and political memoranda is preserved in fragmentary form. The Hàn chéngxiàng Zhūgě Zhōngwǔhóu jí of his 36th-generation descendant Zhūgě Xī (KR5i0078) is the principal late-Míng anthology of his attributed writings, as collected from extant sources with critical removal of clear pseudepigrapha (the Xīn shū, Jiàng yuàn, Liángfù yín, Huángniúmiào jì). The Tàigōng yīnfú jīng (KR5i0061) self-describes Zhūgě Liàng as the only Hàn-era figure to have grasped the Yīnfú tradition. Standard reference: Tillman, Confucian Discourse and Chu Hsi’s Ascendancy (Hawai’i 1992); the broader Wǔhóu cult is documented in Hsiao, Liu Bei the Sage. No CBDB record found.