Fǔ Guǎng 輔廣
Zì Hànqīng 漢卿, hào Qiánzhāi 潛齋. Father was a Shuòrén 朔人 (i.e. of the lost northern lands); on the Southern crossing the family settled in Chóngdéxiàn 崇德縣 of Xiùzhōu 秀州 (modern Zhèjiāng). Conventionally referred to in the doxographies as Qìngyuán Fǔshì 慶源輔氏 (“the Fǔ of Qìngyuán”). Lifedates not recoverable.
First a pupil of Lǚ Zǔqiān 呂祖謙; later moved to Zhū Xī’s school and is one of the senior pupils in Zhū Xī’s late Wǔyí 武彝 / Kǎotíng 考亭 academy. The contemporary epigram preserved in Zhāng Duānyì 張端義’s Guì’ěr jí — “I hear that all his life Fǔ Hànqīng has eaten the leftover gruel below Wǔyí Mountain” (Chén Shàn 陳善’s farewell-poem, faulting him for slavish devotion to one master) — is a well-known piece of late-Sòng academic gossip.
Author of Shī tóngzǐ wèn 詩童子問 (KR1c0021) — explicitly written as a winged extension of Zhū Xī’s Shī jí zhuàn, transcribing what Fǔ Guǎng had heard from Zhū Xī as the “child’s questions.” Also of Sìshū zuǎn shū and a Liùjīng jí jiě (lost). The Sìkù editors note that the Qīng kǎozhèng scholar Chén Qǐyuán (KR1c0064) corrected an evidentiary slip in his Zhōu sòng·Qián gloss (where Fǔ misread a Yuèlìng citation as a xù citation), and remark that “yìlǐ learning and kǎozhèng learning have been on different paths for a long time — Fǔ Guǎng’s project lies elsewhere.”