Dèng Wényuán 鄧文原 (1259–1328; the Sìkù says Sòng Bǎoyòu 6 = 1258, but CBDB and most sources give 1259), zì Shànzhī 善之, alternate zì Fěishí 匪石, self-styled Bāxī 巴西 (“Western Bā”), posthumous shì Wénsù 文肅, native of Miánzhōu 綿州 (Sìchuān) but resident in Qiántáng 錢塘 (Hángzhōu) following his father’s flight. At the end of the Sòng (1275) passed the Zhèxī Zhuànyùnsī examination first place; in Zhìyuán (post-1280) inducted by the Xíngzhōngshūshěng as Hángzhōulù rúxué zhèng; rose through the offices of Jiāngzhè jiàoshòu, Yuántàichángshǐyuàn jiāyìdàifū, Yuán wénzhōngyuán, to Jíxián zhí xuéshì jiān Guózǐjiàn jìjiǔ (Reader-in-Waiting of the Academy of Worthies concurrent with Director of the Imperial University); retired and died at home in 1328. With Yuán Jué 袁桷 (1266–1327) and Gòng Kuí 貢奎 (1269–1329) one of the three foundational architects of the early-Yuán literary culture under the Dàdé / Yányòu reigns. His major works Nèizhì jí and Lǚsùzhāi gǎo are lost; the surviving partial biéjí is the Bāxī jí KR4d0438 in 2 juàn. Also a noted calligrapher, particularly in the Zhào Mèngfǔ school. CBDB person 10803. Yuánshǐ j. 172.