Shì Huìhóng 釋惠洪 (1071–1128, Juéfàn 覺範, also styled Jìyīn zūnzhě 寂音尊者; hào Shímén 石門 — the jié (cliff) where he had his hermitage; original surname Yú 喻; original míng Déhóng 德洪). Of Jiànchāng Xīnchāng 建昌新昌 (modern Yífēng 宜豐, Jiāngxī). Línjì-school Chán monk, fǎsì (dharma successor) of Zhēnjìng Kèwén 真淨克文. Active in Yuánfú / Chóngníng / Dàguān periods; in Chóngníng 4 / 1105 enrolled in Tàizōng huìyào sēngzhì under the false name Huìhóng 惠洪 (his original fǎmíng was Déhóng); imprisoned and demoted on charges related to the Zhāng Shāngyīng 張商英 affair, banished to Hǎinán Zhūyá 朱崖. The most prolific Northern-Sòng Chán-prose-and-poetry writer; the Línjìzōng zhèngzōng jì, the Chánlín sēngbǎo zhuàn, the Léngyán jīng hélùn, the Lěngzhāi yèhuà (shīhuà), the Tiānchú jìnzǎn lù, and the Shímén wénzìchán 石門文字禪 KR4d0095 in 30 juǎn — the principal biéjí. Famously bracketed with Cānliáozǐ 參寥子 釋道潛 as the two Sūmén-influenced shīsēng; less universally esteemed than Cānliáozǐ — accused of qiúmíng guòjí (excessive name-seeking, e.g. forging Huáng Tíng-jiān-attributed poems in Lěngzhāi yèhuà) and as a làngzǐ héshàng (libertine monk, on the Wūfǎsēng charges). The Shímén wénzìchán was edited by his ménrén (disciple) Juécí 覺慈 釋覺慈; collected into the Buddhist canon (dàzàng / Zhīnà zhùshù) — the Sìkù WYG version is the Shìzàng (Buddhist Tripitaka) recension as cut.