Lù Jǐng 陸景 (c. 250–280), zì Shìrén 士仁, was a SūnWú 孫吳 aristocrat and zǐ-house essayist, son of the great Wú general Lù Kàng 陸抗 (226–274) and nephew of the strategist Lù Xùn 陸遜 (183–245). His biography is preserved as an appendix to his father’s biography in Sānguó zhì 三國志 j. 58. He was a precocious classicist and writer — already at twenty he had produced a commentary on the Lǎozǐ and composed his own zǐ-house essays. He held the office of Piānjiāngjūn 偏將軍 (“Specialised General”) in the late Wú years, married a Sūn-clan princess, and died in 280 when Western Jìn armies overran Wú; he was thirty-one sui.
He was the elder brother of the celebrated Western Jìn literary figures Lù Jī 陸機 (261–303) and Lù Yún 陸雲 (262–303), who survived the fall of Wú and emerged as the foremost literary stylists of the Tàikāng 太康 era. In the Kanripo corpus he is the attributed author of KR3a0137 Lùzǐ 陸子. CBDB has no entry; the dates 250–280 follow the Sānguó zhì notice.