Hán Bāngjìng 韓邦靖 (1488–1523), Rǔqìng 汝慶, hào Wǔquán 五泉, was a native of Cháoyì 朝邑 (in present-day Wèinán 渭南, Shǎnxī). Younger brother of the better-known Hán Bāngqí 韓邦奇 (1479–1556) — the Yìjīng commentator, statecraft writer, and Ming Six Boards official — and one of two scholar brothers known together as the Hán shì èr Wǔ (the Two Hán of Wǔquán / Wǔchuān). A jìnshì of Zhèngdé 3 (1508), he was appointed to the Ministry of Works (Gōngbù) and rose to the rank of yuánwàiláng 員外郎 (vice-director). He was dismissed for protesting the extravagant rebuilding of palace structures under the Zhèngdé emperor. Returning to Cháoyì in retirement, he composed the Cháoyì xiànzhì 朝邑縣志 (1519), praised by Kāng Hǎi 康海 in its preface and held up by the Sìkù editors as the model of brevity in late-Míng county gazetteer literature (KR2k0031). He died young at age 36, in 1523. Apart from his collected works Wǔquán xiānsheng jí 五泉先生集, his other writings were largely lost.