Bāo Huī 包恢 (zì Hóngfù 宏父, posthumous name Wénsù 文肅) was a native of Jiànchāng 建昌 (modern Jiāngxī). He took his jìnshì in Jiādìng 嘉定 13 (1220) and rose through a long official career to become Minister of Justice (刑部尚書), Auxiliary Member of the Bureau of Military Affairs (簽書樞密院事), Marquis of Nánchéngxiàn 南城縣侯, and Academician of the Hall of Resources (資政殿學士) at retirement; on death he was given the posthumous title Junior Guardian (少保) and the canonization Wénsù. His paternal uncles all studied under Zhū Xī 朱熹, so he was steeped in Dàoxué from youth. His Sòngshǐ biography praises his administrative toughness — breaking local strongmen, suppressing banditry, regulating salt production. His biography in the Sòngshǐ “Jiǎ Sìdào zhuàn” 賈似道傳, however, blames him for harshly enforcing Jiǎ’s notorious gōngtián fǎ 公田法 in Píngjiāng 平江, even using corporal punishment; both biographies were prepared under Tuōtuō 脫脫 (rendered 托克托 in Qīng editions), and the contradiction reflects tension between the Dàoxué lièzhuàn and the Jiǎ Sìdào biography. He was a friend of 劉克莊 (Liú Kèzhuāng), with whom he served at the Jīxī Hall (緝熙殿) in 1262. According to Liú Xūn’s 劉壎 Yǐnjū tōngyì 隱居通議, Bāo’s signature non-extant work was the Zhōulǐ liùguān biàn 周禮六官辨, which argued that the Zhōulǐ was not a sage’s book. His extant collection is the Bìzhǒu gǎolüè KR4d0334.