Late-Yuán literatus of Línchuān 臨川 (Fǔzhōu, Jiāngxī). Given name Gāo 臯; style-name Shùnjǔ 舜舉; self-styled Wúwú 吾吾. He was a descendant of the Sòng councillor-of-state Wú Qián 吳潛 (1196–1262, Lǚzhāi chéngxiàng 履齋丞相) and an early disciple of Wú Chéng 吳澄 (the great Yuán Neo-Confucian, see KR4d0446). He served as Línjiāng lù rúxué jiàoshòu (Línjiāng prefectural school professor). After the Yuán fell he held to kàngzhì (resistant determination) and did not come out, ending his life in hiding. Neither the Yuán shǐ nor the standard local gazetteers preserve his biography; his identity was only recovered from the Yǒnglè dàdiǎn, which excerpted his poetry under the title Wú Shùnjǔ Wúwú lèigǎo, together with three original prefaces (one by his cousin Hú Jūjìng 胡居敬, one by Liáng Yín 梁寅 — see KR4d0594, one by Zhāng Měihé 張美和). The Hú Jūjìng preface establishes his given name as Gāo and his style as Shùnjǔ. His son Wú Jūn 吳均, zì Zhòngquán 仲權, compiled the surviving 120+ poems and 10+ prose pieces from the disorder. The Sìkù recension is reconstructed from the Yǒnglè dàdiǎn.
No CBDB record located. Native of Línchuān; a member of the same Línchuān Wúshì clan as Wú Chéng and Wú Dāng (see KR4d0553).