Wēn Chún 溫純 (1539–1607), Xīwén 希文, of Sānyuán 三原 (Shǎnxī), posthumous shì Gōngyì 恭毅 (and elevated Shǎobǎo). Took the jìnshì in Jiājìng 44 (1565); office reached Zuǒ Dū yùshǐ. One of the most consistently principled late-Wàn-lì jīngshì (statecraft) officials: first offended Zhāng Jūzhèng and was dismissed; re-appointed; again contested the kuàngshuì (mine-tax) controversy with the zhōngshǐ (eunuch envoys); finally retired after offending Shěn Yīguàn. Intellectually he was ChéngZhū-aligned but refused to engage in the anti-Yáo-jiāng polemic — explicitly because, in the Sìkù tíyào’s reading, guóshì wéi jǐrèn (state-affairs were his sole charge). His collection is the Wēn Gōngyì jí KR4e0214. CBDB 34732 records 1539–1607; not to be confused with Qīng-era homonym (CBDB 90434, 1764–1808).