Pān Yuè 潘岳 (247–300 CE), courtesy name Ānyén 安仁, also popularly known as Pān Ān 潘安 (the common abbreviation of his style name), was a Western Jin poet and official. A native of Rónggyáng 滎陽 (modern Henan), he was renowned in his own time as one of the most handsome men of the Jin court and as a leading literary figure. He served in various capacities at the Western Jin court, associated with the faction of Jiǎ Mí 賈謐, and was executed in 300 CE during the political purges of the Uprising of the Eight Princes. He is the author of a Guānzhōng jì 關中記 (KR2k0166), a geographic record of the Chang’an area, as well as famous literary works including the Bēi gù fù 悼亡詩 (Laments for the Dead) and Xián jū fù 閒居賦. His biography is in Jìn shū 晉書 ch. 55. The CBDB records multiple persons of this name; CBDB 23796 (dates 0,0) appears to be the canonical reference for the Western Jin poet.