Wáng Ānlǐ 王安禮 (1034–1095, zì Héfǔ 和甫), of Línchuān 臨川 (Jiāngxī), youngest brother of Wáng Ānshí 王安石 王安石 and Wáng Ānguó 王安國. Jiāyòu 6 / 1061 jìnshì. Held Hànlín xuéshì, zhī Kāifēngfǔ, Shàngshū zuǒchéng; eventually Zīzhèngdiàn xuéshì zhī Tàiyuánfǔ. Sòngshǐ characterizes his style as kuòlüè xìjǐn (broad-and-easy, indifferent to small punctilio) — a description borne out by his repeated career setbacks: dismissed once on a charge of drinking with courtesans while zhī Húzhōu / zhī Rùnzhōu, dismissed once for corruption, repeatedly demoted and recalled. As Zhīzhìgào, on the appearance of a comet, memorialized that the zhízhèng dàchén had failed to embody the imperial benevolence — covertly criticizing the New Policies; his jìcì (sharp criticism) of his elder brother’s reforms is preserved in this memorial. The original 20-juǎn Wáng Wèigōng jí 王魏公集 KR4d0059 (so listed in Sòngshǐ Yìwénzhì and Chén Zhènsūn’s Shūlù jiětí) was lost; the present 7-juǎn version was reconstituted by the Sìkù editors from the Yǒnglè dàdiǎn. His Wèigōng enfeoffment is recorded only in Tián Zhòu 田晝’s Wáng Héfǔ jiāzhuàn, not in Sòngshǐ; Sòngshǐ 327. His astronomical-bureau text Língtái mìyuàn 靈臺秘苑 KR3d0008 (cataloged in zǐbù) bears Wáng Ānlǐ’s name as compiler.