Hè Shù 賀述 (Cáo-Wèi or Western-Jìn, dates not preserved), early-medieval Chinese ritualist known principally through his lost Lǐtǒng 禮統 (KR1d0134) — a comprehensive synthetic outline of ritual organised under cosmological principles. He has no standard biography in any dynastic history and his lifespan, native place, and offices are not preserved in standard sources.
The cosmological-etymological methodology of his Lǐtǒng — opening with the tiān-dì wéi yuán-qì zhī suǒ shēng (Heaven and Earth as products of the yuán-qì) cosmogonic premise — situates his work in the late-Hàn / early-Wèi wěi-shū (apocryphal text) ritual-cosmology synthesis tradition.
He is possibly a member of the prominent Kuàijī Hè 賀 clan (the same lineage that produced 賀循 of the Eastern Jìn and 賀瑒 of the Liáng) but the specific lineage-link is not preserved. No CBDB id assigned. No DILA authority record.