Xīn Hànchén 辛漢臣 (fl. fourteenth century) is named on the title page of [[KR5a0194|DZ 193 Yùhuáng yòuzuì xīfú bǎochàn]] 玉皇宥罪錫福寶懺 as its compiler, with the deification-style title Léitíng měnglì dūdū 雷霆猛吏都督 — “Commander-in-Chief of the Fierce Messengers of Thunder and Lightning.” Reiter (in Schipper & Verellen, The Taoist Canon 2004, 2:1099–1100) takes him as a real human Qīngwēi 清微 / Léifǎ 雷法 master rather than a divinity, the Léitíng měnglì dūdū title being a hagiographic style adopted by senior practitioners of the Thunder-rite (léifǎ) tradition; Xīn Hànchén is also referenced in [[KR5a1308|DZ 1307 Hǎiqióng Bó zhēnrén yǔlù]] 海瓊白真人語錄 2.14a and in [[KR5a1221|DZ 1220 Dàofǎ huìyuán]] 道法會元 61.2b. No CBDB record located. He is to be distinguished from the Tang-Song deified figure of the same name in some Thunder-rite registers; the dating “fourteenth century” is taken from internal evidence of his work and from the Qīngwēi context.