Hándān Chuò 邯鄲綽 (also written 邯鄲卓 in some Táng-era witnesses; fl. ca. 550–577) was a Northern-Qí 北齊 classicist attached to the Wénlín guǎn 文林館, the literary academy founded under Hòuzhǔ Gāo Wěi 後主高緯. He passed into Northern-Zhōu service after the fall of Qí in 577 but no later biography survives. He is sparsely attested in the standard histories — the Běi Qíshū and Běishǐ mention him only in passing among the Wénlín-guǎn scholars, with no dedicated liè zhuàn. The Suíshū jīngjízhì 《隋書·經籍志》 (j. 32, 經部·五經總義類) records his Wǔjīng xīyí 《五經析疑》 in 28 juàn; the work survived through the Táng (entries in 《舊唐書·經籍志》 and 《新唐書·藝文志》) but was lost by the Sòng. The fragments preserved in Chūxué jì, Tàipíng yùlǎn, and Běitáng shūchāo were collected by Mǎ Guóhàn 馬國翰 into a single juàn of Yùhánshānfáng jíyì shū (= KR1g0033 in the Kanripo corpus).
Disambiguation: Modern Chinese reference works occasionally conflate Hándān Chuò with the much earlier Hándān Chún 邯鄲淳 (ca. 132 – after 220), the Eastern-Hàn / Cáo-Wèi philologist who wrote the Xiàolín 笑林 (the earliest Chinese joke collection) and worked on the Wèi Sānzì shíjīng 三字石經. The two are distinct: Hándān Chún is a Wèi-era 文字學 specialist; Hándān Chuò is a Northern-Qí 五經 debate scholar three centuries later.