Wéi Xún 韋絢 (fl. 812–856), zì Wénmíng 文明, native of Jīngzhào 京兆. Son of Wéi Zhíyì 韋執誼 (the chief minister briefly under Shùnzōng / Yǒngzhēn 805, demoted with the Bāsīmǎ in the Yǒngzhēn reversal). Wéi Xún’s career took him through provincial postings; the surviving evidence places him at Báidì 白帝 city (Kuízhōu) in Chángqìng 1 (821) — the years when Liú Yǔxī 劉禹錫 was governing Kuízhōu — and gives him as Jiānglíng shǎoyǐn 江陵少尹 in Dàzhōng 10 (856), per the preface to his KR3l0007 LiúBīnkè jiāhuà lù 劉賓客嘉話錄. He compiled two listening-records: the Jiāhuà lù of Liú Yǔxī’s conversation, and the Róngmù xiántán 戎幕閒談 (now lost as an independent text, but quoted in Tàipíng guǎngjì) of Lǐ Déyù’s table-talk. The two works span the NiúLǐ factional divide and make Wéi Xún an unusually broad-ranging witness to mid-Táng literary circles. No CBDB entry has been confirmed.