Hán Wò 韓偓 (842–923, zì Zhìyáo 致堯 — preferred over the variant Zhìguāng / Zhìyuán, per the Sìkù tíyào’s argument from Liú Xiàng lièxiān zhuàn’s Wòquán the Yáo-period immortal). Of Jīngzhào Wànnián 京兆萬年. His father Hán Zhān 韓瞻 was a jìnshì of Kāichéng 4 (839) and son-in-law of Wáng Màoyuán 王茂元 — making Hán Wò and Lǐ Shāngyǐn 李商隱 yīmèn xiōngdì (brothers-by-marriage). At age 10 Hán Wò already wrote with mature accomplishment; Lǐ Shāngyǐn’s Hán dōngláng jí xí dé jù yǒu lǎochéng zhī fēng poem celebrates this precocity.
Jìnshì of Lóngjì 1 (889); under Zhāozōng he rose to Bīngbù shìláng and Hànlín xuéshì chéngzhǐ. He stood with Zhāozōng against the rising Zhū Quánzhōng 朱全忠 (Zhū Wēn) — repeated confrontations resulting in repeated demotions (Púzhōu sīmǎ, Róngyì wèi, Dèngzhōu sīmǎ); restored to office in Tiānyòu 2 (905), but refused to enter court when Zhū dominated; fled to Mǐn (Fújiàn), attached himself to Wáng Shěnzhī 王審知, and died there in 923.
The Sìkù tíyào describes Hán’s late-life jié (integrity) as analogous to Guǎn Níng’s (Three-Kingdoms-period recluse) — a Tang-end wánrén (whole man). His verse, while conventionally pigeon-holed under the Xiānglián jí 香奩集 (Cosmetic-Box Collection — sensual erotic verse) attribution, is characterized by zhōngfèn zhī qì shíshí yì yú yǔ wài (loyal-indignant air constantly exceeds the words) — particularly in late-life compositions in Mǐn exile.
Principal work in the corpus: Hán nèihán biéjí KR4c0098 in 1 juǎn. The Xiānglián jí (separately catalogued in some bibliographies) is the yàntǐ corpus traditionally attributed to him; some critics (Fāng Huí, Zhū Xī) regarded the Xiānglián attribution as forgery. CBDB id 94717 gives 842–914; standard reference works (and the Sìkù’s implicit HòuLiáng-survival timeline) give 842–923, used here.