Huáng Dàyú 黃大輿 (fl. early 12th century), zì Zǎiwàn 載萬 (one Sòng witness has Zǎifāng 載方; the Sìkù editors plausibly suggest this is a copying error in the line 萬 → 万 → 方), self-styled “Mínshān Ǒugēng” 岷山耦耕 (“Plough-mate of Mínshān”, from his Shǔ origin). Reckoned a man of Shǔ on the strength of Lì È 厲鶚’s Sòngshī jìshì and the Chéngdū wénlèi — but his city and lineage are unattested. Wáng Zhuó 王灼 says of him in the Bìjī mànzhì KR4j0078 that “his gēcí stand level with the famous voices of the Táng; he had a yuèfǔ called Guǎng biànfēng 廣變風 with several pieces on plum-blossom in particular, all uniquely strange and fine.” The yuèfǔ is lost. He is now remembered for one collection: the Méiyuàn KR4j0064, compiled in his Shānyáng retreat in Jiànyán wùyǒu 戊酉 (the Sìkù notes there must be a textual slip — 戊酉 is impossible; either jǐyǒu 己酉, i.e. 1129, or wùshēn 戊申, 1128, is meant). CBDB id 48711 has no recorded dates.