Fang Gan


Fang Gan, also known as Fang Xiongfei and Xuanying, was a Tang dynasty poet.

Life and career

Fang's father, Fang Su, was a jinshi and Hangzhou-based magistrate who founded the Fang Clan of White Cloud in White Cloud Village, Tonglu, Zhejiang. According to the tenth-century Jianjie lu or Records of Warnings, Fang Gan was the fourteenth son of his family. He was nicknamed "Fang Sanbai" because of his idiosyncrasy of bowing three times to whomever he met. Despite being academically gifted, he failed the imperial examination more than ten times, apparently because of his cleft lip which examiners felt would bring Chinese academia into disrepute.
Fang successfully underwent surgery for his cleft lip about a decade after retiring to Jinghu. According to a poem by Song dynasty poet Xu Tianyou, titled "Fan Gan Dao" or "Fan Gan's Island", this operation took place around 880. Now referred to as "Buchun Xiansheng" or "Mr Lip Mended", Fang spent his final years in a local mountain retreat. Fang was a noted player of the guqin, and enjoyed fishing and drinking in his spare time.
Fang wrote countless poems in his lifetime, three hundred and seventy of which were preserved by one of his proteges and subsequently published in a ten-juan anthology by Wang Zan. Following a popular campaign against "Qu mingru" or "injustice to noted scholars", Fang was posthumously recognised as a successful imperial candidate. A Chinese proverb about posthumous recognition thus goes, "Shenhou shi Fang Gan" or "Not until after his death was Fan Gan recognised".

Works cited

*