Cui Zhuan (å´ÂèÂÂ; pinyin: Cuë Zhuàn, WadeâÂÂGiles: Ts'ui Chuan, also å´ÂæÂ° (late thirdâÂÂearly fourth centuries) was an early commentator on the Zhuangzi before Guo XiangâÂÂs textual revision.
He was the author of a Zhuangzi commentary in ten scrolls (juan), covering 27 chapters (7 inner and 20 outer) which is lost, but fragments can be found in the Zhuangzi yinyi by Lu Deming (ca. 550âÂÂ630).
Cui ZhuanâÂÂs commentary on the Zhuangzi is (partly) preserved in Lu DemingâÂÂs Jingdian shiwen, making him to one of the earliest among the commentators from the Wei-Jin éÂÂæÂ period whose work has survived to this day. The Jingdian shiwen (Xulu) ç»Âå ¸éÂÂæÂÂÃጼÂå½ states that Cui Zhuan commented on 27 chapters (7 Inner Chapters and 20 Outer Chapters), while Xiang Xiu commented on 26 chapters (some sources say 27 or 28, excluding the mixed chapters).
Based on the structure (Inner and Outer sections) and the number of chapters (27), it can be inferred that Cui Zhuan and Xiang Xiu Ã¥ÂÂç§ commented on the same version of the text, even though the specific chapters they annotated do not completely coincide.