Xie Lingyun (born 385, Shining [now Sanjie, Shengzhou], Zhejiang province, China—died 433, Canton) was a prominent Chinese writer of the Six Dynasties era, known chiefly as a nature poet.
The scion of an aristocratic house associated with the displaced southern court, Xie was an official under the Eastern Jin and Liu-Song dynasties, but factional intrigues later disrupted his career, leading to his frequent dismissal and eventual execution in exile.
Xie was knowledgeable about the principles of both Buddhism and Daoism and merged them with Confucianism in his religious works. His literary reputation, however, derived from his poetry, particularly his evocation of a spiritual presence in the wild southern landscape. His refined, imagistic verse set the fashion for his age, prompting early critics to prize his shanshui (“mountain and stream”) landscapes above the more pastoral tianyuan (“field and garden”) scenes depicted by Tao Qian, his countryman and contemporary. Indeed, Xie’s poems outnumber those of other Six Dynasties poets in the Wenxuan (“Literary Anthology”), the 6th-century canon that defined later Chinese literary tastes.