Liujing tianwen bian 六經天文編 is a book assembling statements in the Six Classics on astronomy and astrology. It was compiled during the Southern Song period 南宋 (1127-1279) by Wang Yingling 王應麟 (1223-1296).
The book consists of 2 juan and presents not only quotations from the Classics Yijing 易經, Shangshu 尚書, Shijing 詩經 (juan 1), Zhouli 周禮, Liji 禮記, and Chunqiu 春秋 (juan 2), but also adds annotations and explanations. Apart from astronomical phaeonoma (xingxiang 星象), Wang's book also deals with matters of divination based on celestial and meteorological phaenomena, like Yin and Yang 陰陽, the Five Agents (wuxing 五行), wind, rain, and their relation to the Yijing hexagrams (guayi 卦義). For his annotations, Wang relied on older commentaries on the Classics and historiographical books (see, for instance, the treatises Wuxing zhi 五行志).
The book was first printed during the Qiandao reign-period 乾道 (1165–1173; this contradicts Wang's dates of life) and is included in the series Xuejin taoyuan 學津討原 and Siku quanshu 四庫全書. The Siku edition is based on a print of 1340.