Southern-Sòng -writer (fl. Shàoxīng through Qiándào / Chúnxī, c. 1141–1180); Yànzhōu 彥周, hào Lǎnkū jūshì 孏窟居士 (“Recluse of the Lazy-Den”), of Dōngwǔ 東武 (modern Zhūchéng 諸城, Shāndōng). Nephew of Cháo Bǔzhī 晁補之 (matrilineal line: his mother was a Cháo) — preserving the Yuányòu literary heritage that the Cháo family carried into the Southern Sòng. Per Chén Zhènsūn 陳振孫’s Shūlù jiětí, served under Shàoxīng as Zhí xuéshì Prefect of Jiànkāng; the Sìkù tíyào documents from his that he lived on through the Qiándào and Chúnxī periods, with chángchóu exchanges with Zhāng Shì 張栻 ( Jìngfū) and Liú Gōngfù 劉恭甫. His sole extant work is the Lǎnkū cí KR4j0031, in one juǎn, preserved in the Máo Jìn 毛晉 cutting and the Quán Sòng cí (around 91 ). The collection contains an early self-conscious imitation of Lǐ Qīngzhào’s Yìān tǐ 易安體 (Yǎn ér méi · Xiào Yìān tǐ), one of the earliest to invoke Lǐ as a named stylistic category.