Zhōu Shě 周捨 (469–524), Shēngyì 昇逸, native of Rǔnán Ān-chéng 汝南安城, leading early-Liáng court-ritualist and confidant of Liáng Wǔdì 梁武帝. His standard biography is in Liáng shū 25 (列傳 19) and Nán shǐ 34. Of an established southern aristocratic lineage (his father Zhōu Yóng 周顒 was a famed Qí-period classicist and Madhyamaka-influenced Confucian-Buddhist polemicist, author of the Sān-zōng lùn 三宗論), Zhōu Shě entered Wǔdì’s circle very early and rose to Tài-zǐ shǎo-fù 太子少傅 (junior preceptor to the heir-apparent), Lì-bù shàng-shū 吏部尚書, and Sǎn-qí chángshì 散騎常侍. He was one of the principal authors of the comprehensive Liáng ritual codification of the Tiānjiān era (502–519) — the Wǔ-lǐ yí-zhù 五禮儀注 in over a thousand chapters — and was renowned for his prodigious memory and quick decision-making in ritual matters.

He was also a famed conversationalist, said by his biography to “speak day and night without exhausting his store of references” — and a serious Buddhist scholar in his own right. He died in office in 524 at the age of fifty-six and was posthumously appointed Shì-zhōng 侍中. In this corpus he appears as the attributed author of KR1d0105 Lǐ yíyì — preserved in Cèfǔ yuánguī, Běi shǐ, and Tōngdiǎn citations. No CBDB id assigned in current dump.