Late-Míng / early-Qīng yímín 遺民 figure of Sūzhōu; son of the Dōnglín martyr 周順昌 Zhōu Shùnchāng (1584–1626), tortured to death in the Tiānqǐ purge of 1626. Zhōu Màolán was the chief mourner who organised the Sūzhōu public-protest funeral that became one of the iconic moments of late-Míng popular politics (the Wǔrén mù 五人墓 cohort of executed protesters); after the dynastic transition of 1644 he refused Qīng service and lived as a recluse in Sūzhōu, where he was a central figure in the early-Qīng Sūzhōu yímín literary circle. His nephew 蔣示吉 Jiǎng Shìjí (1624–1703), the author of KR3er081 Yīzōng shuōyuē (1663), was raised in part in Zhōu’s household after Jiǎng’s mother (Zhōu’s cousin) died in 1635, and refers to him in his 1663 self-preface as Zǐpèi jiùshì 子佩舅氏 (“my uncle Zǐpèi”). Not in CBDB under this exact entry.