SòngYuán transition 元 Confucian-educational official and poet. Zhòngmíng 仲明; biéhào Liùfēng 六峯 (“Six-Peaks”). Native of Suìchāng 遂昌 (modern Zhèjiāng, west of Lìshuǐ). CBDB 35401 record exists but lacks dates; lifedates uncertain (active c. 1285–1330).

Family. Father Yǐn Dòng 尹棟, hào Zhúpō 竹坡 — Sòng Bǎoyòu-era jìnshì (1253) and Shàoxīngfǔ mùguān. Yǐn Dòng composed 1000+ poems, all destroyed in the Bǐngzǐ (1276) SòngYuán transition warfare. A single couplet survives in Yǐn Tínggāo’s self-recorded opening to the Yùjǐng qiáochàng: “Bái píng yǐng zhàn wúhén shuǐ; huáng jú xiāng cuī wèiliǎo shī” — “White duckweed’s shadow dips in traceless water; / Yellow chrysanthemum’s fragrance presses unfinished poetry.”

Career. Reconstructed by the Sìkù editors from poem-internal evidence:

  • Yǒngjiā 永嘉 (Wénzhōu) tenure (per Gù Sìlì’s Yuán shī xuǎn xiǎozhuàn and internal poetry evidence); term-full, retired to capital, declined on illness, returned home (per the Gàobìng zhìshì xiè Lǐ shàngshū shī)
  • Dàdé era: Chǔzhōulù rúxué jiàoshòu 處州路儒學教授 (per Suìchāng xiànzhì)

The Yǒngjiā guānshī zhì fails to record his name; the Sìkù editors conclude that both regional gazetteers are imperfect.

Network. Late-life friend of Yú Jí 虞集 (1272–1348). Yú composed inscriptions for Yǐn’s Shào / Táo èrān — suggesting Yǐn’s yǐnyì (reclusion) poetic positioning matched Yú’s late-life orientation.

Within the Kanripo corpus. KR4d0471 Yùjǐng qiáochàng 玉井樵唱 (撰).