Yuán-dynasty 元 Yìjīng 易經 numerologist active fl. 1314–1364, Zhòngchún 仲純, native of Qīngjiāng 清江 (in modern Jiāngxī 江西). His pupil Huáng Zhènchéng 黃鎮成 (1287–1362), in the preface of 1357 to the Yìxiàng túshuō nèipiān, identifies him as a teacher who pursued his learning broadly across the classics but was particularly deep in the (於諸經無不通而尤邃於易). The colophon to his own [[KR5a0163|Yìxiàng túshuō wàipiān]], dated 1364 and signed by Zhāng Lǐ himself, places his career squarely in the late-Yuán turbulence preceding the Míng founding.

His principal extant works in the Daoist canon are the paired Yìxiàng túshuō nèipiān 易象圖說內篇 (KR5a0162, DZ 161; preface 1357) and Yìxiàng túshuō wàipiān 易象圖說外篇 (KR5a0163, DZ 162; preface 1364), forming a unified discourse on the symbols and charts of the Yìjīng in the xiàngshù 象數 tradition. The two works form a set: the inner volume sets out Chén Tuán’s 陳摶 (陳摶) theory of the Hétú 河圖 and a chart-based explanation of selected passages, the genesis of the sixty-four hexagrams, and milfoil-divination calculations; the outer volume contains six numerological charts of the , eight charts on hexagram-internal structure, and a juan on the astrological-calendrical and geopolitical reading of the . Both works draw heavily on the chart-tradition of the early-Sòng “School of Charts” and on Chén Tuán, Shào Yōng 邵雍, and Liú Mù 劉牧 (劉牧). Zhāng Lǐ also has a brief entry in the Sìkù quánshū zǒngmù tíyào 四庫全書總目提要 108.23a–24a.

The Shàngqīng tú 上清圖 4.15b (cited in Schipper & Verellen 2004, 2:747) attaches Zhāng Lǐ’s name to the [[KR5a0159|Dàyì xiàngshù gōushēn tú]] 大易象數鉤深圖 (DZ 158); Marc Kalinowski regards this attribution as fictitious, the actual source of that chart-corpus being Yè Zhōngkān 葉仲堪.

CBDB has multiple homonymous figures named 張理 (entries 42881, 46747, 106638–106642, 270571, 298415, etc.); none has a securely matching biography (the closest, 106642, is a different Zhāng Lǐ with dates 1304–1372 but no clear -numerology profile, and CBDB carries no publications under any of these ids). The Yuán -master Zhāng Lǐ of Qīngjiāng is therefore best identified through the prefaces and colophons of his own works, and is left without a CBDB id here.