Zhū Yì 朱翌 (1097–1167), zì Xīnzhòng 新仲, hào Qiánshān jūshì 灊山居士, native of Shūzhōu Huáiníng 舒州懷寧 (modern Ānhuī, Qiánshānxiàn). Father Zhū Zàishàng 朱載上 was a friend of Sū Shì 蘇軾 KR4d0085 and Huáng Tíngjiān 黃庭堅 KR4d0091; Zhū Yì inherited the family-learning. Through his mother’s family connection (his maternal grandfather was 黃魯直 / Huáng Lǔzhí = Huáng Tíngjiān himself per some sources, though uncertain).
Author of the Yījuéliáo zájì 猗覺寮雜記 KR3i0017 (already cataloged). The Sìkù editors place Zhū Yì’s poetry firmly in the Yuányòu lineage — five- and seven-character gǔtǐ “tiēdàng zònghéng” (free-and-unrestrained), regulated verse “wěilì kàngjiàn” (vigorous-and-firm), with characteristic use of chéngyǔ shǔduì (ready-language for parallel-couplets). Zhōu Bìdà 周必大 in his preface compared Zhū to Dù Mù 杜牧.
Catalog meta gives 1098–1167; CBDB id 3258 gives 1097–1167. The CBDB figure is followed here (one-year difference, likely lunar/solar calendar boundary).
His collection survives as Qiánshān jí 灊山集 KR4d0174 in 3 juǎn (Sìkù Yǒnglè dàdiǎn reconstruction; original 45 juǎn per Sòng shǐ Yìwénzhì — comprising 42 juǎn of wénjí + 3 juǎn of shījí; or, per Chén Zhènsūn KR3h0011, a 3-juǎn poetry-only collection; the present 3 juǎn are the surviving poetry).