Lǐ Jùnmín 李俊民 (1176–1260), Yòngzhāng 用章, hào Hèmíng dàorén 鶴鳴道人 (“Daoist Master Crane-Call”), posthumous shì Zhuāngjìng xiānshēng 莊靖先生 (“Master Solemnly Tranquil”), native of Zézhōu 澤州 (modern Jìnchéng 晉城 in Shānxī). Said by family tradition to be a descendant of the Táng prince Lǐ Yuánjiā 李元嘉 (Hánwáng 韓王). In youth he passed through the Chéngshì 程氏 Lǐxué school. Took the jīngyì (Classics-specialist) jìnshì in first place (i.e. as zhuàngyuán) in Jīn Chéngān 5 (1200); served briefly as Yìngfèng hànlín wénzì and soon withdrew. After the Jīn Southern Displacement (1213) he retreated to Sōngshān as a Daoist householder under the name Hèmíng dàorén. Yuán Shìzǔ summoned him by ceremonial-carriage; he pleaded to return to the mountains. The post-1234 (the Jīn dynasty’s actual fall to the Mongols) poetry in his collection dates conspicuously only by gānzhī cycle — silently comparing himself to Táo Qián. He died in 1260 and received the posthumous shì Zhuāngjìng. His collected works Zhuāngjìng jí KR4d0419 (10 juàn, 7 juàn of poetry + 3 of prose) were first cut by the Zézhōu prefect Duàn Zhèngxíng in the 1240s, with prefaces by Lǐ Zhòngshēn (1219), Wáng Tèshēng, Liú Yíng, and his disciple Shǐ Bǐngzhí (1243). CBDB person 29144.