Lǐ Jífǔ (758–814; zì Hóngxiàn 宏憲, also written Hóngxiàn 弘憲; posthumous title Zhōngyì 忠懿) was a native of Zànhuáng 贊皇 in Zhàozhōu 趙州 (modern Hébĕi). He was the son of the Táng chief minister Lǐ Qīyún 李栖筠 and entered office through the yīn 蔭 privilege as Zuǒ Sīyù shuàifǔ Cángcáo cānjūn, then Tàicháng bóshì in the early Zhēnyuán era. He served twice as Zhōngshū shìláng tóng zhōngshūménxià píngzhāngshì (chief minister) under Xiànzōng (807–809 and again 811–814), and was the leading architect of the Yuánhé zhōngxìng 元和中興 — the Táng court’s mid-period reassertion of authority over the regional military commands. While in office he supervised the re-establishment of Yòuzhōu 宥州 in Yuánhé 9 (814), an event recorded in his own Yuánhé jùnxiàn túzhì KR2k0003, the empire-wide gazetteer he presented to Xiànzōng in Yuánhé 8 (813). His biography is in Jiù Tángshū 148 and Xīn Tángshū 146.