Lǐ Yùhēng 李豫亨, zì Yuánjiàn 元薦 (CBDB 128023, dynasty 19 = Míng), native of Sōngjiāng 松江 (Yúnjiān 雲間, now Shànghǎi). A late-Míng polymath of the Sōngjiāng cultivated-gentry milieu, schooled at first in Confucian classics under his father (a HúGuǎng vice-commissioner who suppressed the Dàwéi 大溈 bandits in 1536), then drifting through poetry, prayer-rituals, military strategy, examination essays, Wén Zhēng-míng-circle calligraphy, antiquities, yǎngshēng, and medicine-divination-astrology. He failed at the imperial examinations and finally entered office via the Hónglúsì (鴻臚寺) appointment in Lóngqìng gēngwǔ (1570). His principal work, KR3ep097 Tuīpéng wùyǔ (printed 1571), is a bǐjì-style miscellany on literature, religion, divination, governance, and natural-philosophical / medical matters.