Shí Guāngjì 石光霽, zì Zhònglián 仲濂, was an early-Míng Chūnqiū scholar and Hànlín official from Tàizhōu 泰州 (now in northern Jiāngsū). His principal teacher was Zhāng Yǐníng 張以寧 (1301–1370), the late-Yuán-to-early-Míng specialist on the Chūnqiū, whom he served as a personal disciple. In Hóngwǔ 13 (1380) he was recommended for office and appointed Guózǐjiàn xuézhèng; later promoted to Chūnqiū bóshì (Erudite of Chūnqiū).
His biography is appended in the Míng shǐ Wényuànzhuàn under Zhāng Yǐníng’s entry, where the History records: “Of Yuán former officials who came to the [Míng] capital, Wēi Sù 危素 and Yǐníng’s reputations were highest. Sù was strong in history, Yǐníng strong in classics; Sù’s draft Sòng and Yuán histories were both lost in transmission, but Yǐníng’s Chūnqiū learning thereby flourished, and his disciple Shí Guāngjì wrote the Chūnqiū gōuyuán.” His principal surviving work is the KR1e0073 Chūnqiū shūfǎ gōuyuán 春秋書法鉤元 in 4 juan, completed in Hóngwǔ 25 = 1392 (the date of his preface). The work transmits Zhāng Yǐníng’s Chūnqiū teaching — much of it preserving citations from Zhāng’s now-lost Chūnqiū jīngzhuàn biànyí 春秋經傳辨疑 (note: the title is closely related to but distinct from Tóng Pǐn’s 童品 homonymously titled KR1e0075 work) — in a five-lǐ 五禮 classification of Chūnqiū events. CBDB id 28380; lifedates not preserved in the standard biographical record.