Zhái Qínián 翟耆年 (fl. 1142), zì Bóshòu 伯壽, hào Huánghè shānrén 黃鶴山人, was a Southern Sòng calligraphy connoisseur and palaeographer. Son of the Northern-Sòng cānzhèng (vice-grand-councillor) Zhái Rǔwén 翟汝文 (1076–1141), he inherited his father’s libraries and continued the jīnshí connoisseurial tradition. His one surviving work the Zhòushǐ 籀史 KR2n0016, compiled around 1142 (Shàoxīng 12) — the imperial command to him is dated the second month of that year — is a critical bibliographical essay on inscribed bronzes, stelae, and palaeographic monuments. The work was originally in two juan (上下); only the upper juan survived through Cáo Róng’s 曹溶 (1613–1685) Jiāxīng manuscript copy, and all later transmissions descend from that. Wáng Shìzhēn 王士禎 (1634–1711) tried unsuccessfully to recover the missing xià juan. CBDB 10216 confirms the figure but lacks dates.