Late-Yuán recluse poet of Jīnhuá 金華 (modern Zhèjiāng). Style-name Jǐngnán 景南; self-styled Yúnqiáo tiānmín 雲嶠天民 (“Mountain-Peak Common-Man”) and Qiáoyún 樵雲. He built a hermitage on the eastern side of Chéngshān 城山 (the city mountain at Jīnhuá), named it Yúnqiáo, and later moved to a riverside abode on the west side. He refused official service. The catalog meta (and CBDB id 35514) gives him as born 1300; from the tíyào’s reasoning (the Wǎn Lín Jīngshān shàngrén poem dates the speaker’s birth to Dàdé gēngzǐ = 1300, and the Dúlè gē “Solo-Enjoyment Song” gives age 75 — which would imply death after 1374) his lifespan is c. 1300–c. 1375. The Sìkù tíyào explicitly identifies and dismisses two false homonyms confusingly attributed to him by other sources: (1) the Liècháo shī jí entry on a Yè Qiáoyún (style Bókǎi) Hóngwǔ jìnshì in the Xíngrénsī, which is in fact a Jiànwén 3 (1401) jìnshì, also a Jīnhuá man, who served under a Hóngwǔ 33 dated cycle after the Jiànwén erasure; (2) the Zhèntsé biān Yè Yóng (style Bóáng) who was a Héjìng shūyuàn shānzhǎng. These are unrelated persons. His Qiáoyún dúchàng 樵雲獨唱 (KR4d0566) is the surviving collection, edited by his grandson Yè Yōng 雍.