Chǔ Chéng 褚澄 (zì Yàndào 彥道, d. 483), Southern-Qí aristocratic official and younger brother of the LiúSòng / Southern-Qí grand-secretary 褚淵 Chǔ Yuān. Born of the Chǔ clan of Yángzhái 陽翟; married the LiúSòng emperor Wéndì’s daughter the Princess of Lújiāng 廬江公主 and was made Imperial Son-in-Law (駙馬都尉). On the founding of the Southern Qí he served as Grand Protector of Wú Commandery (吳郡太守) and rose to Director of Personnel of the Left (左民尚書) and Right General (右軍將軍). His biography is in Nán Qí shū j. 23. The transmitted Chǔshì yíshū 褚氏遺書 (KR3e0011) is attributed to him by the work’s late-Táng / Northern-Sòng prefatorial conceit of stone-tablet recovery from his tomb during the Huáng Cháo 黃巢 disturbance (875–884), but the SKQS editors and most modern scholars regard it as a Northern-Sòng pseudepigraphic composition by an anonymous medical scholar that draws on the Sùwèn and Língshū with original physiological reasoning. The historical Chǔ Chéng — though noted in a few medieval sources as having had medical interests — left no securely transmitted medical writing.