Chén Yuánjìn 陳元晉, zì Míngfù 明父, by family origin a Shǔ 蜀 (Sìchuān) man whose forebears settled in Chóngrén 崇仁 (Fǔzhōu, modern Jiāngxī). The Sòngshǐ has no biography; the Jiāngxī tōngzhì records his career, and Zhào Fǎng’s 趙汸 Dōngshān cúngǎo preserves Yú Jí’s 虞集 行狀 noting that Yú’s grandfather, on retirement through Línchuān, lodged with Chén Yuánjìn’s household and married Chén’s younger sister, confirming the family’s Shǔ origin. Jìnshì of Jiādìng 4 (1211); served as Sub-prefect of Yúdū 雩都, Prefect of Fúzhōu and Róngzhōu, eventually rising to Pacification Commissioner of Yōngguǎn 邕管安撫使. He founded the Yúshù shūyuàn 漁墅書院 (“Fisher’s-cottage Academy”) from which his collection takes its title. The Sìkù tíyào praises his upright temper: his memorials on conscription abuses, on the defense of the Yangtze, and his letters to Wèi Liǎowēng 魏了翁 are particularly trenchant. He left the Yúshù lèigǎo KR4d0320, reconstituted from the Yǒnglè dàdiǎn.