Zhāng Zhèngjiàn 張正見 (ca. 527–575 CE), styled Lóngzhèng 龍政, was a Chén 陳 dynasty poet from Qīnghé Wùchéng 清河武城 (modern Shāndōng). He served as a court erudite (bóshì 博士) and literary official under the Chén dynasty, with his biography recorded in Chénshū 陳書 34 (the collective biography of literary officials, 辭令傳). He was a skilled practitioner of palace-style (gōngtǐ 宮體) verse and imitative yuèfǔ 樂府, cultivating the standard court topics of his day including the “Mount Long” (Lǒng shān 隴山) theme popular among Liáng and Chén poets. The Oxford Handbook of Classical Chinese Literature (Denecke et al. 2017) lists him alongside Jiāng Zǒng 江總 KR4b0070, Xú Líng 徐陵, and the last Chén ruler as a practitioner of this subgenre. His original collection is noted in Suíshū·Jīngjí zhì 隋書·經籍志 but did not survive intact; a jíyìběn reconstruction by Zhāng Pǔ 張溥 is preserved in the Kanripo corpus as KR4b0071.