Zhāng Liè 張烈 (1622–1685), zì Wǔchéng 武承, was an early-Kāngxī court Confucian scholar from Dàxīng 大興 (Shùntiānfǔ 順天府, modern Běijīng). He passed the jìnshì examination in Kāngxī 9 = 1670 (gēngxū 庚戌), and in Kāngxī jǐwèi 康熙己未 = 1679 was nominated and accepted for the special Bóxué hóngcí 博學鴻詞 examination; he held office through Left Companion of the Office of the Heir Apparent (Zuǒ chūnfāng zuǒ zànshàn 左春坊左贊善). After his death his pupils privately conferred on him the posthumous title Zhìdào xiānsheng 志道先生 (“Master Aspiring to the Way”) — a private posthumous title (sī shì 私謚) that the Sìkù editors firmly disapprove of as a presumptuous usurpation of the imperial canonization prerogative; they decline to preserve Yáng Yǔncháng’s 楊允長 prefatory defense of the practice, citing the precedent of Sī Mǎ Guāng’s 司馬光 disapproval of a parallel attempt for Zhāng Zài 張載.
His one surviving work in the Sìkù is the Dú Yì rì chāo 讀易日鈔 (KR1a0131) in eight juàn — a Yìjīng commentary firmly within the Zhū Xī Běnyì tradition. According to his son Zhāng Yì 益 and grandsons Zhāng Shēng 升 and Zhāng Jì 紀, the manuscript was revised over forty-some times and was still being collated against Cài Qīng’s 蔡清 Méng yǐn (KR1a0092), Lín Xīyuán’s 林希元 Cún yí (KR1a0095), and other Mǐnxué works in the days immediately before Zhāng’s death.