Wáng Yì 王奕 (lifedates uncertain; fl. c. 1265–1300), zì Jìngbó 敬伯, hào Yùdǒu shānrén 玉斗山人 (“Mountain-Man of the Jade-Dipper”), native of Yùshān 玉山 in Xìnzhōu 信州 (Jiāngxī). A SòngYuán transition figure of partial yímín identity: documented by internal evidence (the Diàn Dàchéng zhìshèng Wénxuānwáng wén dated 1289 and the Yùcōngrúān jì dated 1293) as a Yuán-period Yùshān rúxué jiàoyù 玉山儒學教諭 (Yùshān School Erudite) from 1289 or shortly after, but maintaining a Sòng-loyalist self-styling in private verse — close friend of Xiè Fángdé KR4d0379, with ten preserved harmonization poems exchanged during Xiè’s final fatal journey north in 1289. The catalog meta and older recensions mis-classify him as Southern Sòng; the Sìkù editors correct to Yuán. His original 12-juàn Dǒushān wénjí and 7-juàn Méiyán záyǒng are lost; the surviving 3-juàn Yùdǒushānrén jí KR4d0440 is Chén Zhōngzhōu’s 1542 selection. No firm CBDB record for this Yùshān Wáng Yì.