Zhù Yǔnmíng 祝允明 (1461–1527; CBDB 276535 gives 1461–1527 — the catalog meta’s 1460–1526 is followed in some traditional sources but CBDB and Wikipedia agree on 1461–1527, accepted here), Xīzhé 希哲, hào Zhīshān 枝山 / Zhīzhǐshēng 枝指生 (born with an extra finger), of Chángzhōu 長洲 (Sūzhōu, Jiāngsū). Hóngzhì 5 / rénzǐ (1492) jǔrén; never jìnshì; appointed Xīngníng zhīxiàn (Guǎngdōng); promoted Yīngtiānfǔ tōngpàn; resigned by xièbìng (sick-leave). Míngshǐ Wényuàn zhuàn. With Táng Yín 唐寅, Wén Zhēngmíng 文徵明, and Xú Zhēnqīng (徐禎卿) the Wúzhōng sìcái (Four Talents of Wúzhōng) — but more fàngdàn bùjī (free-and-eccentric, untrammeled) than the others, often yī fàngdàn zì jǐ (fashioning himself as eccentric). The famous Wú-school calligraphy master — bólǎn qúnjí, yóu gōng shūfǎ, míng dòng hǎinèi (broadly seeing all books, especially skilled at calligraphy, name moving the seas-within). His writings are gathered in the Huáixīngtáng jí in 30 juǎn (KR4e0147). CBDB id 276535, 1461–1527.