Guō Zōngchāng 郭宗昌 (d. 1652), zì Yǔnbó 允伯, of Huázhōu 華州 (modern Huáxiàn, Shǎnxī), was a late-Míng to early-Qing jīnshí enthusiast and minor eccentric. His residence at Zhǐyuán 沚園 by the Báiyáhú 白厓湖 was decorated extensively with self-cut stone inscriptions on every architectural feature (column-foundations, etc.), bearing inscribed kuǎnshì and míngzàn; the project ran more than thirty years and remained unfinished. The Sìkù editors describe him as “yūpì hǎoyì” — eccentric and given to oddity. Together with the contemporary Zhào Hán 趙崡 趙崡 of nearby Zhōuzhì, he was the principal late-Míng-Shǎnxī jīnshí connoisseur. His one substantial surviving work is the Jīnshí shǐ 金石史 KR2n0034 in 2 juan covering 50 stelae. He died in 1652 at the start of the Qing era. CBDB has no entry for him.