Chén Zhì 陳贄 (1392–1466), zì Wéichéng 維成, originally of Yúyáo 餘姚 (Zhèjiāng), later resident in Qiántáng (Hángzhōu). In the Míng Hóngwǔ era he was appointed by recommendation as xùndǎo (Instructor) of the Hángzhōu Prefectural School, ultimately rising to Tàichángsì qīng (Chief Minister of the Court of Imperial Sacrifices). He is best known as the Míng harmonizer (和韻) of Dǒng Sìgāo’s late-Sòng West-Lake cycle Xīhú bǎi yǒng KR4d0400 — his pieces, also numbering a hundred, were first jointly engraved with Dǒng’s by Chén Mǐnzhèng 陳敏政, Prefect of Nánkāng, in Tiānshùn 7 (1463). CBDB person 131033.
In the catalog meta the name is given as “陳贄和” — but this includes the function annotation 和 (“harmonized [in rhyme]”) rather than being part of the personal name. The historical figure is simply 陳贄, zì 維成.