Zhou She (周捨) (469–524), courtesy name Shengyi (昇逸), formally Viscount Jian (簡子, literally "the undiscriminating viscount"), was an official of the Chinese dynasty Liang Dynasty. He was never titular prime minister, and never held an office of high rank, but was largely considered a de facto prime minister and was well regarded by his contemporaries.
Zhou She was an eighth-generation descendant of the famed Jin official Zhou Yi (周顗). His father Zhou Yong (周顒) was a Southern Qi official. When Zhou She was young, he became known for his skills in rhetoric, and he was retained by Wang Liang (王亮), then the mayor of the capital Jiankang, to serve as his secretary.
When Emperor Wu of Liang seized the throne from Emperor He of Southern Qi in 502, he sought out people with talent to serve in his administration. His prime minister Fan Yun was friendly with Zhou She's father Zhou Yong, and he recommended Zhou She, whom Emperor Wu made a low level official and gradually promoted. In 503, Fan died, and Emperor Wu entrusted the important matters of state to Zhou She and Xu Mian, effectively making them co-prime ministers, even though neither carried the title and neither received particularly high rank. For the next 20 years, Zhou and Xu served together in this key capacity. Zhou was considered capable and honest and particularlyl frugal in his living.
Alright, this time you worked me over
Cold spite, can this be all that I need
It's a feeling, and it won't leave me alone
I keep searching for love
Hearts turned to stone
Can't stop this endless dreaming, should have known from
the start
No way to break your scheming heart
Your love is gone, I see it fading away
Love burns the soul, I know where heartache remains
Sometimes when I think of what you mean to me
Look back, faces are all that I see
But the feeling, it won't leave me alone
I keep searching for love
Hearts turned to stone
Can't stop this endless dreaming, should have known from
the start
No way to break your scheming heart
Your love is gone, I see it fading away
Love burns the soul, I know where heartache remains