Source: Lai 1987

Whalen W. Lai, “The Earliest Folk Buddhist Religion in China: T'i-wei Po-li Ching and Its Historical Significance,” in Buddhist and Taoist Practice in Medieval Chinese Society: Buddhist and Taoist Studies II, ed. David W. Chappell (Honolulu: Asian Studies at Hawai`i , University of Hawai`i Press, 1987), 11–35.

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Chinese indigenous sūtra composed by Tanjing 曇靖 of the Northern Wei dynasty during the reign period of Emperor Xiaowu of the Liu-Song dynasty (453–464); two fascicle(s). Makita Tairyō reconstructed the text based on Dunhuang manuscripts: Pelliot 3732 and Stein 2051 and the citation found in the Fayuan zhulin (T 2122.53.932b01–933a). See Gikyō kenkyū [Kyoto: Kyōto Daigaku Jinbun Kagaku Kenkyūjo, 1976], pp.184–206. Commonly known by the short title of 提謂經. Composed in China. See also Ziegler (2001): 104-111.

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Chinese indigenous sutra composed by Tanjing 曇靖 of the Northern Wei dynasty during the reign period of Emperor Xiaowu of the Liu-Song dynasty (453–464); two fascicle(s). Makita Tairyo reconstructed the text based on Dunhuang manuscripts: Pelliot 3732 and Stein 2051 and the citation found in the Fayuan zhulin (T 2122.53.932b01–933a). See Gikyo kenkyu [Kyoto: Kyoto Daigaku Jinbun Kagaku Kenkyujo, 1976], pp.184–206. Commonly known by the short title of 提謂經. Composed in China. See also Ziegler (2001): 104-111. Tanjing 曇靖 Sutra of Trapusa and Bhallika; Tiwei Boli jing, 提謂波利經