Dì-pó-hē-luó 地婆訶羅 (*Divākara, “Sun-Maker” — sometimes calqued in Chinese as 日照, “Sun-Light”; 614–688 CE), Tang-dynasty Indian Buddhist translator from central India (中印度). According to the Sòng-gāosēng zhuàn 宋高僧傳 (T2061, biography in juan 2) and the Kāi-yuán shìjiào lù 開元釋教錄, Divākara arrived at the Tang capital Cháng’ān during the Yí-fèng 儀鳳 era (676–679) and worked as a translator under Empress Wǔ-Hòu’s patronage, producing 18 Buddhist texts in 34 fascicles. His most consequential surviving translations are [[KR6b0043|Fāng-guǎng dà-zhuāng-yán jīng 方廣大莊嚴經 (T187)]] — the Tang re-translation of the Lalitavistara, completed in 685 CE; the Dì-zàng púsà běn-yuàn jīng 地藏菩薩本願經 (T412); and several Tantric and Mahāyāna paripṛcchā texts. Per DILA Buddhist Person Authority A001249.
Works in the Kanripo corpus: KR6b0043 Fāngguǎng dàzhuāngyán jīng (T187); and others.