Tí-pó púsà 提婆菩薩 (*Āryadeva, conventionally c. 175–250 CE), the principal disciple of 龍樹菩薩 Nāgārjuna and the second Indian patriarch of Mādhyamaka. Per the Tí-pó púsà zhuàn 提婆菩薩傳 (T2048, attributed to Kumārajīva) and Tibetan parallels, Āryadeva was a Sinhalese kṣatriya prince who became Nāgārjuna’s principal disciple in southern India and came to be known as the great Mādhyamaka polemicist of his generation. He is conventionally called Kāṇadeva 迦那提婆 (“One-Eyed Deva”, from the legend that he gave his eye to a beggar) in the Chinese hagiographic tradition.
His foundational work is the Catuḥśataka (the “Four Hundred Verses”), preserved in Chinese as Xuánzàng’s KR6m0014 Guǎng-bǎi lùn běn 廣百論本 (T1570) and KR6m0015 Dàshèng guǎng-bǎi lùn shì-lùn 大乘廣百論釋論 (T1571, with Dharmapāla’s commentary). The Bǎi lùn 百論 KR6m0012 (T1569) translated by Kumārajīva is conventionally treated as a partial parallel of the Catuḥśataka tradition. Other Chinese-canon works attributed to him include KR6m0017 Bǎi-zì lùn 百字論 (T1572, Akṣaraśataka) and the Sì-bǎi lùn fragments preserved in Tibetan. Per DILA Buddhist Person Authority A001186.
The catalog of Kanripo treats Típó púsà 提婆菩薩 (Kumārajīva-school name, used for KR6m0012 and KR6m0017) and 聖天菩薩 Shèngtiān púsà (Xuánzàng-school name, used for KR6m0014 and KR6m0015) as separate entries; they refer to the same Indic master.
Works in the Kanripo corpus (under this name): KR6m0012 Bǎi lùn 百論 (T1569), KR6m0017 Bǎizì lùn 百字論 (T1572).