Shì Bǎoyún 釋寶雲 (376–449 CE), Liú-Sòng Hàn-Chinese Buddhist śramaṇa, native of Liáng-zhōu 涼州 (modern Gānsù). According to the Gāosēng zhuàn 高僧傳 (T2059, 339c–340b), Bǎoyún travelled to India in his youth in company with Fǎxiǎn 法顯 (the celebrated pilgrim of the Fóguó-jì 佛國記), studied Sanskrit at length, and returned to China through the Pamir route. He worked at Cháng’ān, then at Lúshān 廬山 with Huìyuǎn 慧遠, and finally at Liù-héshān 六合山 in Jiànkāng under Liú-Sòng patronage; he is recorded as having translated 8 to 10 Buddhist texts including [[KR6b0050|Fó běnxíng jīng 佛本行經 (T193)]] — a five-character verse Buddha-biography in seven fascicles, his most consequential surviving work — and the Wú-liàng-shòu jīng 無量壽經 (T360, the Larger Sukhāvatīvyūha-sūtra; alternative authorship is ascribed to Saṃghavarman). Per DILA Buddhist Person Authority A001157.
Works in the Kanripo corpus: KR6b0050 Fó běnxíng jīng (T193).