Tánrèyào 曇曜 (lifedates unknown; fl. 460–470s), Northern-Wèi Hàn-Chinese Buddhist śramaṇa, the Shā-mén tǒng 沙門統 (“Director of Śramaṇa-Affairs”) — head of the imperial saṃgha — under emperor Wén-chéng-dì 文成帝. According to the Wèi-shū 魏書 Shì-Lǎo zhì 釋老志 and the Gāosēng zhuàn 高僧傳, Tánrèyào is the principal architect of the Northern-Wèi Buddhist restoration after the persecution of Tàiwǔ-dì 太武帝 (446–452): he convinced Wén-chéng-dì in 460 to commission the carving of the Yúngāng 雲岡 cave-Buddha colossi at Wǔzhōu-shān 武周山 — five caves with five colossal Buddhas representing the first five Northern-Wèi emperors — one of the foundational monuments of East-Asian Buddhist art. He also led the imperial-translation enterprise at Píng-chéng, collaborating with Kekaya 吉迦夜 on [[KR6b0060|Zá-bǎo-zàng jīng (T203)]] and the Fù-fǎ-zàng yīn-yuán zhuàn (T2058). Per DILA Buddhist Person Authority A002205.

Works in the Kanripo corpus: KR6b0060 Zábǎozàng jīng; and others.