Shāluóbā 沙羅巴 (also written 沙囉巴; reconstructed Sanskrit Saraha-pa or “Saraba”, 1259–1314) was an Indian-born Buddhist translator and Tantric master active at the Yuán court under Khubilai Khan and his successors. The principal disciple and Chinese translator of 發合思巴 (ʼPhags-pa Blo-gros rgyal-mtshan, the Imperial Preceptor 帝師), he was responsible for translating ʼPhags-pa’s Tibetan-language doctrinal compendium Zhāng suǒ-zhī lùn 彰所知論 KR6o0049 (T1645) into Chinese in 1278, the same year of its composition. He also worked on a number of Tantric translations during the Yuán period and held the title of Quán-shì sānzàng 全釋三藏 (“All-Interpreting Tripiṭaka [Master]”). He is the principal vehicle by which Tibetan Buddhist śāstra literature entered the Chinese canon at this date. His biography is preserved in the Fózǔ lìdài tōngzǎi 佛祖歷代通載 (T2036) and other Yuán-period Buddhist historical sources.