Fútuóbámó 浮陀跋摩 (Skt. Buddhavarman “Protected by the Buddha”; Chinese calque 覺鎧 Juégài “Armored by Awakening”; DILA Authority A000941) was a Central Indian (Tiānzhú 天竺) Buddhist monk-translator who worked in the Northern Liang (北涼, c. 397–439 CE) state under the patronage of King Juqu Mengxun 沮渠蒙遜. Together with the Chinese monk Dàotài 道泰 (道泰) and others, he translated the Āpítán pípóshā lùn 阿毘曇毘婆沙論 (KR6l0011, T1546, 60 juan), an early rendering of Sarvāstivāda Vibhāṣā commentary material on the Jñāna-prasthāna. Buddhavarman served as the Sanskrit-Indic expert while Dàotài had traveled westward to obtain the manuscripts. His precise dates are unknown; he is dated to the first half of the 5th century CE.