Cài Mó 蔡謨 (281–356), Dàoming 道明, native of Chénliú Kǎo-chéng 陳留考城 (in modern Hénán). His standard biography is in Jìn shū 77 (列傳 47, Cài Mó zhuàn). A leading Eastern-Jìn court statesman and ritualist, he was descended from the prominent Hàn-period Cài family (kinsman of 蔡邕 Cài Yōng). He fled south with the founding Eastern-Jìn migration, was patronised by Wáng Dǎo 王導, and rose steadily through the court: Tài-zǐ zhōng-shù 太子中庶, Chéng-xiāng cān-jūn, Yǎ-yáng tài-shǒu, Wǔ-lǐng dū-dū, and eventually Sī-tú 司徒 under Jìn Mùdì.

His ritual scholarship is preserved in two works in this corpus: KR1d0106 Nìjiàng yì — a doctrinal treatise on the nì-jiàng nomenclature-and-mourning rule for collateral relatives — and KR1d0120 Cài-shì sāng-fú pǔ — a Sāngfú genealogy-chart commentary. His political career was marked by his late-life impeachment under Jìn Mùdì for refusing the Tài-zǐ shǎo-fù commission, leading to his demotion and house-arrest; he was rehabilitated and re-appointed shortly before his death in 356 at the age of seventy-five. The dates 281–356 are settled in the Jìn shū. No CBDB id assigned in current dump.