His family lived at
Dunhuang, where he was born around 233 CE. At the age of eight, he became a novice and took the Indian monk named
Zhu Gaozuo () as his teacher. As a young boy, Dhamaraksa was said to be extremely intelligent, and journeyed with his teacher to many countries in the Western Regions, where he learned
Central Asian languages and scripts. He then traveled back to China with a quantity of Buddhist texts and translated them with the aid of numerous assistants and associates, both Chinese and foreign, from Parthians to Khotanese. One of his more prominent assistants was a Chinese upāsaka, Nie Chengyuan (), who served as a scribe and editor. Dharmaraksa first began his translation career in
Chang'an (present day
Xi'an) in 266 CE, and later moved to
Luoyang, the capital of the newly formed
Jin Dynasty. He was active in Dunhuang for some time as well, and alternated between the three locations. It was in Chang'an that he made the first known translation of the
Lotus Sutra and the
Ten Stages Sutra, two texts that later became definitive for
Chinese Buddhism, in 286 and 302, respectively. He died at the age of seventy-eight after a period of illness; the exact location of his death is still disputed. ==Works==