Supplemented Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law [添品法華経] (Chin T’ien-p’in-fa-hua-ching; Tembon-hoke-kyō): One of the three extant Chinese versions of the Lotus Sutra, translated in 601 by Jnānagupta and Dharmagupta. This version generally accords with Kumārajīva’s Chinese translation of the Lotus Sutra, the Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law, although there are some differences between the two. For example, the content of the “Devadatta” chapter in Kumārajīva’s version is included in the preceding chapter, “Treasure Tower” (eleventh), in Jnānagupta and Dharmagupta’s translation; accordingly the Supplemented Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law has only twenty-seven chapters while the Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law has twenty-eight. In addition, the “Entrustment” chapter, the twenty-second chapter of the Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law, is placed as the last chapter in the Supplemented Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law, and the “Dhāranī,” or twenty-sixth, chapter of the Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law, as the twenty-first chapter in the Supplemented Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law. Furthermore, the “Parable of the Medicinal Herbs” chapter of the Jnānagupta-Dharmagupta version contains an additional parable not found in Kumārajīva’s translation.