Li No-cha. Third son of Li Ching; defends the Chou, [146]; and Têng Chiu-kung, [147]; vanquishes Fêng Lin, [153]; defeats Chang Kuei-fang, [153][154]; and Chiang Tsŭ-ya, [154]; fights and slays Ts’ai-yün Hsien-tzŭ, [159][160]; fights with Ch’ien-li Yen and Shun-fêng Êrh, [162]; and Peking, [229]; legend of, [305] sq.; frequently mentioned in Chinese romance, [305]; an avatar of the Intelligent Pearl, [306]; and Lung Wang, [307] sq.; and Ao Ping, [308][309]; discharges a magic arrow, [312]; and Shih-chi Niang-niang, [312][313]; commits hara-kiri, [313][314]; temple built to, [314]; his statue destroyed by his father, [315]; consults his master, [316]; is transformed, [316][317]; battles with his father, [317] sq.; is reconciled to his father, [318][319]

Li P’ing. Sixth officer of the Ministry of Epidemics, [242]

Li Shao-chün. And Tsao Chün, [166][167]

Li Shih-min, Emperor; and legend of the five graduates, [243] sq.; and Chang T’ien-shih, [243] sq.; visited by spirits of the graduates, [245][246]; canonizes the graduates, [246]

Li T’ieh-kuai. One of the Eight Immortals, [214], [303]; legends of, [289] sq.

Li T’ien-wang. And Sun Hou-tzŭ, [331]. See also Li Ching

“Liao Chai Chih I.” Seventeenth-century work; and fox-legends, [370][371]

Libraries. See Accessory Institutions

Lieh Tzŭ, or Lieh Yü-k’ou. A philosopher, by some regarded as fictitious; Chinese mythology and, [72]; his Absolute, [90][91]; apotheosized, [148]

Lieh Yü-k’ou. See Lieh Tzŭ