T’ai Shan. Sacred mountain; Fêng-shan sacrifices offered on, [127]
T’ai Shih. The Great Beginning, [90]
T’ai Su. The Great Blank; one of the stages in creation, [90]
T’ai Sui. Called Yin Chiao; the celestial year-spirit, [194] sq.; sacrifices to, [194]; corresponds to the planet Jupiter, [194]; legend of, [195]–[196]; son of tyrant Chou, [195]; and Ho Hsien-ku, [195]; and Ta Chi, [195]–[196]; canonized by Yü Ti, [196]; and Jan Têng, [196]; canonized by Chiang Tzŭ-ya, [196]; worship of, [196]–[197]; divination of locality of, [197]
T’ai Tsung. Emperor; and the Door-gods, [173]–[174]
T’ai Yin. Princess; and Lu Ch’i, [110]–[111]
T’ai-i Chên-jên. Taoist priest, [144], [305] sq.; appears in a dream to Yin Shih, [305]; visits Li No-cha, [306]; Li No-cha visits, [310]–[311], [316]
T’ai-i Huang-jên. The spirit of Ô-mei Shan, [179]–[180]
T’ai-po Chin-hsing. Spirit of the South Pole Star, [329], [337]
T’ai-shang Lao-chün, or Lao Tzü. Third person of the Taoist triad, [125]