What is Bai's name?

Ao Lie for nothing. Ao Lie, the third prince of the West Sea Dragon King, set fire to the night pearl given by the Jade Emperor and was sued by the West Sea Dragon King for disobedience. The jade emperor hung him in the air and beat him three hundred times, and he was punished in a few days. Later, the Guanyin Bodhisattva in the South China Sea stepped forward and was spared the death penalty, and was banished to the sad stream in the shadow of the snake mountain, waiting for the Tang Priest to learn the scriptures. Later, after eating the white horse that Tang Priest rode by mistake, he was enlightened by the Bodhisattva and turned into a white horse dragon.

Bai is a character in the famous novel The Journey to the West. It turned out that the three princes of the West Sea Dragon King were named Aolie in the TV series, and the original journey to the West was called the three princes of Yulong without mentioning their names.

In the ordeal of learning from the scriptures, Bai rarely made a move. Only when Huang Paoguai turned the Tang Priest into a tiger did he put all his eggs in one basket. At that time, the Monkey King was angry with Tang Priest because of Monkey King Thrice Defeats the Skeleton Demon and returned to Huaguoshan. When Zhu and Sha Wujing went to look for no news, they were forced to take action.

In The Journey to the West's catalogues or poems in books, Bai is often called a horse, and the five elements belong to fire. In Buddhism, the general Buddha has the highest status, such as the God of War Buddha, who can sit on the lotus platform. Followed by bodhisattva, followed by arhat, and the lowest is monk. Bai was named the Bodhisattva of Eight Tianlong Guangli, ranking second only to his younger brother the Monkey King, so he has a high status.