According to historical records, there are four "Mulan" in the history of China.
In the Qing Dynasty, there was a girl named Zhu Mulan in Shuanglong Town, Xiling County, Huangzhou County, Huguang in the early Tang Dynasty. Mulan bows to Ma Shuangquan and is skillful in military strategy. /kloc-when she was 0/4 years old, she disguised as a man to join the army instead of her father and fought in the battlefield 13 years. She made many outstanding achievements and returned home in triumph. Emperor Taizong named her a general and a princess, and named her Li. This historical fact is also recorded in the Book of Old Tang Dynasty.
Liu Chongnian, the author of Thirty-two Shi Lan Banknotes, was born in the early Western Han Dynasty and his father was Wei Ying. During the period of Emperor Wu of Han Dynasty, Xiongnu invaded. In order to resist foreign invasion, Mulan disguised herself as a man to join the army instead of her father. She was brave and good at fighting, died in battle, and was hunted down by the court for her filial piety.
"Han Shu Mulan Biography" contains: Mulan, a native of Langzhong, Sichuan at the end of Yuan Dynasty, was a girl of Han nationality. Mulan lost her parents when she was very young and lived alone with her uncle Li Han.
According to the New Tang Book, Mulan, a young girl, surnamed Ren, was strong-willed and patriotic. When the country was in crisis, she ran out of money and recruited thousands of volunteers to defend the country. In order to facilitate the action, Mulan disguised herself as a man, jumped over the sword array, and led her thousands of troops to gallop on the battlefield, defeating the powerful rebels in one fell swoop and making contributions to the country. Cen Can, a famous frontier poet, once wrote a poem praising her: "If there are thousands of troops, it will take three years."
References:
Mulan (Ancient National Heroine)-Baidu Encyclopedia