Mulan
English
Alternative forms
- Mu-lan, Mu-Lan, Mu Lan
Etymology
From Mandarin 木蘭/木兰 (Mùlán, literally “magnolia”).
Proper noun
Mulan (countable and uncountable, plural Mulans)
- A female warrior from Chinese folklore.
- Any of several places in China:
- A county of Harbin, Heilongjiang, China.
- 1969 February 13 [1969 February 12], “Harbin Mobilization Rally Hails Mao's Line”, in Daily Report: Communist China, volume I, number 30, Foreign Broadcast Information Service, sourced from Harbin Heilungkiang Provincial Service, translation of original in Mandarin, →OCLC, Communist China: Northeast Region, page G 1:
- Vice Chairman (Lin Chun-pu) of the Mulan County Revolutionary Committee, Vice Chairman (Li Te-tung) of the revolutionary committee of a commune in Payen County […] also spoke. They related their experience in grasping revolution to stimulate production, as well as in pushing up a high tide in spring farming.
- 1983, Chong-Sik Lee, Revolutionary Struggle in Manchuria: Chinese Communism and Soviet Interest, 1922-1945[1], University of California Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 222:
- Not only were the Korean Communists numerous, but their influence extended over a wide territory ranging from Chientao in the southeast to Ilan and Mulan in the southern part of Heilungkiang Province, where the Koreans had formed communities of their own.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Mulan.
- A township in Huangpi district, Hubei, China.
- A river in Fujian, China.
- 2005, “Fang Lüe, "Inscription for the Temple of Auspicious Response"”, in Victor H. Mair, Nancy S. Steinhardt, Paul R. Goldin, editors, Hawaiʻi Reader in Traditional Chinese Culture[3], Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 392:
- THE FOLLOWING TEXT commemorates the reconstruction and expansion of the main temple of a local cult in Putian District, Fujian Province, located on China’s southeast coast. The god, known by the time the inscription was composed in 1138 as the Duke of Manifest Kindness (Xianhui hou), was the proprietary deity of a prominent local kin group, the Fang of Baidu, a small village which lay about three miles east of Putian city in the hills edging the fertile flood plain of the Mulan River. Like many prominent kin groups of the area, the Fang had abandoned their original homes, which had been in the hinterland behind Hangzhou, and settled in Putian in the late 800s, a time of widespread unrest that accompanied the fall of the Tang dynasty (618-907).
- A county of Harbin, Heilongjiang, China.
Translations
warrior; locations
Further reading
- Saul B. Cohen, editor (1998), “Mulan”, in The Columbia Gazetteer of the World[4], volume 2, New York: Columbia University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 2080, column 2