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Fictional Country

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Fictional country



 
 
A fictional country is a country
Country

Country may refer to the territory of a state, or to a smaller, or former, political division of a geographical region. In another meaning of the word, the country is also a term used to refer to rural areas....
 that is made up for fictional stories, and does not exist in real life.






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Map of Oz
1984 Fictious World Map
A fictional country is a country
Country

Country may refer to the territory of a state, or to a smaller, or former, political division of a geographical region. In another meaning of the word, the country is also a term used to refer to rural areas....
 that is made up for fictional stories, and does not exist in real life. Fictional lands appear most commonly as settings or subjects of literature
Literature

Literature is the art of written works. Literally translated, the word means "acquaintance with letters" . In Western culture the most basic written literary types include fiction and non-fiction....
, movie
Film

Film encompasses individual motion pictures, the field of film as an art form, and the film industry. Films are produced by recording images from the world with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or special effects....
s, or video games. They may also be used for technical reasons in actual reality for use in the development of specifications, such as the fictional country of Bookland
Bookland (imaginary place)

Bookland is an imaginary place created in the 1980s in order to reserve an European Article Number Country Code for books, regardless of country of origin, so that the EAN space can catalog books by ISBN rather than maintaining a redundant parallel numbering system....
, which is used to allow EAN
European Article Number

An EAN-13 barcode is a barcode standard which is a superset of the original 12-digit Universal Product Code system developed in North America....
 "country" codes 978 and 979 to be used for ISBN numbers assigned to books, and code 977 to be assigned for use for ISSN numbers on magazines and other periodicals. Also, the ISO 3166
ISO 3166

ISO 3166 is a three-part standardization published by the International Organization for Standardization , and defines codes for the names of country, dependent territory, and special areas of geographical interest, and their principal country subdivision ....
 country code "ZZ" is reserved as a fictional country code, thus no Internet
Internet

The Internet is a global network of interconnected computers, enabling users to share information along multiple channels. Typically, a computer that connects to the Internet can access information from a vast array of available server and other computers by moving information from them to the computer's local memory....
 top-level domain
Top-level domain

A top-level domain , sometimes referred to as a top-level domain name, is the last part of an domain name, that is, the group of letters that follow the final dot of any domain name....
 will ever end in ".ZZ".

Fictional countries appear commonly in stories of early science fiction
Science fiction

Science fiction is a broad genre of fiction that often involves speculations based on current or future science or technology. Science fiction is found in books, art, television, films, games, theatre, and other media....
 (or scientific romance
Scientific romance

File:Aerial house3.jpgScientific romance is a bygone name for what is now commonly known as science fiction. The term is most associated with the early science fiction of the United Kingdom, and the earliest noteworthy use of the term scientific romance is believed to have been by Charles Howard Hinton in his 1886 collection....
). Such countries supposedly form part of the normal Earth
Earth

Earth is the third planet from the Sun. Earth is the largest of the terrestrial planets in the Solar System in diameter, mass and density. It is also referred to as the World and Wiktionary:Terra.Note that by International Astronomical Union convention, the term "Terra" is used for naming extensive land masses, rather...
 landscape although not located in a normal atlas. Later similar tales often took place on fictional planets
Planets in science fiction

Planets in science fiction are fictional planets that appear in various media, especially those of the science fiction genre, as story-settings or depicted locations....
.

Jonathan Swift
Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift was an Anglo-Irish satire, essayist, political pamphleteer , poet and cleric who became Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, Dublin....
's protagonist, Lemuel Gulliver
Gulliver's Travels

Gulliver's Travels , officially Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. By Lemuel Gulliver, First a Surgeon, and then a Captain of several Ships, is a novel by Jonathan Swift that is both a satire on human nature and a parody of the "travellers' tales" literary sub-genre....
, visited various strange places. Edgar Rice Burroughs
Edgar Rice Burroughs

Edgar Rice Burroughs was an United States author, best known for his creation of the jungle hero Tarzan and the heroic Mars adventurer John Carter , although he produced works in many genres....
 placed adventures of Tarzan
Tarzán

Tarz?n was a half-hour syndicated series that aired 1991 in television?1994 in television. In this version of the show, Tarzan was portrayed as a blond environmentalist, with Jane turned into a French ecologist....
 in areas in Africa
Africa

Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km? including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area....
 that, at the time, remained mostly unknown to the West and to the East. Isolated islands with strange creatures and/or customs enjoyed great popularity in these authors' times. By the 19th century, When Western explorers had surveyed most of the Earth's surface, this option was lost to Western culture
Western culture

File:Clash of Civilizations map.pngWestern culture are terms which are used to refer to cultures of European origin. This terminology originated as a way of describing what was different about the Graeco-Roman culture and its descendants, in contrast to the older neighboring civilizations of the Middle East, which in many ways continued...
. Thereafter fictional utopia
Utopia

Utopia is a name for an ideal community or society, taken from the Utopia written in 1516 by Sir Thomas More describing a fictional island in the Atlantic Ocean, possessing a seemingly perfect social system-politics-legal system....
n and dystopia
Dystopia

A dystopia is the vision of a society that is the opposite of utopia. A dystopian society is one in which the conditions of life are suffering, characterized by human misery, poverty, oppression, violence, disease, and/or pollution....
n societies tended to spring up on other planet
Planet

A planet , as 2006 definition of planet by the International Astronomical Union , is a celestial body orbiting a star or Stellar evolution#Stellar remnants that is massive enough to be rounded by its own gravity, is not massive enough to cause thermonuclear fusion, and has cleared the neighbourhood of planetesimals....
s or in space, whether in human colonies or in alien societies originating elsewhere. Fictional countries can also be used in stories set in a distant future, with other political borders than today.

Superhero
Superhero

A superhero is a Character "of unprecedented physical prowess dedicated to act of derring-do in the public interest". Since the debut of the prototype superhero Superman in 1938, stories of superheroes?ranging from brief episodic adventures to continuing years-long sagas?have dominated American comic books and crossed over into other mass...
 and secret agent comics and some thrillers also use fictional countries on Earth as backdrops. Most of these countries exist only for a single story, a TV-series episode or an issue of a comic book. There are notable exceptions, such as Marvel Comics
Marvel Comics

Marvel Comics is an American comic book and related media company owned by Marvel Publishing, Inc., a subsidiary of Marvel Entertainment, Inc. Marvel counts among as its List of Marvel Comics characters such well-known properties as Captain America, the Fantastic Four, the Hulk , Iron Man, Spider-Man, the X-Men, and many others....
 Latveria
Latveria

Latveria is a Fictional country in the Marvel Universe.It is an isolated European country ruled by the villainous Doctor Doom, supposedly located in the Banat region....
 and DC Comics
DC Comics

DC Comics is one of the largest and most popular American comic book and related media companies, along with Marvel Comics. A subsidiary of Warner Bros....
 Qurac
Qurac

Qurac is a fictional country in the DC universe. It is a tiny Middle Eastern country on the Persian Gulf, wedged between Iraq and Kuwait. Qurac is often used when DC has need of a terrorism state in the Middle East....
 and Bialya
Bialya

Bialya is a fictional country appearing in many comic book series published by DC Comics. It was notably featured in issues of Justice League International as written by Keith Giffen and J.M....
.

Purposes

Fictional countries often deliberately resemble or even represent some real-world country or present a utopia or dystopia for commentary. Variants of the country's name sometimes make it clear what country they really have in mind. (Compare semi-fictional countries
Fictional country

A fictional country is a country that is made up for fictional stories, and does not exist in real life. Fictional lands appear most commonly as settings or subjects of literature, films, or video games....
 below.) By using a fictional country instead of a real one, authors can exercise greater freedom in creating characters, events, and settings, while at the same time presenting a vaguely familiar locale that readers can recognize. A fictional country leaves the author unburdened by the restraints of a real nation's actual history, politics, and culture, and can thus allow for greater scope in plot construction.

Regional Stereotypes

Writers may create an archetypal
Archetype

An archetype is an original model of a person, ideal example, or a prototype after which others are copied, patterned, or emulated; a symbol universally recognized by all....
 fictional "Eastern European", "Middle Eastern", "Asian", "African" or "Latin American" country for the purposes of their story.

Such countries often embody stereotype
Stereotype

A stereotype is a preconceived idea that attributes certain characteristics to all the members of class or set. The term is often used with a negative connotation when referring to an oversimplified, exaggerated, or demeaning assumption that a particular individual possesses the characteristics associated with the class due to his or her me...
s about their regions. For example, inventors of a fictional Eastern European country will typically describe it as a former or current Soviet
Soviet Union

The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was a Constitution of the Soviet Union socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991.The name is a translation of the , romanization of Russian Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik, abbreviated ????, SSSR....
 satellite state
Satellite state

Satellite state is a political term that refers to a country which is formally independent, but under heavy influence or control by another country....
, or with a suspense story about a royal family; if pre-20th century, it will likely resemble Ruritania
Ruritania

Ruritania is a fictional country in central Europe which forms the setting for three books by Anthony Hope: The Prisoner of Zenda , The Heart of Princess Osra , and Rupert of Hentzau ....
 or feature copious vampires and other supernatural
Supernatural

The term supernatural or supranatural pertains to an order of existence beyond the scientifically visible universe. Religious miracles are typically supernatural claims, as are Spell and curses, divination, the belief that there is an afterlife for the dead, and innumerable others....
 phenomena. A fictional Middle Eastern state often lies somewhere on the Arabian peninsula, has substantial oil
Petroleum

Petroleum or crude oil is a naturally occurring, flammable liquid found in rock formations in the Earth consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights, plus other organic compounds....
-wealth and problems with radical Islam and will have either a sultan
Sultan

Sultan is an Islamic honorifics, with several historical meanings. Originally it was an Arabic language abstract noun meaning "strength", "authority", or "rulership", derived from the verbal noun ???? sulah, meaning "authority" or "power"....
 or a mentally-unstable
Mental illness

A mental disorder or mental illness is a psychological or behavioral pattern that occurs in an individual and is thought to cause distress or disability that is not expected as part of normal development or culture....
 dictator
Dictator

A dictator is an authoritarian ruler who assumes sole and absolute power without hereditary ascension such as an absolute monarch. When other states call the head of state of a particular state a dictator, that state is called a dictatorship....
 as a ruler. A fictional Latin American country will typically project images of a banana republic
Banana Republic

Banana Republic is a chain of mainly United States based clothes stores founded by Mel Ziegler and Patricia Ziegler in 1978 as a travel-themed clothing company....
 beset by constant revolution
Revolution

A revolution is a fundamental social change in power or organizational structures that takes place in a relatively short period of time....
s, military dictatorship
Military dictatorship

A military dictatorship is a form of government wherein the political power resides with the military. It is similar but not identical to a stratocracy, a state ruled directly by the military....
s, and coups d'état
Coup d'état

A coup d??tat , often simply called a coup, is the sudden unconstitutional overthrow of a government by a part of the state establishment – usually the military – to replace the branch of the stricken government, either with another civil government or with a military government....
. A fictional African state will suffer from poverty, civil war and disease.

Modern writers usually do not try to pass off their stories as facts. However, in the early 18th century George Psalmanazar
George Psalmanazar

George Psalmanazar claimed to be the first Taiwan to visit Europe. For some years he convinced many in Kingdom of Great Britain, but was later revealed to be an impostor....
 passed himself off as a prince from the island of Formosa (present-day Taiwan
Taiwan

Taiwan is an island in East Asia. "Taiwan" is also commonly used to refer to the country governed by the Republic of China and to the ROC itself, which governs the island of Taiwan, Orchid Island and Green Island, Taiwan in the Pacific Ocean off the Taiwan coast, the Penghu islands in the Taiwan Strait, and Kinmen and the Matsu Islands...
) and wrote a fictional description about it to convince his sponsors.

Some larcenous entrepreneur
Entrepreneur

An entrepreneur is a person who has possession of an organization, or venture, and assumes significant accountability for the inherent risks and the outcome....
s have also invented fictional countries solely for the purpose of defrauding
Fraud

In the broadest sense, a fraud is a deception made for personal gain or to damage another individual. The specific legal definition varies by legal jurisdiction....
 people. In the 1820s, Gregor MacGregor
Gregor MacGregor

Gregor MacGregor was a Scotland soldier, adventurer and colonizer who fought in the South American struggle for independence. Upon his return to England in 1820, he claimed to be cazique of Poyais ....
 sold land in the invented country of Poyais. In modern times, the Dominion of Melchizedek
Dominion of Melchizedek

The Dominion of Melchizedek is a micronation known largely for facilitating large scale banking fraud in many parts of the world....
 and the Kingdom of EnenKio
Kingdom of EnenKio

The Kingdom of EnenKio, or "EnenKio" for short, is a small Separatism of Marshall Islands who lay claim to the United States' Unincorporated area of Wake Island....
 have been accused of this. Many varied financial scams can play out under the aegis of a fictional country, including selling passports and travel documents, and setting up fictional banks and companies with the seeming imprimatur of full government backing.

Fictional Countries in Survey Research

Fictional countries have been created for polling
Opinion poll

An opinion poll is a statistical survey of public opinion from a particular sampling . Opinion polls are usually designed to represent the opinions of a population by conducting a series of questions and then extrapolating generalities in ratio or within confidence intervals....
 purposes. When polled in April 2004, 10% of British
Great Britain

Great Britain is an island lying to the northwest of Continental Europe. It is the List of islands by area, and the largest in Europe. With a population of 58.9 million people it is List of islands by population....
 people believed that the fictional country of Luvania would soon join the European Union
European Union

The European Union is an economic and political union of 27 European Union member state, located primarily in Europe. It was established by the Treaty of Maastricht on 1 November 1993 upon the foundations of the pre-existing European Economic Community....
. Similarly, two thirds of Hungarians
Hungary

Hungary , officially in English the Republic of Hungary , is a landlocked country in the Carpathian Basin of Central Europe, bordered by Austria, Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia....
 polled in March 2007 demanded that absolutely no asylum be granted to immigrants from the fictional country of Piresa. In the 1989 General Social Survey, U.S. respondents were asked to rate the social status of people of "Wisian" background, a fictional national heritage. While a majority of respondents said they could not place the Wisians in the U.S. social hierarchy, those who did ranked their status as quite low, just slightly above Mexican-Americans. "Once you let the Wisians in, the neighborhood goes to pot," quipped Time Magazine. Fictional countries are also invented for the purpose of military training scenarios, e.g. the group of islands around Hawaii
Hawaii

File:Pahoehoe and Aa flows at Hawaii.jpgThe State of Hawaii is a U.S. state in the United States, located on an archipelago in the central Pacific Ocean southwest of the continental United States, southeast of Japan, and northeast of Australia....
 were assigned the names "Blueland" and "Orangeland" in the international maritime exercise, RIMPAC 98.

Questionable cases

Countries from stories, myths, legends, that some people have believed to actually exist.
  • Tazonia
  • Atlantis
    Atlantis

    Atlantis is a legendary island first mentioned in Plato's dialogues Timaeus and Critias .In Plato's account, Atlantis was a naval power lying "in front of the Pillars of Hercules" that conquered many parts of Western Europe and Africa 9,000 years before the time of Solon, or approximately 9600 BC....
  • Aztlán
    Aztlán

    Aztl?n is the legendary ancestral home of the Nahua peoples, one of the main cultural groups in Mesoamerica. "Aztec" is the Nahuatl word for "people from Aztlan."...
  • El Dorado
    El Dorado

    El Dorado is a legend that began with the story of a South American tribal chief who covered himself with gold dust and would dive into a lake of pure mountain water....
  • Hidalgo
    Hidalgo

    Hidalgo is a States of Mexico in central Mexico, bordered on the north by San Luis Potos?, on the east by Veracruz and Puebla, on the south by Tlaxcala and Mexico State, on the northwest by Quer?taro....
  • Lemuria
    Lemuria (continent)

    Lemuria is the name of a hypothetical "Lost lands" variously located in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Ocean Oceans. The concept's 19th century origins lie in attempts to account for discontinuities in biogeography....
  • Mu
    Mu (lost continent)

    Mu is the name of a hypothetical continent that allegedly existed in one of Earth's oceans, but disappeared at the dawn of human history.The concept and the name were proposed by 19th century traveler and writer Augustus Le Plongeon, who claimed that several ancient civilizations, such as those of Egypt and Mesoamerica, were created by refu...
     (continent)
  • Ophir
    Ophir

    Ophir is a port or region mentioned in the Bible, famous for its wealth. King Solomon is supposed to have received a cargo of gold, silver, sandalwood, precious stones, ivory, apes and peacocks from Ophir, every three years....
  • Shangri-La
    Shangri-La

    Shangri-La is a fictional place described in the 1933 novel Lost Horizon by British author James Hilton. In the book, "Shangri-La" is a mystical, harmonious valley, gently guided from a lamasery, enclosed in the western end of the Kunlun Mountains....
     or Shambhala
    Shambhala

    In Tibetan Buddhism tradition, Shambhala is a mythical monarchy hidden somewhere in Tibet. It is mentioned in various ancient texts, including the Kalachakra and the ancient texts of the Zhang Zhung culture which predated Tibetan Buddhism in western Tibet....
  • Xanadu
    Xanadu

    Xanadu, also spelled Shangdu or Shang-tu and also known as Kaiping , was the summer capital of Kublai Khan's Yuan Dynasty in China, after he decided to move the capital of the Yuan Dynasty to Dadu, present-day Beijing....
  • Zembla (See Pale Fire
    Pale Fire

    Pale Fire is a novel by Vladimir Nabokov. The novel is presented as a poem titled "Pale Fire" by John Shade, a fictional author, with an introduction and commentary by a fictional friend of his....
    )
  • Zanj
    Zanj

    Zanj was a name used by medieval Geography in medieval Islam to refer to both a certain portion of the East African coast and its inhabitants....

Books

  • Alberto Manguel & Gianni Guadalupi: The Dictionary of Imaginary Places
    The Dictionary of Imaginary Places

    The Dictionary of Imaginary Places is a book written by Alberto Manguel and Gianni Guadalupi. It takes the form of a catalogue of fantasy lands, islands, cities, and other locations from world literature—"a Baedecker or traveller's guide...a nineteenth-century gazetteer" for mental travelling....
    ,
    ISBN 0-15-626054-9
  • Brian Stableford: The Dictionary of Science Fiction Places


See also

  • List of fictional countries
    List of fictional countries

    List of fictional countries is a list of Fictional country from published works of fiction . Fictional works describe all the countries in the following list as located somewhere on the surface of the Earth as we know it — as opposed to inside the planet, on another world, or during a different "age" of the planet ....
  • List of fictional European countries
  • Fictional city
  • Fictional geography
    Fictional geography

    Fictional geography is the use of maps, text and imagery to create lands and territories to accompany works of fiction. Depending on the completeness and complexity of the work, varying media, levels of collaboration and a number of other factors, the depiction of geographical components to works of fiction can range from simple drawings of a...
  • Constructed world
  • Imaginary country
    Imaginary country

    An imaginary country or fantasy country is often important in mail art, as it issues its own artistamps.It can sometimes be difficult to distinguish between an imaginary country, which does not even attempt to make any colourable claim to sovereignty, and a micronation, which does....
  • Jennifer Government: NationStates
    Jennifer Government: NationStates

    Jennifer Government: NationStates is a multiplayer nation simulation browser game. It was created by Max Barry in late 2002, based loosely on his novel Jennifer Government....
  • List of fictional counties
    List of fictional counties

    Fictional counties are created by an author for character placement and story background....
  • List of fictional companies
    List of fictional companies

    This is a list of notable fictional corporation. Entries in this list must have received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject....
  • List of fictional planets
  • List of fictional universes
    List of fictional universes

    This is a list of fictional universes, organized by genre and by sub-genre. The term universe can be misleading, since some of them are supposed to occur in our own world, but in a fictional future or past timeline....
  • List of fictional U.S. states
    List of fictional U.S. states

    This is a list of fictional U.S. states found in various works. Fictional states are not as common as fictional cities, counties, or countries; often, a work will invent a fictional city and simply not reveal its state....
  • Proposed country
    Proposed country

    The term "proposed country" or "aspirant nation" refers to country or states that have been or still are considered to be potentially viable entities but do not currently exist as independent states....


External links