A fictional country is a country that is made up, and does not exist in real life. Fictional lands appear most commonly as settings or subjects of literature or of movies.
Fictional countries appear commonly in stories of early science fiction (or scientific romance). Such countries supposedly form part of the normal Earth landscape although not located in a normal atlas. Later similar tales often took place on fictional planets.
Jonathan Swift's protagonist, Lemuel Gulliver, visited various strange places. Edgar Rice Burroughs placed adventures of Tarzan in areas in Africa 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. When Western explorers had surveyed most of the Earth's surface, this option was lost to Western culture. Thereafter fictional utopian and dystopian societies tended to spring up on other planets or in space, whether in human colonies or in alien societies originating elsewhere.
Superhero and secret agent comics and some thrillers also use fictional countries 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 Latveria and DC Comics Qurac and Bialya.
Purpose
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 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.
Writers may create an archetypal fictional "Eastern European", "Middle Eastern", "Asian", or "Latin American" country for the purposes of their story. (Relatively few fictional countries outside of alternate history have locations in North America or in Western Europe, presumably because global audiences have better familiarity with these areas' actual circumstances.)
Such countries often embody stereotypes about their regions. For example, inventors of a fictional Eastern European country will typically describe it as a former or current Soviet satellite state, or with a suspense story about a royal family; if pre-20th Century, it will likely resemble Ruritania or feature copious vampires and other supernatural phenomena. A fictional Middle Eastern state often lies somewhere on the Arabian peninsula, has substantial oil-wealth, and either a sultan or a mentally-unstable dictator as a ruler. A fictional Latin American country will typically project images of a banana republic beset by constant revolutions, military dictatorships, and coups d'état.
Modern writers usually do not try to pass off their stories as facts. However, in the early 18th century George Psalmanazar passed himself off as a prince from the island of Formosa (present-day Taiwan) and wrote a fictional description about it to convince his sponsors.
Some larcenous entrepreneurs have also invented fictional countries solely for the purpose of defrauding people. In the 1820s, Gregor MacGregor sold land in the invented country of Poyais. In modern times, the Dominion of Melchizedek and the Kingdom of EnenKio 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.
List of fictional countries
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 (see below).
Note: for inclusion in this list, the country should be notable enough to have a separate article. See List of fictional countries for a longer list.
- Aeaea: mythical island in Greek mythology, home of the sorceress Circe
- Al Amarja: Mediterranean island state in the Over the Edge roleplaying game
- Aquilonia: kingdom of the Robert E. Howard character Conan the Barbarian
- Axphain: neighbor of Graustark
- Babar's Kingdom
- Belka: a country with a fascist government from the Ace Combat game series. Possibly referring to Nazi Germany. Capital city: Dinsmark.
- Brutopia: country appearing in several Donald Duck stories, possibly referring to the Soviet Union
- Duchy of Cagliostro: country apperaring in the anime movie The Castle of Cagliostro directed by Hayao Miyazaki.
- Carbombya: fictional country mentioned in the Transformers series
- Cimmeria: homeland of the Robert E. Howard character Conan the Barbarian
- Cockaigne: legendary country described in medieval tales, where all the harshness of medieval peasant life did not exist
- New Crobuzon: a dystopian city-state created by China Miéville
- Dawsbergen: neighbor of Graustark
- Dinotopia: a hidden, utopian island from James Gurney's illustrated books
- Eastasia: from the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
- Elbonia: Eastern European country from the comic strip Dilbert
- Equatorial Kundu: African country from the television series The West Wing
- Eurasia: from the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
- Freedonia: European country from the Marx Brothers movie Duck Soup
- Genovia: European country from the movie The Princess Diaries and its sequel
- Gilead: fictional republic in the novel The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
- Gormenghast Castle: a castle of titanic proportions featured in a series of fantasy works penned by Mervyn Peake
- Grand Fenwick: a duchy in The Mouse That Roared and sequels by Leonard Wibberley
- Graustark: Eastern European country in several novels by George Barr McCutcheon
- Groland: French television channel Canal+ "presipality"
- Hoenn: a region or state in the Pokémon world
- Hy-Brazil
- Islandia: Austin Tappan Wright's imagined country in the Southern Hemisphere, about which several books, including Islandia, have been published
- Island of Vanar: the land in which Martin Bertram's novel Vanity of Vanities takes place.
- Kinakuta (Queenah-Kootah): island state from Neal Stephenson's novels Cryptonomicon and The Baroque Cycle
- Krakozhia: from the movie The Terminal
- Landover: the kingdom in the Magic Kingdom series by Terry Brooks
- Latveria: a country appearing in Marvel Comics usually ruled by Victor Von Doom, also known as Doctor Doom. Doom ruled this country as a Dictatorship which he preferred to call an "enforced monarchy". The capitial is Doomstadt.
- Laurania: the republic in Savrola (A Tale of the Revolution in Laurania) by Winston Churchill
- Lyonesse: land sunk under the waves in Welsh legend
- Matobo: African country from the movie The Interpreter. Possibly referring to Zimbabwe.
- Molvanîa: Eastern European country from a parody travel guidebook; from the same author as Phaic Tan.
- Narnia: Fictional country in the Chronicles of Narnia where animals can talk.
- Novistrana: Soviet breakaway state from the computer game The Revolution
- Nutopia: John Lennon's conceptual country
- Oceania: from the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
- Orre: a region in the games Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD, although its relation to Hoenn and Johto is unknown
- Osea country with capitalist economy. Appears in the Ace Combat game series. Possibly referring to the USA. Capital city is Oured.
- Oz: from L. Frank Baum's World of Oz novels
- Pala: fictional island utopia in Aldous Huxley's Island
- Palombia: from Spirou comics
- Phaic Tan: South East Asian country from a parody travel guidebook; from the same author as Molvania.
- Pottsylvania: from Jay Ward's The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show
- Qumar: Middle Eastern state from the television series The West Wing
- Qwghlm: a country off the northwestern coast of Britain in Neal Stephenson's fictions Cryptonomicon and The Baroque Cycle
- Ruritania: from Anthony Hope's The Prisoner of Zenda and associated works
- Saguenay, Kingdom of: a legendary land of vast riches believed to exist by early French explorers of Canada
- San Lorenzo: a tiny, rocky island nation located in the Caribbean Sea in Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle
- San Marcos: Latin American republic in Woody Allen's comedy Bananas
- San Serriffe: April Fool's Day joke
- Shangri-La: a mystical, harmonious valley, enclosed in the western end of the Himalaya in James Hilton's novel Lost Horizon
- Skull Island: from King Kong movie(s)
- Island of Sodor: between England and the Isle of Man, the setting for the Reverend Awdry's Thomas the Tank Engine railway network managed by "The Fat Controller"
- Strong Badia: from Homestar Runner cartoon series.
- Tecala: South American republic in the movie Proof of Life resembling Colombia.
- Thulahn: Himalayan country in The Business by Iain Banks
- Tropico: A Caribbean island from the video game Tropico, it is apparently somehwhere in the Gulf of Honduras.
- Utopia: from Thomas More's De Optimo Reipublicae Statu deque Nova Insula Utopia
- Vulgaria: the far-off, make-believe land in the children's story Chitty Chitty Bang Bang: The Magical Car by Ian Fleming
- Yuktobania: a country with a socialist government from Ace Combat game series. Possibly referring to the USSR. Capital city is Cinigrad from its possible namesake, Stalingrad.
- Zekistan: Fictional Asian/Middle Eastern country in "Full Spectrum Warrior." Recent history reflect Afghanistani and Iraqi recent history.
Tarzan had adventures in:
Lands in the Tintin stories by Hergé
Tintin's adventures involve the following imaginary states:
Lemuel Gulliver stumbled upon:
Lands inside the Earth
See also
Hollow Earth.
While the map of Earth in the "
Hyborian Age" differs markedly from today's, some of Howard's fictional, ancient countries obviously serve as ancestors of historical ones.
...and others.
Though
J. R. R. Tolkien indicated that he intended Arda to represent our Earth in a previous age, sometimes
few correspondences exist between modern landmasses and countries and those of Arda. The following countries, areas or regions feature on the continent Middle-earth:
- Angmar, country of the Witch-king of Angmar
- Arnor, the northern kingdom of men.
- Dol Guldur Hill of Black Magic, stronghold of the Necromancer (Sauron). From the description, probably based on Glastonbury Tor, Somerset.
- Dunland, the country of the Dunlendings
- Eriador
- Erebor, the Lonely Mountain
- Forodwaith, the Northern Waste
- Gondor
- Haradwaith, a Southron land, home to the Haradrim
- Ithilien, trans-Anduinian Gondor
- Lothlórien, greenwood land of Galadriel (also Lórinand and Laurelindórenan).
- Mirkwood an elven forest invaded by the evil of Sauron
- Mordor, mountain-girt land of evil
- Moria (also Khazad-dûm), a country or city-state beneath the Misty Mountains
- Rohan, home to the horse-lords
- The Shire, land of the Hobbits
See also the category Realms of Middle-earth.
Not on Earth
These countries do not exist on our Earth, but on another planet (or in another universe). Some are planets unto themselves.
- Abh Empire from the anime Crest of the Stars
- Alagaësia from Christopher Paolini's Inheritance Trilogy.
- Amestris from the anime Fullmetal Alchemist
- The Autarchy of Yzordderrex and the Reconciled Dominions ruled over by the Autarch in Imajica by Clive Barker
- Aveh from the Playstation Game Xenogears
- Fanelia - from the anime Escaflowne is a kingdom on the planet gaia, from whom Earth is visible as a moon.
- Derlavai - continent in an alternate universe, from Darkness.
- Fourecks desert continent in Terry Pratchett's Discworld
- Hoenn, A region in the Pokémon universe, based on the islands of Kyushu and Okinawa, Japan.
- Hyrule, a kingdom that is the chief setting of Nintendo's Legend of Zelda games.
- Johto, A region in the Pokémon universe, based on the Kansai Prefecture, Japan.
- Jurai - Planet and interstellar empire from the anime Tenchi Muyo!.
- Kanto (Pokémon), A region in the Pokémon universe, based on the Kanto Prefecture, Japan.
- Klatch empire on the Circle Sea in Terry Pratchett's Discworld
- Kislev from the Playstation Game Xenogears
- Lancre, mountain kingdom of Terry Pratchett's Discworld
- Lost Hope, faerie kingdom ruled by the man with thistle-down hair in Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
- Majipoor and other lands appear in works by Robert Silverberg
- Manticore, capital planet of the Star Kingdom of Manticore (which includes the planets Sphinx and Gryphon in the same binary star system) in the Honorverse novels and sotries of David Weber
- The Mushroom Kingdom, setting for Nintendo's Super Mario video game series.
- Orre, A region in the Pokémon universe, based on the U.S. state of Arizona.
- Tamaran, the fictional homeplanet of DC Comics superheroine Starfire and her villainous sister Blackfire
- Tlön (actually an entire world), of Jorge Luis Borges's Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius
- Trantor, capital of the Galactic Empire of Isaac Asimov's Foundation novels.
- Videssos, a fictional empire from the books of Harry Turtledove, analogous in many ways to the Byzantine Empire of our world
- Xing, from the manga, Fullmetal Alchemist.
A world created by
Raymond E. Feist.
- Human
- Elven - Elvandar
- Dwarven
- Saaur - Wiñet (a smaller continent, unknown political divisions)
Narnia Universe
A world created by
C S Lewis.
See also
List of places in The Chronicles of Narnia
Semi-fictional countries
Some lands exist uneasily on the borderlands of fiction and fact, of imagination and reality. There follows a list of places with a real counterpart, but which in
romantic/poetic imagination or
nationalist fervour or historical dimmed memory can become "other". Note that a
Latinate name may conjure up visions of (questionable) past grandeur.
In the 1991 film King Ralph, Finland (which is a republic) is portrayed as a Kingdom with a Royal Family.
Franchise nations from Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash
- The Alps
- Brickyard Station
- Caymans Plus
- Dixie Traditionals
- Meadowvale on the (river)
- Metazania
- Mr. Lee's Greater Hong Kong
- Narcolombia
- New South Africa
- Nova Sicilia
- Pickett's Plantation
- Rainbow Heights
- Reverend Wayne's Pearly Gates
- White Columns
Questionable cases
Countries from stories, myths, legends, that some people have believed to actually exist
Books
- Alberto Manguel & Gianni Guadalupi: The Dictionary of Imaginary Places ISBN 0-15-626054-9
- Excellent book; includes details of inhabitants, government structure, and sightseeing tips. Does not cover off-planet locations.
- Brian Stableford: The Dictionary of Science Fiction Places
See also
External links
Fictional countries | Lists of fictional things
Países imaginarios | Pays imaginaire | Izmišljena zemlja | Lijst van niet-bestaande locaties | 架空の国一覧 | Lista de países fictícios | Izmišljena država | Kategori:Fiktiva platser | Forveyou payis | 虚构国度