User:Senix/sandbox
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utilisateur:Senix/Brouillon
- Absurdistan – sometimes used to satirically describe a country where everything goes wrong
The heat death of the universe is a cosmological subclass of the fundamental epistemological concept of twink death. It posits that the universe will evolve to a state of no thermodynamic free energy, and will therefore be unable to sustain processes that increase entropy. Heat death does not imply any particular absolute temperature; it only requires that temperature differences or other processes may no longer be exploited to perform work. In the language of physics, this is when the universe reaches thermodynamic equilibrium.
- Kuala Rokat: a far eastern country in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Seal". Described in the tape sequence at the start of the episode as "a small but strategic nation on the India-China border".[1]
- Tajinkistan: Central Asian country from Lol:-)
- Tazbekistan:[2] Central Asian republic, setting for the 2013 BBC TV comedy series Ambassadors (Also on MI5 (Spooks); Series 10, Episode 6).
- Turmezistan: An Asian country and location of a UN base featured occasionally in seasons 9 and 10 of Doctor Who.
East Asia
- Eastasia: One of the countries in the 1949 dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. The nation is stated to consist of "China and the countries south to it, the Japanese islands, and a large but fluctuating portion of Manchuria, Mongolia and Tibet."
- Glubbdubdrib: An island of sorcerers and necromancers located near Japan in Gulliver's Travels.
- Luggnagg: An island of miserable immortals located near Japan in Gulliver's Travels.
- Blefuscu: a land where all the people are tiny from the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift. Enemies of Lilliput
- Houyhnhnms Land: a land where horses rule. The animalistic human-like creatures in this land are called Yahoos. From the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift.
- Lilliput: a land where all the people are tiny from the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift
- Greater Korean Republic: A fictional empire in Homefront which initially started off as a unified Korean Republic under Kim Jong-un, who managed to reunify the Koreas peacefully. It was established in 2015, after conquering Japan, the Philippines, and all of Southeast Asia and Western America.
- Hun Chiu: A parody of Korea in Designated Survivor, which is divided into the democratic West Hun Chiu, which is a US ally and led by President Han, and the totalitarian East Hun Chiu, which is led by the tyrannical Chairman Kim.
- Bultan: A country in Designated Survivor that has a very strict legal system and is led by a Prime Minister. Relations with the US are tense due to an American youth being sentenced to a harsh punishment and the unexpected death of the Bultanese ambassador.
- Jade Empire: A titular Far Eastern nation based on Ancient China in the video game Jade Empire.
- Shangri-la: A small, peaceful kingdom in the western Himalayan Mountains featured in the 1933 novel Lost Horizon.
- Yul: A fictional kingdom in Hong Gildong jeon whose king was overthrown by the titular character, and ruled under said character's benevolent government.
- Khalnikstan: A fictional country located in south Pakistan, Created by Kymani, Khalnikstan has gone through 2 civil wars, one for the end of monarchy, And the other for facism, The first one succeeded, While the other failed, More details are still in the progress of being made today.
- Gaipajama: An Indian-based monarchy from The Adventures of Tintin.
- Helmajistan: A fictional South Asian country, based Afghanistan featured in the Japanese anime television series Full Metal Panic!.
- Jalpur: A fictional Indian kingdom in the computer-animated television series Mira, Royal Detective.
- Khura'in: A deeply-religious kingdom located in the western edge of the Far East or near Nepal in Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney − Spirit of Justice.
- Lugash: A mountain kingdom located somewhere near India from the Pink Panther films.
- Mahishmati/Magizhmathi: An ancient kingdom located in India from the Baahubali films based on the historical Mahishmati
- Manjipoor: A magical kingdom based on India where protagonist Alex Wilson is from in the Australian television series The Elephant Princess.
- Dacan: A country featured in a Ministry of Defence Education Outreach Programme workshop. In the background to the scenario presented during the workshop, Dacan is described as being an oil-rich country which was once a British colony and is currently a member of the Commonwealth; at the beginning of the scenario proper, the government of Dacan orders the arrest of the leadership of a political party that seeks independence for the country's Chiswan province. The fallout from the arrests leads to a civil war breaking out, with the resulting closure of Dacan's airports and borders meaning that foreign nationals are stranded in the country; these include British nationals who are involved with Dacan's oil industry. The unrest, combined with a humanitarian situation stemming from a poor harvest, means that Dacan is faced with a major crisis that must be responded to by those participating in the workshop.[3][4][5][6]
- Nidan Island: An island lying off the southeastern coast of Dacan which features a Royal Air Force base.[7][8]
- Mawan: A country featured in the same Ministry of Defence workshop as Dacan, described as having a land border with that country. During the scenario presented in the workshop, Mawan closes its border with Dacan in response to the unfolding crisis in that country, exacerbating the issue of foreign nationals who are stranded in Dacan.[4][7][8]
- Siando: A country featured in the same Ministry of Defence workshop as Dacan, lying off the southwestern coast of that country.[7][8]
- Tuluwan: A country featured in the same Ministry of Defence workshop as Dacan, lying to the southeast of that country. Tuluwan is described as being subject to a United Nations peacekeeping mission at the time of the scenario presented during the workshop, with the peacekeeping force consisting of British, French, and Turkish forces.[7][8]
- Southeast Asia Union (SEAUn): A superstate in Southeast Asia which served as the primary setting of the Japanese anime film Psycho-Pass: The Movie.
- Sunda: in Eric Ambler's State of Siege,[9] is similar to Indonesia but much smaller, confined to a single island. (In reality there is a Sunda Strait and many islands known collectively as the Sunda Islands, but no specific one island with the name.)
- Kumandra: The main setting for Raya and the Last Dragon where humans & dragons once lived together in harmony. It is heavily inspired by Southeast Asia countries. To conduct research, the filmmakers and the production team traveled to Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore, Indonesia and the Philippines.
- Philistinia: A fictional Philistine state lasting to the present day, from Harry Turtledove's short story Occupation Duty.
- Yewaire: A fictional Middle Eastern country from the movie Operation Red Sea.
- Beninia: African nation from Stand on Zanzibar
- Buranda: African nation from Yes Minister
- Clonka Minkus: African country created by British animator David Firth for his series The News Hasn't Happened Yet.
- Gafir: A fictional nation situated at the cross roads of the red sea, littered with desert, once under British rule until the year 1950, was created as an April Fools' Day joke as Instagram’s country of the day in 2018.
- Kangan: African nation from Anthills of the Savannah
- Hili-liland: a nation near the South Pole, founded by Ancient Romans, in the 1899 novel A Strange Discovery by Charles Romeyn Dake. It is south of Tsalal and has a more developed civilization. It consists of Hili-li City on Hili-li Island, along with some outlying island colonies.
- Leaphigh, Leaplow, Leapup, Leapdown, Leapover, Leapthrough, Leaplong, Leapshort, Leapround, Leapunder: ten independent kingdoms in the Antarctic archipelago of the Leap Islands, in the 1835 novel The Monikins by James Fenimore Cooper
- Wirrawee: In The Tomorrow series by John Marsden
- Wumpa Islands: an archipelago southeast of Australia in the Crash Bandicoot video games series.
- Hili-liland: a nation near the South Pole, founded by Ancient Romans, in the 1899 novel A Strange Discovery by Charles Romeyn Dake. It is south of Tsalal and has a more developed civilization. It consists of Hili-li City on Hili-li Island, along with some outlying island colonies.
- Leaphigh, Leaplow, Leapup, Leapdown, Leapover, Leapthrough, Leaplong, Leapshort, Leapround, Leapunder: ten independent kingdoms in the Antarctic archipelago of the Leap Islands, in the 1835 novel The Monikins by James Fenimore Cooper
Atlantic
- Birdwell Island: de facto independent island community in the Clifford the Big Red Dog series similar in geography and custom to an islands off of the east coast of the United States.
- Fröland: Island in the North Sea in the Dutch TV series Fröland - country?
- Sahrani: Atlantic island divided into the northern communist Democratic Republic of Sahrani and the oil-rich democratic monarchy of the Kingdom of South Sahrani in the video game Armed Assault
Caribbean
- Barclay Islands (the Barclays): British-dependent Caribbean archipelago off the Bahamas embroiled in conflict between Castro's Cuba and the drug trade in Frederick Forsyth's novel The Deceiver.
- Booty Island: a pirate island in the Caribbean Sea in the game Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge, part of the Tri-Island area (governed by Elaine Marley)
- Cascara: a tiny Caribbean island in the movie Water
- Cayuna: an imaginary Caribbean island modelled on Jamaica in the novels of John Hearne
- Crab Island: poor Caribbean island shaped like a crab, under the domination of Crocodile Island, in the Patrouille des Castors comics
- Crocodile Island: Caribbean island shaped like a crocodile, with a dictatorial government which seems to be heavily influenced by Tahiti, in the Patrouille des Castors comics
- Guarma: A Caribbean island east of Cuba that Arthur Morgan, Dutch, Javier, Micah, and Bill Gets stranded on in Chapter 5 of Red Dead Redemption 2
- Jambalaya Island: an ex-pirate island in the Caribbean, turned to a tourist attraction center, in Escape from Monkey Island
- Mêlée Island: a pirate island in the Caribbean Sea, from the Monkey Island games, part of the Tri-Island area (governed by Elaine Marley)
- Phatt Island: an island in the Caribbean in the game Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge
- Plunder Island: a pirate island in the Caribbean in the game The Curse of Monkey Island, part of the Tri-Island area (governed by Elaine Marley)
- Porto Santo: a tiny island nation in Latin America visited by Steve Urkel in the Family Matters episode "South of the Border" (Note: Porto Santo is a real island of Madeira Archipelago)
- Sacramento: a Caribbean Island from Érico Veríssimo's novel, O Senhor Embaixador (The Ambassador), heavily based on Cuba.
- San Lorenzo: a tiny, rocky island nation located in the Caribbean Sea in Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle
- Santa Costa: Caribbean island dictatorship from the pilot episode of Mission: Impossible. Appears to lie somewhere between Cuba and the Venezuelan coast on a map seen–briefly–at the start of the episode.
- Scabb Island: an anarchic pirate island in the Caribbean in the game Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge
- Skull Island (2): a small pirate island in the Caribbean in the game The Curse of Monkey Island
- Tropico: island nation in the Caribbean in the Tropico computer game
Indian Ocean
- Pala: island utopia in Aldous Huxley's Island
- Saint Georges Island: an island nation located somewhere in the Arabian Sea. It was the centrepoint of the episode A Victory for Democracy from the sitcom, Yes, Prime Minister.
- Skull Island: from King Kong movie(s)
- Taprobane: a country described as "about ninety percent congruent with the island of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka)" from Arthur C. Clarke's The Fountains of Paradise
Mediterranean
- Al Amarja: Mediterranean island state in the Over the Edge roleplaying game
- Barataria: island kingdom, presumably somewhere in the Mediterranean. The setting for Act II of the operetta The Gondoliers, by Gilbert and Sullivan.
- Mervo: an island principality in the Mediterranean in the novel The Prince and Betty by P. G. Wodehouse
- Mypos: island nation around the Greek isles, home of Balki from Perfect Strangers
- Pathos: neighbor of Mypos, part of a different Tri-Island Area in Perfect Strangers
- Skeptos: neighbor of Mypos, part of a different Tri-Island Area in Perfect Strangers
Pacific
- Baki: homeland of Omio in Madeleine L'Engle's writing, a small Pacific island nation once dominated by British
- Balnibarbi: land containing the metropolis called Lagado from the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift
- Bensalem: utopian island nation located somewhere off the Western coast of the continent of America from Francis Bacon's The New Atlantis
- Caspak: a huge island country located in the South seas somewhere between South America and Australia from Edgar Rice Burroughs' The Land That Time Forgot and its sequels
- Eleutheria: an island nation in the Southwest Pacific Ocean from the Eleutheria Model Parliament role playing game.
- Glubbdubdrib: an island governed by a tribe of magicians. About one third the size of the Isle of Wight. From the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift.
- Kinakuta (Queenah-Kootah): island state from Neal Stephenson's novels Cryptonomicon and The Baroque Cycle
- Luggnagg: an island state about 100 leagues SE from Japan. From the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift.
- Nuku'la Atoll: An archipelago in the South Pacific and former colony of the French colonial empire featured in San Sombrèro: A Land of Carnivals, Cocktails and Coups.[10]
- Patusan: an island nation somewhere in the South China Sea in the movie Surf Ninjas as well as in the film The Last Electric Knight and the TV series Sidekicks. Also mentioned in Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad. ????
- Taka-Tuka-Land: Astrid Lindgren's book about Pippi Longstocking mentions a travel to this country in the third book of the series. Pippi's father was a king there in the South Sea.
- Toga Toga Islands: South Pacific island nation featured on The A-Team
- Vanutu: a tiny South Pacific nation consisting of four atolls from the novel State of Fear by Michael Crichton
Other or uncertain
- Aquabania: an idyllic island, the supposed home of The Aquabats
- Cacklogallinia: a kingdom off the coast of South America, from A Voyage to Cacklogallinia by Captain Samuel Brunt
- Cap'D'Far: a small island country from an episode of Scarecrow and Mrs. King whose only export was fish bones
- Dinotopia: a hidden, utopian island from James Gurney's illustrated books
- Flyspeck Island: home of Gunk in the comic strip Curtis
- Huella Islands: islands off the coast of Cayenne, mentioned in the Hardy Boys books. They are ruled by dictator Juan Posada and their "spy chief" is named Bedoya. The adjective is Huellan.
- Lucre Island: a pirate island in the game, Escape from Monkey Island
- Malevelosia: an island kingdom filled with supervillains in Justice Squad
- Mardi archipelago: from Herman Melville's Mardi and a Voyage Thither
- Mesa de Oro: unstable Latin American island in the Three Young Investigators series. (The name means "golden table" in Spanish.)
Transcontinental
- Holy Britannian Empire: A country based in North America which controls the whole Americas, Japan, New Zealand, and parts of the Middle East. From the Japanese anime franchise Code Geass
- Eurasia: from the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
- Oceania: from the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
- Agraria: Eastern country in the film You Know What Sailors Are
- Anemia: a country in the film Hot Stuff. Bears the same name as the medical condition.
- Angria: imaginary country from the poems of the Brontë sisters.
- Arcacia: mythical kingdom in the film A Royal Family
- Ardistan: from the novel Ardistan and Dschinnistan by Karl Friedrich May
- Aslan: from anime Area 88. Sometimes also transliterated Asran.
- Auspasia: the noisiest and most talkative nation in the world; appears in Georges Duhamel's Lettres d'Auspasie and La dernier voyage de Candide
- Bahavia: country where Meena Paroom's father is the ambassador in the Disney Channel series, "Cory In The House".
- Bahkan: a nation threatened by the Federated Peoples' Republic in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Fool's Gold"
- Borginia: a republic from the videogame Dino Crisis. It also appears in Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney and Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth, in which it is stated as being in northern Europe.
- Bregna: a centralized scientific planned state from the animated series Aeon Flux
- Bukistan: an Islamic country in the Cary Grant movie Dream Wife. Later referred to in I dream of Jeannie.
- Calia: from Modesty Blaise episode "The Jericho Caper"
- Candover: medieval country in the novel Rats and Gargoyles by Mary Gentle
- Celama, Kingdom of: mythical land where inhabitants fight for survival as a challenge to their dignity in novels El reino de Celama by Luis Mateo Díez
- Chekia: mythical kingdom in the film The Only Thing
- Chernarus: post-soviet Republic from the game DayZ and ArmA 2
- Coronia: a kingdom from the film King, Queen and Joker
- Danu: setting of Timothy Mo's 1991 novel The Redundancy of Courage, based on East Timor
- Derkaderkastan: from the film Team America: World Police
- Dschinnistan (Djinnistan): in the novel Ardistan and Dschinnistan by Karl Friedrich May
- Eastern Coalition of Nations: in Star Trek: First Contact, the Eastern Coalition of Nations (ECON) was one of the major powers involved in World War III
- Ecuarico: homeland of an exiled dictator in an episode of Gilligan's Island
- Eretz: home of a visiting prime minister, Salka Palmir, in an episode of The Six Million Dollar Man ('Eretz' is Hebrew for 'land')
- Far Eastern Republic: a nation from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Commandante"
- Federated Peoples' Republic: a nation hostile toward the Kingdom of Bahkan in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Fool's Gold". Possibly the same as the Federated People's Republic: from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Time Bomb".
- Filemonia: one of the countries resulting of the 1991 collapse of USSR as told in Mortadelo y Filemón: El 35 Aniversario
- Findas: country sunk under the waves in The Book of Conquests by Jim Fitzpatrick
- Forest Kingdom: from Simon Green's Blue Moon Rising. Ruled by King John.
- Freiland: from Freiland by Theodor Hertzka
- Gavel: the republic in the animated picture Ghost in the Shell
- Gnubia: from television series MacGyver
- Gondour: an ideal republic imagined by Mark Twain in his short story The Curious Republic of Gondour.
- Guamania: from the French-Canadian series Dans une Galaxie près de chez vous
- Guravia: a country where the first robot president was elected in the Astro Boy animated series
- Gzbfernigambia: a kingdom from the film Such a Little Queen
- Herland: in the novel Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
- Hetland: a kingdom from the film Such a Little Queen
- Hillsdown: duchy in Simon Green's Blue Moon Rising. Ruled by Duke Alaric.
- Inguanaguay: Fictional country in Disney cartoon The Replacements.
- Kabulstan: a xenophobic third world military dictatorship in an episode of MacGyver
- Kafaristan: from William Rose Benét's children's book The Flying King of Kurio
- Kajsa (Casha, Kasha): a sultanate, neighbor to Basenji from the sitcom I Dream of Jeannie
- Kamburu: totalitarian desert nation secretly ruled by a fugitive alien, based on Iraq or Libya, in the comic book mini-series JLA: Destiny
- Kampong: from the novel The Thirteen-Gun Salute by Patrick O'Brian
- Kazahrus: an absolute monarchy known for Human Rights violations from the third season of Blindspot
- Kekistan: based on the word "Kek", a variant of the acronym “LOL” (laugh out loud).
- Klopstockia: from the W. C. Fields film Million Dollar Legs
- Kreplakistan: Soviet Republic from the Austin Powers films, likely based on the real Karakalpak Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, now the Republic of Karakalpakstan, and "kreplach" – Eastern European Jewish dish consisting of meat-filled dumplings.
- Kumrahn: see Qumran
- Kumor:The diaries of Kumor
- Kurio: from William Rose Benét's children's book The Flying King of Kurio
- Khurland: mythical kingdom in the film A Royal Family (but see Courland)
- Lands Beyond: setting in Norton Juster's The Phantom Tollbooth
- Libria: a totalitarian state in the movie Equilibrium
- Litzenburg: neutral country in the Border Zone computer game
- Lividia: mythical kingdom in the film Greater Than a Crown
- Loompaland: a "terrible" country from Roald Dahl's 1964 children's book, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. It is inhabited by dwarves called Oompa Loompas and is full of extremely dangerous creatures called Snozzwangers, Hornswogglers, Vermicious Knids, and wicked Whangdoodles.
- Low countries: from Simon Green's Beyond the Blue Moon. Capital city: Haven.
- Lukano: a small independent country facing the Mediterranean Sea from Time Crisis 3 video game. It neighbors Astigos, a small, peaceful island in the Mediterranean Sea.
- Macaria: utopian country from A Description of the Famous Kingdom of Macaria (1641), published by Samuel Hartlib, now attributed to Gabriel Plattes
- Malicuria: a monarchy run by Emperor Aleister, while Princess Mallory is his daughter, from the episode "April's Fool" of the 1987-1996 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon TV series. The episode is set on the Malicurian embassy in the United States.[11]
- Mandavia: a kingdom in the film Speed King
- Marnsburg: a member of the United Nations hostile to the United States in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Imitation"
- Monica: an anarchist state from the animated series Aeon Flux
- Morevana: a kingdom in which fat is prized in the film The Slim Princess
- Moribundia: from Patrick Hamilton's Impromptu in Moribundia
- Mortadelonia: one of the countries resulting of the 1991 collapse of USSR as told in Mortadelo y Filemón: El 35 Aniversario
- Isle of Naboombu: kingdom of anthropomorphic animals in the Disney film Bedknobs and Broomsticks
- New Swissland: Nation southwest of Greenland in the Captain Underpants series. Every person born in this country is given a ridiculous name at birth.
- Nivia: from the Photon TV series
- Nordenija: republic created by British artist Chris Shade
- Norgborg: Small nation located within the Arctic Circle, featured in San Sombrèro: A Land of Carnivals, Cocktails and Coups.[10]
- Nouvelle Atlantide or New Atlantis: a huge, rich, powerful, and very far from peaceful nation in Anatole France's Penguin Island. Similar to the United States.
- Opperland: a fictitious country based on the Netherlands where the Dutch language is treated entertainingly, [1]
- Oriosa: Tarrant Hawkin's home country in Michael A. Stackpole's series The Dragon Crown War Cycle.
- Perusalem: land ruled by The Inca of Perusalem in the short satiric play by George Bernard Shaw
- Petoria: from the "E. Peterbus Unum" episode of Family Guy
- Pianostan: a country once visited by Inspector Gadget where its people remain happy so long as their King remains miserable
- Pomerania: a nation in the film Anchors Aweigh. It has a navy which accepts non-Pomeranians. Not to be confused with the real Pomerania, formerly a region of Prussia.
- Radiata: Home country in Radiata Stories
- Riallaro archipelago: from Godfrey Sweven's Riallaro, the Archipelago of Exiles
- San Gordio: a kingdom in the film The Cowboy Prince
- Tanah Masa: from Karel Čapek's War with the Newts
- Tawaki: from the film Man of the Moment
- Tirania (also Republic of Tirania): country governed by dictator Bruteztrausen; Spanish secret agents Mortadelo and Filemón helped depose Bruteztrausen and president Rompetechen was then elected.
- Tontecarlo: a gambler's paradise in Superlópez comic-books until Superlópez's tourism visit. Clearly based on Monte Carlo; "Tonte" refers to Spanish word tonto (=fool).
- Trobokistan: former Soviet satellite nation in Totally Spies! TV series
- Ünderland: a small duchy bordering Michigan, from The Venture Bros. animated TV series. Formerly ruled by supervillain Baron Ünderbheit, now a democracy under the presidency of Girl Hitler.
- Unistat: analogue of the United States in the Schrödinger's Cat trilogy of Robert Anton Wilson
- The United States of Anatidae: Duckworld equivalent of the United States in the film Howard the Duck.
- Valaria: a kingdom in the film The Colonel of the Red Hussars
- Versovia: dictatorship from Australian children's miniseries Eugenie Sandler P.I. from ABC Kids
- Volsinia: the country with unknown location in Frritt-Flacc by Jules Verne
Pun-based names
- Anvillania: a country where the Warner Brothers and Sisters were declared royalty in Animaniacs
- Applesauce Lorraine: a country, stated to be bordered by France and Baja California, from Rocky and Bullwinkle's epic "The Three Moosketeers". It is a parody of the region of Alsace-Lorraine.
- Backhairistan: from The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius animated TV series
- Brainania: from the animated series Pinky and the Brain
- Brutopia: country appearing in several Donald Duck stories, possibly referring to the Soviet Union
- Contraria: from the series WordGirl is the homeland of Nocan the Contrarian.
- Double Crossia: a country mentioned in the Three Stooges short You Nazty Spy
- Elbonia: Eastern European country from the comic strip Dilbert
- Jumbostan and Unsteadystan: from the world of Donald Duck
- Lower Slobbovia: ice-covered wasteland from the comic strip Li'l Abner
- North Elbonia: A Communist neighbour of Elbonia (see above); loosely based on North Korea.
- San Glucos: from The Simpsons episode "Sweets and Sour Marge"
- Yurp: a poor country depicted in I Am Weasel animated TV series (pun on "Europe")
- Zombikistan: possibly Eastern European country mentioned in MadWorld as being the original location of Mad Castle and whose major export is apparently zombies.
- Alanbrooke: A fictionalized Ireland in Barbie in Rock 'N Royals.
- Al-Alemand: Islamic state consisting of the former Germany and the Low Countries. From the alternate history book The Years of Rice and Salt, by Kim Stanley Robinson.
- Alfaine: Appeared in Jules Lemaitre's Prince Hermann Regent (1893).
- Alpenstein: European principality and former ally of Nazi Germany featured in San Sombrèro: A Land of Carnivals, Cocktails and Coups.[12]
- Alpine Emirates: Islamic states in the Bavarian Alps in the alternate history book The Years of Rice and Salt, by Kim Stanley Robinson.
- Alsander: Southern European state in James Elroy Flecker's King of Alsander (1914).
- Altis and Stratis: an insular Mediterranean country in ARMA 3 located between Italy and Greece, and modelled after the real-life Greek Aegean islands of Lemnos (Altis) and Agios Efstratios (Stratis).[13]
- Alvonia: European kingdom from the film My Pal, the King (1932).
- Anatruria: Balkanic kingdom in the Bernie Rhodenbarr novel The Burglar Who Thought He Was Bogart.
- Andalasia: The cartoon kingdom in Enchanted where Giselle, Prince Edward, Queen Narissa, Nathaniel and Pip live.[14]
- Apollonia: An Italian-based kingdom in Barbie as the Island Princess.
- Arendelle: small Nordic kingdom based on real-life Norway in the 2013 film Frozen.[15]
- Ariana: A country to the south of Atropia.[16][17]
- Arnovia: Small country between Switzerland, the German Empire, and Austria-Hungary; year 1911. Book Peril in Paris from the series Taylor & Rose: Secret Agents, written by Katherine Woodfine.
- Atropia: A fictional pro-Western dictatorship used for US and NATO exercises; exercise maps depict the country's borders as loosely corresponding to those of Azerbaijan.[16][17]
- Averna: A fictional oil-rich principality on the Adriatic Sea in the novel, Sweet Danger (1933) by Margery Allingham.
- Axphain: Neighbor of Graustark.
B
- Bacteria: Thinly disguised version of Fascist Italy from the film The Great Dictator. Bears the same name as the microorganism.
- Balinderry: Strategically placed quasi-Irish nation that is crucial to a defence radar system, but has an IRA-type insurgency, in an episode of The Six Million Dollar Man.
- Balkistan: Appeared in Allen Upward's The Prince of Balkistan (1895).
- Baltish, A fictional country from a Lithuanian TV show of the same name.
- Bandrika (sometimes spelled Vandreka): Eastern European Alpine country, the setting of the first part of the film The Lady Vanishes. The language spoken in this country is an amalgamation of several European languages.
- Barataria, Fictional island nation, presumably in the Mediterranean, promised by Don Quixote to Sancho Panza in the novel The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha. Setting for part of Gilbert and Sullivan's The Gondoliers, it becomes a Republican Monarchy during the course of the operetta.
- Baronia: the country from which Prince Paul comes in The Secret Series by Enid Blyton
- Barscheit: a principality in The Princess Elopes (1905), a "Ruritanian" romance by Harold MacGrath.
- Bartovia: a European Country in The Simpsons; in the episode "The Italian Bob" Sideshow Bob was trying to decide on a new place to live, he took a globe, spun it, and stabbed it with a knife, so as to get a random country. After a couple of more unpleasant options, the knife stabs Bartovia, to which Bob says, "Now cut that out."
- Belgardia, an impoverished European Kingdom in King Kelly of the U.S.A.
- Belgica: A monarchy in Western Europe based on Belgium in Strike Witches.
- Belsornia: A country created by Elinor Brent-Dyer and home to a number of characters who appear in the Chalet School series
- Bessonia: A "small Latin state" bordering Switzerland in Tiny Carteret (1930) by Sapper.
- Blitva: A state in northeastern Europe, ruled by a dictator; in the novel Banket u Blitvi (Banquet in Blitva, 1939) by Croatian novelist Miroslav Krleža. Blitva is the Croatian word for chard.
- Borduria: A totalitarian state from the comics series The Adventures of Tintin, located in the Balkans. Its first appearance is in King Ottokar's Sceptre (1938).
- Borginia: Northern-European country featured in the Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney and Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth video games.
- Borostyria: A kingdom in the 1933 Arsène Lupin novel The Woman with Two Smiles.
- Borovia: Central-European country from The Big Knights TV programme (1999).
- Borobia is also a communist Eastern European country in the G.I. Joe comics by Marvel Comics, starting from issue #61 (1987).
- Borsovia: A kingdom in Eastern Europe that featured in Gordon Murray's BBC Television children's puppet series A Rubovian Legend, 1955–63.
- Braslavia: A fictional country, a dictatorship, bordering Austria in La Patrouille des Castors episodes 13 La Courone Cachée and 14 Le Chaudron du Diable.
- Bratislavia: A fictional country mentioned in Count Duckula.
- Bratislava, portrayed as a country in The Slipper and the Rose.
- Bretzelburg: central European dictatorship from Spirou et Fantasio comics.
- Commonwealth of Britannia: A country in northwestern Europe based on the United kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in Strike Witches.
- Brogavia: A Nazi-occupied Balkan nation featured in Commando Comics.
- Brungaria: An eastern European country politically opposed to the United States and a principal source of antagonists in the Tom Swift Jr. book series.
- Buronia: A European monarchy in the North Sea next to the United Kingdom featured in Prince of Peoria
C
- Cagliostro: a small European kingdom in the animated film The Castle of Cagliostro.
- Caledonia: a European sovereign kingdom country in Scandal episode Heavy is the Head, whose current monarch is the Queen Isabel of Caledonia and later, her son, Prince Richard of Caledonia. It is based in the United Kingdom.[18]
- Carovia: small European kingdom from the film Trouble for Two.
- Carpania: European kingdom in the film The Great Race.
- Carpathia: Kingdom in central Europe from the play The Sleeping Prince by Terence Rattigan and the subsequent film The Prince and the Showgirl and musical The Girl Who Came to Supper
- Chocovakia: European republic setting for the #0-issue of the Flemish Spike and Suzy-series, borders Belgium, named based on Czechoslovakia.
- Codophia: a European country featured in Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth. It was divided into Allebahst and Babahl during the events of the game.
- Concordia: a small country only a few miles across somewhere in Europe in the play Romanoff and Juliet and its film adaptation.
- Cordina: locale in Nora Roberts' romance novels, especially the Cordina's Royal Family series.
- Cordovia: Fictional war torn country in the present day Russian province of Dagestan. Mentioned in Season 2 of BoJack Horseman.
- Cordonia: Fictional country of the Prince who stays at Grey House as mentioned in ’The Good Witch’ TV Show. It is also mentioned in the Pixelberry Studios game Choices.
D
- Dacia: A country based on the Kingdom of Romania in Strike Witches.
- Dalmatia: a tiny Balkan nation whose royal family were exiled to Great Britain after a communist revolution there. Dalmatia did really exist, although it had not had its own king since the Middle Ages. The royal family is fictitious, as is the hymn. Seen in the TV series You Rang, M'Lord?.
- Darklonia: Country ruled by Destro's cousin, Darklon, in G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero.
- Dawsbergen: neighbor of Graustark.
- Doppelkinn: neighboring principality to Barscheit (Harold MacGrath, The Princess Elopes, 1905).
- Dor: The kingdom that The Tale of Despereaux takes place in.
- Drackenberg: a European country from Lloyd Alexander's The Drackenberg Adventure.
- Drasuvania (ドラスベニア Dorasubenia) is a fictional Eastern Europe country in the world of 11eyes. It is the home country of Verard and Yukiko Hirohara. It lies at the border between Europe and Asia.
- Dreisenburg: A tiny Germanic nation featured in the pilot of The Secret Service.
- Drusselstein: a fictional Germanic kingdom in Phineas and Ferb. It is the home country of Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz.
- Ducklovia: a country bordering Serbia in Count Duckula
- Dulcinea: a kingdom in Barbie as the Princess and the Pauper, where King Dominick is from.
- Dunwyn: a kingdom in the TV series Adventures of the Gummi Bears.
E
- East European Republic: an anti-American power from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Submarine". Possibly the same as the East European People's Republic (EEPR) from "The Party" and the European People's Republic from "Invasion".
- Ehrenstein, of which the capital is Dreiberg: principality of Princess Hildegarde in Harold MacGrath, The Goose Girl (1909, #8 US best seller).
- Eldia: a Germanic island nation from the manga/anime series Attack on Titan.
- Enchancia: The main kingdom in Sofia the First.[19]
- England, England: The Isle of Wight becomes its own country and an England-themed Theme Park in the novel England, England.
- Essenheim: appeared in John Rowe Townsend's A Foreign Affair (1982).
- Estrovia: European kingdom in the film A King in New York.
- Esturia: dictatorship in Eastern Europe in La Patrouille des Castors episode 5 La Bouteille à la Mer.
- Euphrania: A tiny kingdom in the film The Slipper and the Rose.
- Eurasia: the fictional superstate in George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four formed from Europe and the former Soviet Union.
- Euroslavia: Eastern European country that comprises most of Europe; home to a supervillain in the cartoon The Ripping Friends.
- Evallonia: Central European country in the novels of John Buchan.
- Evarchia: Eastern European country from Brigid Brophy's Palace Without Chairs.
F
- Fairytopia: A kingdom in Barbie: Fairytopia and its sequels and spinoffs, neighbored by Flutterfield (based on Spain) and Shimmervale (based on Portugal).
- Faricia: A federal Western European communist state in the Ninja Gaiden series.
- Fasilica: appeared in an early 1914 serial by Rex Stout, of later Nero Wolfe fame, reprinted in the 1990s as A Prize for Princes.
- Flavonia: appeared in Violet Needham's Betrayer (1950) and other novels by the author.
- Florin: one of the fictional principalities in William Goldman's novel The Princess Bride.
- Floravia: A European kingdom in Barbie: Princess Adventure.
- Franistan: from the I Love Lucy episode 'The Publicity Agent' in which Lucy pretends to be the "Maharincess of Franistan", royalty from a faraway land who is a big fan of Ricky's, in order to get Ricky some publicity.
- Freedonia: From the Marx Brothers' film Duck Soup. It is ruled by Rufus T. Firefly (Groucho Marx).
- Franchia: A strange country in Welcome to Night Vale, described as "a land of arches'. It is a country with no residents at all, with the possible exception of a great beast, just hundreds of square miles of ancient stone arches, intertwined and leaning against each other, with the wind hollowing through the narrow alleyways.
- Federation of the Communes of France: A syndicalist nation in western Europe featured in the HOI4 mod, Kaiserreich: Legacy of the Weltkrieg.
- Frobnia: Communist Eastern Bloc nation in Central Europe from Infocom's interactive fiction game Border Zone, bordering neutral Litzenburg.
G
- Gallowmere: A fictional kingdom in the MediEvil video game series.
- Gantha: Southern European state in James Elroy Flecker's King of Alsander (1914).
- Genovia: From The Princess Diaries novel series and film adaptations (The Princess Diaries and The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement). In the novels, it is a principality between Italy and France; in the film it is between Spain and France. Either way, it is based on Monaco, and to a lesser extent on Andorra.
- Gerolstein a fictional Grand Duchy in Jacques Offenbach's comic opera La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein. The realm also appears in Robert Louis Stevenson's Prince Otto and Eugène Sue's The Mysteries of Paris
- Glenraven: a tiny country in the Alps, no bigger than Liechtenstein, squeezed into the border between France and Italy in Glenraven series by Marion Zimmer Bradley.
- Glottenberg: kingdom in Sport Royal and The Heart of Princess Osra by Anthony Hope
- Gonobutz: Bob de Moor's Barelli comics.
- Granbretan: a future evil version of Great Britain where the noble classes hide behind metal masks of various totem animals, created by Michael Moorcock in his The History of the Runestaff books.
- 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.
- Greenvale: the kingdom in the video game Overlord: Dark Legend is set.
- Graznavia: an Eastern European republic ravaged by civil war in This War of Mine, a video game by 11 bit studios.
- Grenyarnia: a secret European country only rich people know about, alluded to by Jerry Seinfeld as a highly exclusive vacationing destination in the 30 Rock episode SeinfeldVision.[20]
- Grulovia: a fictional Eastern European country from the Psychonauts game series.
- Grünewald: an imaginary Germanic state where the novel Prince Otto (1885) by Robert Louis Stevenson is set.
- Guilder: one of the fictional principalities in William Goldman's The Princess Bride.
- Gyenorvya: A fictional small European country hosting EuropeVision, (a parody of EuroVision) in the Netflix Series Q-Force.
H
- Havária: a Eastern European country in György Moldova's short story Az új császár új ruhája (2018).
- Hav: a European city-state in Jan Morris's novel Last Letters from Hav. Crimea-like in location.
- Hedestad: A Swedish island in Stieg Larsson's novel Män som hatar kvinnor (2005).
- Helvetia: A country in Central Europe based on Switzerland in Strike Witches.
- Herzoslovakia: a small Balkan state in Agatha Christie's novel The Secret of Chimneys (1925) and in "The Stymphalean Birds" from the novel The Labours of Hercules (1947).
- Hohenphalia: home principality of Princess Hildegarde in Harold MacGrath's Arms and the Woman (1899).
- Hohenwald: home principality of the heroine in Richard Harding Davis, The Princess Aline (1895).
- Holstenwall: a shadowy village of twisted buildings and spiraling streets in The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920).
- Principality of Hazelrink: homeland of the princess Charlotte Hazelrink in the Anime Princess Lover!
I
- Illyria: Eastern European country featured in the play Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare & subsequently in Les Mains Sales (Dirty Hands) by Jean-Paul Sartre. Illyria is also an ancient Greek & Roman name for a part of the Balkans. Illyria is again used as a fictional kingdom in the film, Secret Society of Second-Born Royals
- Irania: small European kingdom from the film Trouble for Two.
- Socialist Republic of Italy: A syndicalist state in Southern Europe featured in the HOI4 mod, Kaiserreich: Legacy of the Weltkrieg.
- Ithuvania: Eastern European country used as an experiment, featured in The Far Side cartoon books.
- Ixania: a small Balkan country of little global importance in Eric Ambler's The Dark Frontier.
- Ix: officially the Kingdom of Ix is a Kingdom that borders Oz. It is the titular nation in Queen Zixi of Ix.
J
- Jugendheit: kingdom of King Frederick in Harold MacGrath's The Goose Girl (1909, #8 US best seller) Note that the name is a kind of pig-German literally meaning "youthness".
K
- Kalos: a region based on France in Pokémon X and Y.
- Karathia: Slavic monarchy in the Three Investigators series.
- Karetsefia: Eastern European country in Elizabeth Kay's Beware of Men with Moustaches.
- Karistan: Central European country in the Polish-American film Legend of the White Horse.
- Karlova: European kingdom in Edgar Rice Burroughs's The Rider (1918).
- Karlsberg: principality of the hero of Sigmund Romberg's "The Student Prince" (1924 Broadway musical; 1954 film with Mario Lanza).
- Kemalia: A country used in US and NATO exercises that has its borders loosely correspond to those of Turkey.[16]
- Klopstokia: Central European country from Million Dollar Legs film by Edward F. Cline.
- Klugenstein: Germanic dukedom from A Medieval Romance (1870 short story) by Mark Twain.
- Kochenia: A European country in the Korean drama Blood.
- Krasnia: Ivor Novello's Glamorous Night, Stage play, 1935.
- Krastava: small Eastern European country located between Poland and Czechoslovakia from the novel The Mourner by Richard Stark.
- Kravonia: Eastern European country from the novel Sophy of Kravonia by Anthony Hope and the subsequent film.
- Krayia: realm of Queen Nadya in Noël Coward's, The Queen Was in the Parlour (play, 1922).
L
- Laevatia: Balkan state in Nevil Shute's 1938 novel Ruined City.
- Lanconia: Eastern European country referenced in Jude Deveraux's romance novels.
- Lapathia: appeared in the Three Investigators series (created by Robert Arthur, Jr.) in the book The Mystery of the Flaming Footprints (1971).
- Latkovia: an Eastern nation featured in the Amalgam Comics crossover between Marvel Comics and DC Comics.
- Latvislavia: fictional European country in Donald Duck. Known of its national football team.
- Laurentia: kingdom in the stage musical King's Rhapsody and subsequent film.
- Letzenstein: a tiny state, presumably based on Liechtenstein, which is featured in Meriol Trevor's "Letzenstein Chronicles" series of books.
- Lichenstamp: a country in one episode of the comedy series The Suite Life on Deck.
- Liechtenhaus: a small European principality featured in the Italian film Piccolo grande amore by Carlo Vanzina (1993).
- Lipays: A country in the Bay of Biscay.
- Lissenberg: appeared in Jane Aiken Hodge's Leading Lady (1990).
- Livonia: from the video game ARMA 3: Contact and DayZ: Livonia, it is a Polish-speaking Baltic country that is a member of NATO and borders four other countries, including Russia through Kaliningrad, and Belarus.[21]
- Losania is a small country in Eastern Europe by World's End Harem.
- Lucrania: pro-Nazi country bordering Germany, France and Switzerland in Biggles – Secret Agent by W. E. Johns.
- Lutha: a small Balkan kingdom from the novel The Mad King by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
- L'Manberg: a small unrecognised country based on the United Kingdom from the YouTube series Dream SMP.
M
- Madelvia: a small European kingdom that appears in the Freeform film My Christmas Prince.
- Magyaristan: Islamic state in the former Hungary. From the alternate history book The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson.
- Malaria: a kingdom in the animated film Igor.
- Maldavia: principality in Eastern Europe that is mentioned by Muffy in the Arthur season 10 episode "Family Fortune".
- Mandorra: European kingdom in the U.S. motion picture, The Brigand.
- Mandrika: Mountainous European country on Alfred Hitchcock's film The Lady Vanishes (1938).
- Margoth: European kingdom in Edgar Rice Burroughs's The Rider.
- Marisi: appears in Rex Stout's A Prize for Princes ("Ruritanian romance" set in Fasilica and Marisi; serialized in 1914 and reprinted as a book in the 1990s; author is the later creator of the Nero Wolfe mystery series).
- Markovia: European monarchy in the DC Universe.
- Marshovia (Marsovia, Makovnia): small Eastern European kingdom most likely located somewhere near Transylvania in the operetta The Merry Widow.
- Medici: a Mediterranean country and setting of Just Cause 3
- Medioka: Ruritania type of mid-European country presented in the Mickey Mouse comic strip story "The Monarch of Medioka" (1937–38).
- Mendorra: principality located near Germany from the American soap opera, One Life to Live.
- Mervo: island principality in The Prince and Betty by P. G. Wodehouse
- Messina: principality in Richard Harding Davis's, The King's Jackal (1891).
- Minaria: Alternative name for Limaria.[16]
- Misty Isles: an island nation in the Mediterranean in Harold Foster's Prince Valiant.
- Mittenheim: grand duchy in The Heart of Princess Osra by Anthony Hope
- Mixo-Lydia: Balkan country in the novels of Angela Thirkell; has a long-standing enmity with neighbouring Slavo-Lydia.
- Moldavia: Eastern European country from the first episode of Batman and later Dynasty
- Moldovakia: Eastern European country in Recess best known for its spies and its luge team.
- Molvanîa: Eastern European country from a parody travel guidebook; from the same authors as Phaic Tăn and San Sombrèro.
- Monaco: Western European country and the main setting of the second season of Yakitate!! Japan anime. Unlike the real life Monaco, the Monaco from the anime series is not a principality and is ruled by a King.
- Monte Lucio: state ruled by a count in Violet Needham’s novel, The Changeling of Monte Lucio and also mentioned in some of her other works.
- Montenaro: European country featured in The Princess Switch: Switched Again.
- Montland: an English-speaking constitutional monarchy in the Dead or Alive video game series. It is a home country of Amy and Luna.
- Moronica (alternatively, Moronika): parody of Nazi Germany from the Three Stooges short You Nazty Spy and its sequel I'll Never Heil Again, with "Moe Hailstone" as its dictator. A nation called Moronica also appeared in 2010's Bikini Jones and the Temple of Eros.
- Morvania: An Eastern European country in Jem, ruled by Queen (formerly Princess) Adriana Slododac.
- Morvania (2): the Eastern European setting of Andre Norton's first published novel, Ruritanian romance The Prince Commands (1934). Though tiny, it seems to have been important due to strategic location; on his way there, the title character had to attend state occasions in London, Paris, and Berlin.
- Muravia: Republic in the Balkans with capital Stefania in Dashiell Hammett's story This King Business, featuring The Continental Op.
- Mypos: Native home of Balki Bartokomous on Perfect Strangers.
N
- Nafrece: a country in Birdie Wing: Golf Girls' Story.
- Narcissia: A fictional version of Scotland ruled by Princess Portia in Barbie: Princess Charm School.
- Neustria: A French-speaking 14th-century western European kingdom in Leslie Barringer's Neustria cycle of historical fantasy. An actual Neustria existed from about the 6th to the 10th century, when it was absorbed into France.
- Neutralia: Fictional version of Portugal from Arrival and Departure by Arthur Koestler.
- Neutralia: Mediterranean republic in Scott-King's Modern Europe by Evelyn Waugh
- New German Republic: A technologically advanced post-apocalyptic society encompassing Central Europe that is governed by the Triax megacorporation in the Rifts role-playing game.[22]
- Nexdoria: a country from Coming 2 America, the neighbors of Zamunda
- Nihilon: a country somewhere in central Europe, run by nihilists, in Alan Sillitoe's comic novel Travels in Nihilon.
- Niroli: focus of a series of Harlequin Presents novels.
- Nordland: Ivor Novello's King's Rhapsody, 1949, stage play; probably not in Scandinavia because the characters have rather Balkan-sounding names. (Note: Nordland is a county of Norway).
- Norvenia: a fictional English-speaking country in The Boxtrolls.
- Novistrana: from the computer game Republic: The Revolution.
- Novoselic: The European country governed by Sonia Nevermind and her royal family in the PSP game Super Dangan Ronpa 2, the sequel to Dangan Ronpa, developed by Spike.
O
- Oceania: fictional super state in George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four referring to Great Britain, the Americas, Australasia and southern Africa.
- Ornowitza: a Dutchy that appeared in Violet Needham's Betrayer (1950) and other novels by the author.
- Orsinia: Featured in Ursula K. Le Guin's Orsinian Tales and Malafrena.
- Orussia: A country in Eastern Europe based on the Russian Empire in Strike Witches.
- Osia, of which the capital was Bleiberg: setting of Harold MacGrath's, The Puppet Crown (1901, in which year the book was the #7 US fiction best seller; a film version was released in 1915).
- Osterlich: Nation invaded by Bacteria and Tomainia in the film The Great Dictator; obviously supposed to be Austria.
- Ostania: A country for the set of Spy × Family, based on the German Democratic Republic during the Cold War era.
- Ostmark: A country featured in Strike Witches based on Austira-Hungary.
- Otheon is a fictional country in Europe and a primary location for events in My Hero Academia: World Heroes' Mission.
- Ovitznia: A republic in the Balkans from Road Rovers TV series.
P
- Paldea: European region based on the Iberian peninsula in the video games Pokémon Scarlet and Violet.
- Pannonia: Appeared in Guy Boothby's Long Live the King (1900).
- Panquita: European monarchy mentioned in second season of Yakitate!! Japan anime. A member of that nation's royal family, Princess Anne, was a guest judge at the baking exhibition.
- Papilloma: Small European Kingdom, later Republic, from film Kath & Kimderella. Papilloma is a tiny and poor Spanish outpost on the heel of Italy. Last ruler was King Javier.
- Peaceland: European country featured in the anime Nadesico, which was once a theme park, but formed its own nation. It is neutral in all conflicts, on earth and beyond, has no taxes, and has a great banking system similar to that of Switzerland. Ruri "Ruri Ruri" Hoshino, a famous character of the series, is originally a princess from there.
- Penglia: European country, bordering Aldovia featured in the film A Christmas Prince. Both countries are engaged in a peace treaty originally signed on Christmas Eve 1419 that has to be renewed every 100 years.
- Penguin Island (L'île des Pingouins): in the 1908 novel by Anatole France, an island in the North Sea where penguins were miraculously transformed into humans (and which is in fact a satirical view on France).
- People's Republic of Great Britain: An Fictional version of Great Britain featured in the Doctor Who episode "Rise of the Cybermen".
- Pepeslavia: from the film Su Excelencia starring Mario Moreno (better known as Cantinflas). Probably referring to Yugoslavia.
- Perusalem is a satire of Germany (Preussen, i.e. Prussia) in The Inca of Perusalem by George Bernard Shaw.
- Petrovakia: a fictional union republic in the game Heavy Weapon, usually referring to Czechoslovakia.
- Pfennig Halbpfennig: presumably German/Eastern European Grand Duchy and setting for the operetta The Grand Duke, by Gilbert and Sullivan. Notable for an unusual law regarding "Statutory Duels", in which duelists compete by drawing playing cards – the loser then dies and becomes a "legal ghost".
- Poictesme: a country situated roughly in the south of France in the books of James Branch Cabell.
- Poland: Eastern European country similar to the real Poland in the play King Ubu by Alfred Jarry.
- Poldavia: a small country presumably in Eastern Europe in The Blue Lotus from The Adventures of Tintin.
- Pontevedro: a poverty-stricken Grand Duchy situated deep in the Balkans from the comedy play L'Attache d'ambassade by Henri Meilhac and the subsequent operetta and film The Merry Widow. Pontevedro is a veiled reference to the Balkan country of Montenegro.
- Pottibakia: Balkan country from the short story "What Does it Matter? A Morality" by E. M. Forster. Capital city: Ekarest.
- Pottsylvania: from Jay Ward's cartoon series The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show.
- Povia: a small monarchy in the Balkans in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Heir Apparent".
- Prydain: Welsh kingdom, ruled by the High King, in The Chronicles of Prydain novels by Lloyd Alexander.
- (Kalbsbraten-)Pumpernickel: German duchy, a caricature of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach in Vanity Fair, The Fitz-Boodle Papers, and other works by William Makepeace Thackeray
Q
- Qwghlm: a country off the northwestern coast of Britain in Neal Stephenson's fictions Cryptonomicon and The Baroque Cycle.
R
- Razkavia: Germanic country in Philip Pullman's The Tin Princess.
- Réndøosîa: a fictional Eastern European country plagued by natural disasters to the point that its flag is always depicted with a hole in it. It is also at war with the neighboring nation of Grimzimistan. Homeland of Enk, Adi and Xan, the main characters on the animated series The Amazing Adrenalini Brothers.
- Republic of Great Britain: A fictional version of Great Britain featured in the Doctor Who story Inferno.
- Republic of Krovtonova: A fictional Eastern European nation referenced in the Father Ted episode "Speed 3", in which it is mentioned that Craggy Island has been helping to ease the republic's unusually high milk surplus.
- Robo-Hungarian Empire: A fictional Eastern European nation in several Futurama episodes.
- Rogash: A small Central European country featured in the Night Court episode "My Life as a Dog Lawyer". Despite its small size it possesses nuclear weapons and missiles supplied by the US government in exchange for maintaining a listening post to spy on Switzerland.
- Romagna: A country in southern Europe in the Strike Witches universe.
- Romanovia: Eastern European country featured in the comedy Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story. Dodgeball is the national sport. This country was also mentioned in Inspector Gadget.
- Rongovia: Fictional country mentioned in Santaland Diaries by David Sedaris. It has an embassy to the US in Trumansburg, New York, and a very active Ministry of Fine Arts. The capital is Fat City. Rongovia is a state of mind.
- Rovinia: a kingdom mentioned in Pursuit to Algiers.
- Rubovia: a kingdom in Eastern Europe that featured in Gordon Murray's BBC Television children's puppet series A Rubovian Legend, 1955–63.[23]
- Rumekistan: a fictional Eastern European nation featured in Marvel Comics' Cable & Deadpool
- Ruritania: a kingdom in central Europe from Anthony Hope's The Prisoner of Zenda and associated works, which gave rise to the Ruritanian romance genre. Also used in Ernest Gellner's nonfictional Nations and Nationalism as a stereotypical country developing nationalism.
S
- San Lorenzo: An insular European dictatorship with no extradition treaties, in the series Leverage, specifically the episodes The Big Bang Job and The San Lorenzo Job.
- Samavia: Eastern European kingdom in Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Lost Prince.
- Sardovia: An Eastern European Dictatorship bordering Belarus from the CBS program Scorpion, also in FUBAR from Netflix.
- Saroczia: Eastern European country which the United States invades, which serves as the terrorist basis in the video game Winback.
- Kingdom of Sauville: A small kingdom between France, Switzerland and Italy from anime series Gosick. It consists of parts of the real Italian provinces: Aosta Valley, Liguria, Piedmont.
- Sciriel: kingdom in Roland Pertwee's late (1927) Ruritanian romance A Modern Knight Errant, set just before and after World War I.
- Seravno: a Balkan country from the TV Series, Mission Impossible.
- Servia: appeared in Bessie Marchant's A Princess of Servia (c. 1925). Also an ancient foreign name for Serbia.
- Sercia: was a part of Genovia A Princess of Sercia Sercia get Independence from Kingdom of Genovia
- Shimmervale: A Maltese based kingdom powered by Crystallites in Barbie: Mariposa & the Fairy Princess.
- Skandistan: Islamic state comprising what was formerly Scandinavia. From the alternate history book The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson.
- The People's Republic of Slaka: a Balkan communist country in Malcolm Bradbury's Rates of Exchange and its sequel Why Come to Slaka? It also featured in the BBC drama, the Gravy Train moves East.
- Slavo-Lydia: Balkan country in the novels of Angela Thirkell; has a long-standing enmity with neighbouring Mixo-Lydia.
- Slavosk: a country in Eastern Europe from the TV series Danger Man. Drake must travel to Slavosk to rescue the supposed sister of a famous professor from this country.
- Slorenia: a small East European country in Marvel Comics. Its inhabitants were massacred by Ultron.
- Slovetzia: a tiny country in Eastern Europe in the film The Beautician and the Beast. Slovetzia is located between Romania, Ukraine and Hungary; situated roughly in Trans-Carpathia, a real region in the Ukraine. The republic is portrayed as a post-communist Eastern European dictatorship.
- Sokovia: an Eastern European country home of H.Y.D.R.A. and birthplace of Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver from Avengers: Age of Ultron
- Island of Sodor: a large island in the Irish Sea, between the Isle of Man and the English mainland near Barrow-in-Furness in Cumbria, to which it is connected by bridge.[24] The setting for the Reverend W. Awdry's The Railway Series and it's television adaptation.
- Soviet Unterzoegersdorf: the "last existing appanage republic of the USSR", a fake country created by monochrom for theatre performances and computer games.
- St. Gregory: A British Crown dependency in the Channel Islands, featured in the ITV series Island at War. Based upon Jersey and Guernsey.
- St. Tulipe: A tiny European principality (ministate) in the 1981 Italian film Madly in Love. Its location is supposed to be between Germany and France.
- Strackenz: A tiny European duchy in the novel Royal Flash by George MacDonald Fraser that borders Denmark and Germany. It is threatened with invasion by both countries as a result of the Schleswig-Holstein Question.
- Svenborgia[25][circular reference]: a secret European country only rich people know about, referenced by Jack Donaghy and Jerry Seinfeld as an exclusive vacationing retreat in the SeinfeldVision episode of 30 Rock.[20]
- Svitz: a mysterious European country in Welcome to Night Vale described as, "A land of low rolling hills and off-key tones heard on the breeze" and "is perfect for the visitor with a strong constitution, and a low tendency for hallucination."
- Sylvania: a country ruled by Queen Louise in the film The Love Parade. The name is also used in the Marx Brothers' film Duck Soup. It was the country which attacked Freedonia.
- Tauri-Hessia: European country in the book The Circus of Adventure, part of the Adventure Series by Enid Blyton.
- Tescara: European island nation located in the Atlantic Ocean. As a free trade zone enrolled into the United Nations in 1991, it is used as place of origin for the suspects of CSI: New York's season 1 episode 19, "Crime and Misdemeanor".
- The Triple Monarchy of Scythia-Pannonia-Transbalkania: from Dr. Engelbert Eszterhazy stories by Avram Davidson.
- Transbalkania: a fictional kingdom featured in "Number 187", a story by Baroness Orczy.
- Tryphemia: King Pausole's country in The Adventures of King Pausole by Pierre Louÿs
- Ulgia: a politically unstable country from the anime Noir.
- Ulmreich: Southern European state in James Elroy Flecker's King of Alsander (1914).
- Urseville-Beylestein: Prince Paul's country in the 1902 book Love and the Soul Hunter by John Oliver Hobbes.
V
- Varania: appeared in the Three Investigators series (created by Robert Arthur, Jr.) in the book The Mystery of the Silver Spider (1967).
- Vascovy: appeared in John Oxenham (William A. Dunkerley), A Princess of Vascovy (1899).
- Vesbaria or Wessbaria: opponent state created for the joint Russo-Belarusian Zapad 2017 exercise. Supports Veyshnoria in its struggle for independence. The territory of Vesbaria corresponds to that of Lithuania and Lower Latvia.[26][27]
- Veyshnoria or Veishnoriya: opponent state created for the joint Russo-Belarusian Zapad 2017 exercise, concurrently co-opted as an internet micronation by elements of the Belarusian opposition and others. The territory of Veyshnoria corresponds to that of the Grodno Region and the northwestern parts of the Minsk and Vitebsk regions.[28][26][27][29]
- Vulgaria: Home to the Baron and Baroness Bomburst in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang[30] and from The Three Stooges episode, Dutiful But Dumb. Also used as a fake name for former Yugoslavia by Lawrence Durrell in some of his Antrobus short stories.
W
- Warnerstock: a small country between France and Germany in the film Wakko's Wish
- Weselton: a duchy in Frozen, neighbour of Arendelle.
Y
- Yakestonia: mountainous eastern European nation, where yodeling is prominent in local culture, but so is surfing on its coast. Important landmark is Mount Bubneboba, and its fresh mountain air is celebrated worldwide. A traditional greeting is doing an armpit fart while repeating the word "zwooba!". Home of exchange student Fentruck on the animated series Doug.
- Yugaria: small Balkan nation from the Mission: Impossible: Operation Surma video game.
Z
- Zamunda:Coming to America with Eddie Murphy.
- Zandar: A small principality seen in Power Rangers: Dino Charge. Home of Sir Ivan, the Gold Dino Charge Ranger, and Prince Philip, the Graphite Ranger. The people of Zandar speak with British accents.
- Zembla: Northern European country in Vladimir Nabokov's novel Pale Fire
- Zindaria: a brand-new one that existed in Europe during the English Regency era of 1811–1820, Anne Gracie's The Stolen Princess (2008).
- Aemonkia: a federal democratic communist state under a totalitarian hereditary dictatorship in North America in Dead or Alive series.
- Ayx Empire: a fascist absolute monarchy in North America in the Ninja Gaiden series. It is ruled by the evil Emperor Garuda.
- Magisteria: a North American Germanic, Romance and Slavic English, French, German and Dutch-speaking fascist absolute monarchy in Dead or Alive series. It is ruled by Lord Tatorusis.
- Opium: A country in the novel, The House of the Scorpion.
- Brobdingnag: A fictional country from the novel Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift. As described by Swift, Brobdingnag extends some 2000 miles westward from Canada's Pacific coast, and is inhabited by a race of giants.
- Countries in Fallout (video game series).
- Caesar's Legion is an autocratic, ultra-reactionary, utilitarian slaver army founded in 2247 by Edward Sallow (Who later adopted the name "Caesar") and Joshua Graham. It is largely inspired and partially based on the ancient Roman Empire, though it isn't the Roman Empire, the Roman Republic or even its military, the Legion. It is a slave army with trappings of foreign-conscripted Roman legionaries during the late empire. All military, no civilian, and with none of the supporting civilian culture. It appears only in Fallout: New Vegas.
- The New California Republic (NCR) is a federal presidential republic founded in New California by Aradesh also formerly leader of Shady Sands, comprising five contiguous states and additional territories and holdings in pre-War regions in Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, and parts of Mexico. The Republic dedicates itself to the values of the old world: Democracy, liberty, the rule of law, all in order to make the wasteland a better place. However, its policies resulted in difficulties in recent years. It was founded in 2186, is mentioned in Fallout 3 and Fallout 4, and appears in Fallout 2 & Fallout: New Vegas.
- The Enclave is a nation state established after the Great War, formed by members of the pre-War United States government and military industrial complex. It claims authority over the territory of the United States of America, considering itself the legal continuation of the U.S. government and styling itself as such. First appearing in Fallout 2, then later in Fallout 3, its add-on Broken Steel, and is mentioned from its few remaining now retired survivors appearing in Fallout: New Vegas with former soldiers, now followers for the Children of Atom in the Fallout 4 add-on Far Harbor.
- Shi (Fictional Nation) is a post-apocalyptic nation that is against all post-great war politics. It was founded by survived Chinese spies that established most areas from ruins of San Francisco as City State and uses some elements of the Chinese culture, such as their ancestors' customs, clothing, language, and demeanor. The younger generations, however, seem to rely more on the surviving popular culture interpretations of Chinese culture (such as kung-fu holovideos), rather than actual cultural traditions. It appears in Fallout 2 and is indirectly mentioned in Fallout 4.[citation needed]
- Republic of Dave (also formerly called Kingdom of Tom, Kingdom of Larry, the Republic of Stevie-Ray, Billsylvania, and the New Republic of Stevie-Ray) is a small farming settlement in the far northeast corner of the Capital Wasteland (Fallout 3) that is considered by its close-knit inhabitants to be a sovereign nation-state. This nation is actually closer to a Micronation, because since on-off monarchies and republics with an only family control it, and they only had one citizen working as a teacher or merchant (optional) during the game. This "Nation" only appears in Fallout 3.
- The Free Economic Zone of New Vegas is a neoliberal autocratic faction led by Pre-Great War survivor Robert House in Fallout: New Vegas. Although it is formally founded if House establishes sovereignty over the Mojave region, in practice, it exists in a practical capacity throughout Mr House's rule in New Vegas.
- Countries in The Man in the High Castle
- In the world of The Man in the High Castle the United States has been partitioned by the victorious Axis powers after World War II.
- Pacific States of America, a puppet state of the Empire of Japan consisting of the west coast of the former United States. Its capital is Sacramento. In the television series it is an occupied province called the Japanese Pacific States and does also include Alaska and the west coast of Canada.
- United States of America, a puppet state of Nazi Germany consisting of the northern east coast of the former United States and several central states. In the television series it is an occupied province called Nazi America or the American Reich.
- "The South", a racist regime in the Southeast of the former United States, which collaborates with Nazi Germany. It does not appear in the television series.
- Rocky Mountain States, a neutral buffer zone state consisting of the remaining territory of the former United States. Its capital is Canon City. In the television series it is portrayed as a lawless Neutral Zone. Countries in Revolution
- Monroe Republic was ruled by Sebastian Monroe. His government was a neo-feudal republic dictatorship controlling the former Northeastern United States including Michigan, Wisconsin, most of Virginia, New Jersey, as well as a small part of Canada. The Republic's military, the Monroe Militia, enforces strict laws against citizens owning firearms, which are often punished by death.
- The Patriots are neo-fascist, totalitarian, semi-Paramiltiary/Political group formed from the pre-blackout American government. Their "capital" was Guantánamo Bay before they returned to Washington D.C.
- Georgia Federation is a nation-state with a government largely modeled after pre-blackout america located in the former 'Dixie' states. They have a high population and standard of living.
- Plains Nation, is dominated by Native American-like tribes after blackout, whom circulate a specified territory in the Midwest. There are also many scattered settlements, though they are largely self-governed.
- Texas, a nation located in the former US state of Texas, as well as former Mexican Territory, this nation's governance is mostly like that of pre-blackout america, and a high standard of living is enjoyed. While not as advanced as the Georgia Federation, it is stated to be more militarily capable, and the 'Texas Rangers' are served as the main military force. Whilst military and farming technology here is mundane, Texans show great architectural skill, and even have networked newspapers, most notably the 'Austin Star Times'.
- California Commonwealth, a nation formed from the previous states of California, Oregon and Washington.
- Wasteland, an area shown on a map of the Former continental U.S., it is likely that this area is a lawless region, rather than a political entity.[31]
- Ecotopia: an ecological utopia appearing in the novels Ecotopia and Ecotopia Emerging by Ernest Callenbach. See also Cascadia, a secessionist idea based in part on Callenbach's Ecotopia.
- Gilead: a stereotypical Christian republic in the novel The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
- Greater Texas: successor state to the United States, encompassing most of North America, in the novel A Spectre is Haunting Texas by Fritz Leiber
- Opium: from the novel The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer. It is a future nation between Aztlan (formerly Mexico) and the United States. This nation is part of a deal made between the Mexican and American governments and a powerful drug lord named El Patrón, promising that the drugs he makes will be sold in Europe and Asia and will also take care of the illegal immigrant problem if he is allowed a strip of land.
- Panem: A post-apocalyptic country in "The Hunger Games" Trilogy that exists in parts of what used to be the United States, Canada, and Mexico. It consists of a wealthy city known as The Capitol, as well as Districts 1 through 12, which each provide a certain material for the Capitol's residents. The Districts were forced to send challengers to compete in the Hunger Games, long contests with typically only one winner, the last contestant to remain alive.
- Petoria: Is an Oligarchic Micro or Small nation that only occupies the Griffin household and later invades the Swanson's backyard as "Joehio" in the Family Guy episode "E. Peterbus Unum" and briefly mentioned in "Stew-Roids".
- Countries in Crimson Skies
- Industrial States of America, a large industrial nation created by the secession of Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Indiana in the Crimson Skies series. Its capital is Chicago.
- Empire State, a nation formed out of the secession of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania in the Crimson Skies universe. The capital is New York City.
- Arixo, the republic formed by the merger of the seceded states New Mexico and Arizona in the Crimson Skies series. Its capital is in Phoenix.
- Navajo Territory, a homeland state for the Navajo northern Arizona in the Crimson Skies series.
- Pacifica, the peaceful Crimson Skies nation created out of former British Columbia, Washington state, and Oregon. Its capital is South Vancouver.
- Nation of Hollywood, a bombastic and arrogant nation with its capital in Los Angeles created out of California due to secession in Crimson Skies. Its air force maintains relative hegemony over the Gulf of Mexico.
- People's Collective, a Christian-based communist state with a capital in Omaha created out of the seceded states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Iowa from Crimson Skies.
- Deseret, a Mormon theocratic country created out of Utah in Crimson Skies.
- Lakota Territory, a homeland for the Lakota people created out of annexed land from the states of North Dakota and Montana. From Crimson Skies.
- Confederation of Dixie, a half-revival of the Confederate States of America containing the states of Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, Missouri, and Arkansas from Crimson Skies. Its capital is in Atlanta.
- Atlantic Coalition, a loose confederacy of the states of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut capitaled in Boston from Crimson Skies.
- Free Colorado, a nearly lawless nation capitaled in Denver from Crimson Skies.
- Countries in Fracture:
- The Atlantic Alliance, a nation create out Washington D.C. and most others on the Eastern Seaboard that practice extensive high technology and cyborging to augment it citizens survival. Its capital is very implied be Washington D.C. itself, ruled by Unnamed Atlantican president that have anti-biotechnology policies spark the Second American Civil War in 2161.
- Republic of Pacifica, a nation created out California and several other states on the Western Seaboard that practices extensive bioengineering to augment its citizens survival. Its capital is in San Francisco, it is ruled by General Nathan Sheridan, and its secession sparks the Second American Civil War in 2161.
- Porto Santo: a tiny island nation in Latin America visited by Steve Urkel in the Family Matters episode "South of the Border". (Note: Porto Santo is a real island of Madeira Archipelago)
- Republica Libra: island country in the Caribbean with similarities to the Dominican Republic, in the novel Shooting Script by Gavin Lyall. Capital: Santo Bartolomeo.
- Saint Andrews: island country where part of Neil Gaiman's novel Anansi Boys takes place.
- Yara: Caribbean island nation ruled as a dictatorship, ruled by Antón Castillo and inspired by Cuba. Appears in Far Cry 6.
- Balio: Meso-American nation with a population numbering nine million,5% of whom are indigenous Aztec. Featured in episode 18, season 2 of Scorpion.
- Boca Grande: Central American country based on El Salvador in A Book of Common Prayer by Joan Didion.
- British Hidalgo: tiny Central American country in the novel Limekiller by Avram Davidson (See Hidalgo).
- El Honduragua: a fictional country in Central America from the sketch show Spitting Image, whose politics are dominated by fascist parties all supported by the United States. Its name is a portmanteau of El Salvador, the British Honduras (now Belize) and Nicaragua.
- San Pequeño: Country where nurse Gina Cuevas came from on 1990s sitcom Nurses.Tibecuador: Central American country in The Fairly OddParents.
- Amazonia: country somewhere in northern South America, used as a fictional location in a movie script, mentioned in the novel Shooting Script by Gavin Lyall.
- Andes Mallorca: South American country in the computer game Strike Commander roughly resembling real-world Colombia.
- Aquilea: South American country in the film Les Trottoirs de Saturne
- Azuera: in the Sir John Appleby novel The Open House by Michael Innes
- Cordillera: country straddling the Andes in the novel High Citadel by Desmond Bagley. Capital: Santillana.
- Las Acacias (Republica popular de): Country located inside Argentinian territory, as seen in the Argentinian series Telenoche.
- Mandoras: A South American country where Adolf Hitler's brain was hidden in Madmen of Mandoras and its extended version, They Saved Hitler's Brain.
- Miranda / The Mirandan Republic: South American nation from Luis Buñuel's film The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, from which the character Don Rafael is an ambassador to France. It is referred to by several characters as an unpleasant place with a strict military, oppressive leadership, and high murder rate.
- Nova Jambalaya: a Brazilian favela that has become a city-state with a communist-like dictatorship government in Brazilian sitcom Toma Lá, Dá Cá
- Olifa: country on the Pacific coast of South America in The Courts of the Morning by John Buchan.
- Olancho: The setting (described as "one of those little republics down there") of Richard Harding Davis' 1897 novel, Soldiers of Fortune.
- Pelotillehue: Fictional country which is developed Condorito comic series.
- San Monté: South American country at the brink of civil war from Action Comics #1.
- San Pasquale: South American country in Commander in Chief. Possibly based on Bolivia or Panama.
- San Pedro: South American country in the Sherlock Holmes short story "The Adventure of Wisteria Lodge" and in the film Hour of the Assassin.
- Vespugia: South American nation located in Patagonia, site of ancient step pyramids and a history of some Welsh settlement, in books by Madeleine L'Engle. In an alternate timeline it was ruled by a dictator who threatened nuclear warfare.
- Zalay: a republic in South America from the Dead or Alive video game series.
- Zendonia: a communist state in South America from the Dead or Alive video game series.
- Curuguay: a generic Latin America country mentioned in The Equaliser (2021) S02E01
- San Nicasio: a small country from the TV miniseries Persons Unknown.
- Santa Fe de Tierra firme: A ficticional American country where Ramón del Valle-Inclán's novel Tyrant Banderas takes place.
- Sapogonia: imaginary country, located somewhere to the south of Mexico, where all mestizos come from, in the novel Sapogonia by Ana Castillo.
- Afromacoland: African country in the novel Chief the Honourable Minister by T. M. Aluko
- Azania: African country from Evelyn Waugh's novel Black Mischief but with earlier origins in Roman histories.
- Babar's Kingdom: from children's book, a country of intelligent bipedal elephants.
- Bahari: from the CBS television series, Scorpion, a small north African nation under the brutal rule of a dictatorship. The nation is a former Nazi German colony and there are several Nazi German military bases located in the deserts of the country.
- Balic: A fictional African country featured in the Japanese anime television series Full Metal Panic! The Second Raid.
- Bapetikosweti: The "homeland" state in which the South African satirist Pieter-Dirk Uys (under the guise of his drag character, Evita Bezuidenhout) was the South African ambassador.
- Bongo Congo: African kingdom in animated cartoon series King Leonardo and His Short Subjects
- Bulmeria: an African country mentioned in the webcomic, It's Walky!
- Bulungi: A country located south of Côte d'Ivoire and southeast of Liberia featured in an article by satirical news group The Onion. In the article, the United States' "ambassador" to Bulungi is accused of making the country up. Bulungi's capital city is Yabba-Dabba.
- Buranda: African country in the BBC comedy series Yes Minister, formerly known as "British Equatorial Africa"
- Darrar, Federal Republic of: A country in the Horn of Africa based on Ethiopia in the novel Borderlines by Michela Wrong.[32][33]
- North Darrar: A country in the Horn of Africa based on Eritrea in the novel Borderlines by Michela Wrong. The capital city is Lira. The country neighbours the Federal Republic of Darrar and has fought a war against it over a border dispute based on the Eritrean–Ethiopian War.[34][35]
- Equatorial Uqbar Orbis: Dictatorship in Africa originally depicted in Better Call Saul (S1:E10). The country appears to be a reference to Jorge Luis Borges’s short story Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius.
- Guadec: African country in an episode of Spooks. Led by reformist President Manu Baffong.
- Gwinalia: fictional African country in the PBS show Chocolate.
- Ishmaelia: a fictional African country from the novel Scoop by Evelyn Waugh.
- Kalya: West African country in the novel The Zinzin Road by Fletcher Knebel. Capital city: Ft. Paul.
- Kamanga: Southern African country between Namibia and Mozambique in the novel Tenth Man Down by Chris Ryan. Ruled from the poverty-stricken capital of Mulongwe, Kamanga is the very model of post-colonial corruption, nepotism, and greed. The territory, once a British possession, is now suffering from an AIDS epidemic, while poaching goes unchecked during a brutal civil war. Uranium, diamonds, and bauxite are key resources, although they remain in the hands of the European-descended elite. Kamanga uses the Kwacha as its national currency. This "Kwacha" is a fictional currency, but it has the same name as the Malawian kwacha and the Zambian kwacha.
- Kambezi: Southern African country occurring in several MacGyver episodes, located somewhere near Zimbabwe and home to a population of black rhinos, a protected species approaching rapid extinction thanks to South African poachers. Kambezi is also in fact a military dictatorship, and relies heavily on the smuggling of dagga. Kambezi was later used in season 3 of Blindspot, but was a Central African monarchy at war with its neighbor and seeking control of a pipeline.
- Kangan: African nation in the novel Anthills of the Savannah (1984) by Chinua Achebe
- Katanga: African country, neighboring Sierra Leone, in Frederick Forsyth's The Dogs of War (1974)
- Kivukiland: African kingdom in the 2001 South African comedy movie Mr Bones by Leon Schuster, starring Leon Schuster[36]
- Ligeria: African home of the agent Benjamin N’udu in the Canadian TV series InSecurity.
- Logosia: African country from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Crane".
- Lombuanda: an independent white-supremacist African country on the Gulf of Guinea in the Mission: Impossible episode "The Diamond". Underdeveloped and densely forested, Lombuanda is ruled by French-speaking settlers who keep two million black citizens starved and without 'schools, hospitals, or any voice in government'. The title of prime minister is held by Hendrik Durvard, a despotic white Lombuandan who plans to use a 27,000-carat diamond to finance his seizure of tribal reserves.
- Mombaka: an African country featured in the films Red Scorpion and Jagga Jasoos.
- Mumbambu: African nation occupying the Central and East region as portrayed in a video by The Onion about the United States sending US$3 billion worth of aid to Andorra as it was believed to be south of Mumbambu in Africa, not Europe.[37]
- Naruba: a fictional West African country in Designated Survivor. It is located in between Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Benin and Burkina Faso. Its capital city is Soji. It is mentioned to be one of the poorest nations on the planet, with conflicts arising from warlords such as Atsu Kalame.
- Narubu: fictional country from Army Wives.
- Natumbe: African country from Dynasty TV series
- New Zanzibar: featured in The Simpsons episode "Simpson Safari", this country only existed for a few moments between Tanzania and Pepsi Presents New Zanzibar.
- Ngombia: West African country featured in the 1963 Tom Swift Jr. novel Tom Swift and His Repelatron Skyway.
- Niberia: African country in the 2009 film The International
- Orïsha: a West Africa country based on Nigeria in the fantasy novel Children of Blood and Bone and its sequel by Tomi Adeyemi.
- Pepsi Presents New Zanzibar: featured in The Simpsons episode "Simpson Safari", this country came into being after civil war in Tanzania created the country New Zanzibar, which moments later was purchased by Pepsi.
- Podoso: a fictional Central African country mentioned in the Turkish television series Valley of the Wolves.
- Republic of West Africa: Highlighted in the episode 6 of season 1 of Madam Secretary ("The Call"), the Republic of West Africa is lodged in between Gabon and Cameroon (around the area of Equatorial Guinea) and is said to be ruled by a military junta following a coup. In the context of the episode, the ruling council of the RWA is aiming to commit ethnic cleansing against the Beko people, marching on the city of "St. Juste", one of the Beko peoples' primary population centres. The North and Interior of the RWA are said to be ruled by warlords armed with "RPGs and Machine Guns". One of the official languages of the RWA is French, although some of the Beko people are noted to speak Igbo. It is also implied that a heavy number of the Beko people within the RWA follow the Christian faith, primarily Roman Catholicism.
- Sahelise Republic: African country mentioned in The West Wing, episode "In This White House"
- Sangala: A nation from 24: Redemption and 24 (season 7) where Jack Bauer comes to after running away from his life. A coup d'état takes place, with rebels using brainwashed children as soldiers. The nation is later invaded by the US in season 7.
- Seanfrika: A country from the movie Sean Banan inuti Seanfrika founded by the Iranian-Swedish comedian Sean Banan to escape the cold Swedish winters.
- Sonzola: an African republic mentioned in the novels of Christopher Brookmyre
- Transvalia: not actually a state in its own right, but rather a parody of Orania. Leon Schuster made a comedy film called Sweet 'n Short (1991), which was a parody of life in the New South Africa. The film was made in 1990 shortly after Nelson Mandela was released from prison - many of the fictional events portrayed therein actually came to pass in post-apartheid South Africa.
- United Mitanni Commonwealth: A fictional African country in Lee Correy's science fiction novel Manna.
- Upper Gorm: Fictional African country in the 1980 comedy film First Family.
- UAC: An unnamed African country depicted in the video game Far Cry 2, can also be presumed to be named Seko.
- Wadiya: Country ruled by the protagonist in the 2012 film The Dictator. Located by the Red Sea.
- West Angola: a fictional African country referred to in Scandal.
- West African Union: a fictional merger of Liberia and Sierra Leone in Seafighter a 1999 novel by James H. Cobb. Ruled by Premier-General Obe Belewa.[38]
- West Monrassa: Central African country in an episode of Spooks. Run by President Gabriel Sakoa, a corrupt leader planning a genocide against the people in the north of the country.
- Zambawi: African country from Patrick Neate's novel Musungu Jim and the Great Chief Tuloko (2000)
Name | Flag | Work | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Chula, Republic of | Mort & Phil | Parody of Chile. South American country ruled by dictator Antofagasto Panocho (a parody of Augusto Pinochet), whom Mort and Phil are sent to kill. |
A
Name | Flag | Work | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Belgistan | fictional Middle Eastern country in the anime Gasaraki. | ||
Helmajistan | fictional area from the anime Full Metal Panic!. | ||
Chinese Federation | Code Geass | Monarchy comprising the entirety of East (except Japan), South, and Central Asia. Its capital is located in Luoyang, and is controlled by an emperor (who serves more as a symbolic head of state) and a council of eight eunuchs. | |
Achu, Kingdom of | Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir (2016) | A monarchic country located in a tropical climate. Home of Prince Ali. First mentioned in the episode "Princess Fragrance".[39] | |
Diamantara, Republic of | Michiko & Hatchin | South American nation inspired by Brazil. | |
Franbel | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | 01 "Gatchaman Versus Turtle King"
11 "The Mysterious Red Impulse" 19 "Speed Race from Hell" 35 "Burn, Desert Fires" 43 "A Romance Destroyed By Evil" 46 "Gatchaman in the Valley of Death" 50 "Trachadon, the Dinosaur Skeleton" 51 "Cata-Roller, the Revolving Beast" 52 "Red Impulse's Secret" 53 "Farewell Red Impulse" 54 "Gatchaman Burns with Rage" 56 "The Bird Missile of Bitterness" 61 "The Phantom Red Impulse" 64 "A Christmas Present of Death" 66 "The Devil's Fashion Show" 69 "The Cemetery in the Moonlight" 77 "The Successful Berg Katse" 80 "Come Back! Boomerang" | |
Doria Kingdom | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | ||
Shosken Kingdom | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | ||
Wale | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | Country in South Africa, filled with poverty and plagued by a famine. | |
Congol | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | ||
Indelhia | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | ||
Assham | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | ||
Amehon | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | ||
Bien | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman | ||
Amerishima | Science Ninja Team Gatchaman |
BOOKS
Name | Flag | Work | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Hav | Last Letters from Hav | independent country in the Eastern Mediterranean, described in an epistolary novel by Jan Morris. | |
Dahomalia | Stand on Zanzibar | African nation created by merging of Dahomey, Upper Volta and Mali. | |
Beninia | Stand on Zanzibar (1968) | African nation that aspires to become a first world country. | |
Republican Union of Nigeria and Ghana | Stand on Zanzibar | African country formed by merging of Nigeria and Ghana. | |
Yatakang | Stand on Zanzibar | Former Dutch colony located in South East Asia. Inspired by Indonesia. | |
Axphain | Graustark (1901) | Neighbor of Graustark in several novels. | |
Graustark | Various Works | Eastern European country in several novels by George Barr McCutcheon. | |
Dawsbergen | Novels by George Barr McCutcheon | Country in Eastern Europe mentioned in several novels by author George Barr McCutcheon. | |
Almaigne | The Alteration by Kingsley Amis (1976) | A monarchy with Emperor at the throne, located in Central Europe, which united German speaking states. It is based on German Empire, though its borders do not match those of real Germany.[40] | |
New England, Republic of | The Alteration | An alternate reality where Henry VIII never became King and Martin Luther and Thomas More became Pope, Protestantism was limited to the breakaway republic. The secular head is the First Citizen (Joseph Rudyard Kipling is mentioned as First Citizen, serving from 1914 to 1918) and the head of the 'schismatic' church is the Archpresbytor of Arnoldstown. Also mentioned is New England's war against Louisiana and Mexico from 1848 to 1850 (with Edgar Allan Poe as a leading general), its technological and scientific advance over the Papal jurisdiction, its productions of banned Shakespeare plays and its practice of 'separateness' against Native Americans. | |
Alsander, Kingdom of | King of Alsander by James Elroy Flecker (1914) | A kingdom in the Southern Europe[41] | |
Annexia, Interzone, Abyssinia | Naked Lunch (1959) | European country, inspired by Soviet Russia. | |
Vespugia | A Swiftly Tilting Planet, Troubling a Star | Spanish-speaking country in the south of South America mentioned in Madeleine L'Engle's A Swiftly Tilting Planet and Troubling a Star | |
Arnovia | Taylor & Rose Secret Agents: Peril in Paris by Katherine Woodfine (2018) | Small country between Switzerland, the German Empire, and Austria-Hungary in 1911 | |
Averna, Principality of | Sweet Danger by Margery Allingham (1933) | An oil-rich principality on the Adriatic Sea | |
Brungaria | Tom Swift, Jr. | Eastern European dictatorship similar to the Soviet Union, in the Tom Swift, Jr. series. | |
Socialist Democratic Republic of Corteguay | Tom Clancy's Net Force Explorers: The Ultimate Escape | South American country located in an island in the Pacific Ocean. Totalitarian state. Capital city is named "Adello". Obtained independence in 2005. | |
Carpathian Republic | Tom Clancy's Net Force Explorers: The Great Race | Balkan authoritarian and militaristic country under an embargo. Its political ideology is a mix of Nazism and communism. It uses the Cyrillic alphabet. | |
Costaguana & Sulaco | Nostromo | South American country under a dictatorship, based on Colombia | |
Shangri-La | Lost Horizon | Mystical, harmonious valley, enclosed in the western end of the Himalaya in James Hilton's 1933 novel. | |
Etchechuria | The Stolen March | Lost Pyrenean country lying between France and Spain where nursery rhyme characters come to life. | |
Grinlandia | Novels by Alexander Grin | Name of the country is never mentioned by the author himself, and the name Grinlandia was suggested in 1934 by literary critic Korneliy Zelinsky. | |
Erewhon | Erewhon | Country satirizing aspects of Victorian society. | |
Samavia | The Lost Prince | Eastern European kingdom in Frances Hodgson Burnett's novel. | |
Bolumbia | The Shadow of a Titan | South American dictatorship, from Felix Wedgwood's novel.[42] | |
Borostyria | Arsène Lupin, Gentleman Burglar | Balkan principality modeled on Montenegro.[43] | |
Bouazizi Empire | American War | Empire made up of a multitude of failed Middle Eastern and North African states in the late 21st century; influences the Second American Civil War by trying to prolong it | |
Penguina (L'île des Pingouins) | Penguin Island | In the 1908 novel by Anatole France, an island in the North Sea where penguins were miraculously transformed into humans (and which is in fact a satirical view of France). | |
Poictesme | Biography of the Life of Manuel | Country situated roughly in the south of France in the books of James Branch Cabell. | |
Polrugaria | The Tragic Life of a Polrugarian Minister | Archetypal Communist-ruled country, "heavily modelled on Poland"[44] in Isaac Deutscher's 1952 essay "The Tragic Life of a Polrugarian Minister". | |
Krassnia | The Restoration Game | Country based on South Ossetia located in the Caucasus and republic of the Soviet Union in the Caucasus that declared independence with the dissolution of the Soviet Union from the 2010 science fiction/techno-thriller novel The Restoration Game by Ken MacLeod.[45][46][47][48][49] The novel's protagonist, Lucy Stone, is a computer programmer who grew up in Krassnia when it was still part of the Soviet Union.[45] At the time of the novel's setting in 2008, she is working for a videogame company in Edinburgh, Scotland.[45][47] Stone's mother, commissions her company to create an MMORPG based on Krassnian mythology which leads into the rest of the novel's plot.[45][46] MacLeod was originally going to set his novel in the near future but was forced to change it when the Russo-Georgian War happened in August 2008 while he was writing it which not only brought the real South Ossetia to international attention (he wanted someplace obscure for Lucy Stone's homeland) but also made certain events in the book impossible, and was therefore now set in 2008, sometime before August that year.[47][48] | |
Zembla | Pale Fire | "Distant northern land" whose deposed king the narrator weaves into a critical apparatus; possibly based on Novaya Zemlya. | |
San Lorenzo The Republic of | Kurt Vonnegut's novel Cat's Cradle | A tiny, rocky island nation. The country's form of government is a dictatorship, under the rule of ailing president "Papa" Monzano, who is a staunch ally of the United States and a fierce opponent of communism. Its capital is the seaside city Bolivar. Its language is a fictitious English-based creole language | |
North Darrar | Borderlines | African nation in the Horn of Africa-based on Eritrea in the legal thriller novel, Borderlines by Michela Wrong. The capital city is called Lira. North Darrar neighbours the Federal Republic of Darrar and has fought a war against it over a border dispute based on the Eritrean–Ethiopian War.[50][51] | |
Orsinia | Orsinian Tales, Malafrena | Central European country similar to Czechoslovakia or Hungary, the focus of Ursula K. Le Guin's Orsinian Tales and the novel Malafrena. |
TV
Name | Flag | Work | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Gran Colombian Empire | The Last Ship (TV Series) | A growing coalition of South American nations that seeks to rival/surpass the United States as a superpower. It serves as the main antagonistic force of the final season. | |
Kambezi | MacGyver | Southern African country, located near Zimbabwe. It is home of a huge population of black rhinos which is approaching extinction due to poachers. It is also a military dictatorship and relies heavily on dagga exports. | |
Kabulstan | MacGyver | very hostile third world country that does not like strangers | |
Caledonia[52] | Scandal | European monarchy featured in the season 5 premiere episode which bears strong similarities to the United Kingdom. | |
West Angola | Scandal | Coastal African nation framed for various terrorist attacks on the United States of America in season 4. Later invaded by the US military after President Fitzgerald Grant is blackmailed into doing so. | |
Kashfar | Scandal | Middle Eastern country mentioned in the episode "Whiskey Tango Foxtrot". Four US Army soldiers stationed there are taken hostage, causing President Fitzgerald Grant to send in a SEAL team to rescue them. | |
Tyrgyzstan | The State Within | in the BBC television drama | |
Baracas | CSI: Miami (2002-2012) | Pro-American South American country which supports the torture teams of the U.S. force in the region. | |
Tescara | CSI: NY | Atlantic island mentioned in the TV series CSI: NY by Jerry Bruckheimer. According to the show, this nation joined the UN in 1991 and is a free-trade port. | |
Pacific States of America | The Man in the High Castle | A puppet state governed by the Empire of Japan, consisting of the West Coast of the United States along with Alaska and Hawaii. Its capital is Sacramento. In the television series, it is depicted as an occupied province called the Japanese Pacific States, also occupying parts of British Columbia. | |
Rocky Mountains States | The Man in the High Castle | De facto buffer zone between the Japanese-allied Pacific States of America and the Nazi satellite United States with its capital based in Canon City. In the novel, the R.M.S. is depicted as a sovereign nation situated between California and the Mississippi River. However, in the television series, it is a 'Neutral Zone' based solely along the Rockies. Effectively an anarchistic, libertarian society, the Neutral Zone acts as a refuge for Nazi or Japanese targets but being subject to Nazi or Japanese agents. | |
Sangala | 24 | Western African republic and former French colony, it is said to share a border with the Republic of Congo. The democratic government led by Prime Minister Ule Matobo is overthrown in a coup by General Benjamin Juma of the Peoples Freedom Army in 24: Redemption. It is later invaded by the United States military in 24: Season 7 after the Juma regime begins to engage in genocide. The capital city is Mali Baso, and other notable locations include Sangala City and Kasanga Province. | |
Patusan | Various | Island nation somewhere in the South China Sea in:
Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad NOT REALLY A COUNTRY, ALTHOUGH SHOULD BE MENTIONED AS SOURCE FOR OTHERS film The Last Electric Knight TV series Sidekicks. | |
Zephyria | Son of Zorn | East European country in Fox's 2016 show. | |
Tajinkistan | Lol:-) | Central Asian country, shown in the Canadian TV show Lol:-). | |
United States of America | Watchmen | Alternative United States that won the Vietnam War and annexed Vietnam, turning it into the 51st state due to the superpowered use of Doctor Manhattan in the war. In the Watchmen TV series, as of 2019, the country is shown to have abolished presidential term limits, redesigned the flag, incorporated other Southeast Asian countries (such as Thailand) as "commonwealths", and instituted a system of reparations for slavery for African-Americans. | |
Turmezistan | Doctor Who comics | a fictional country in Doctor Who. | |
Val Verde | Predator | Spanish-speaking country in the film Predator. | |
San Marcos | Archer Vice | Latin American banana republic. | |
Marivella Islands | Tales of the Gold Monkey | South Pacific volcanic chain consisting of hundreds of mysterious and tropical islands featured in the 1982 adventure television series and now described as the Republic of the Marivelles. | |
Kumranistan | Yes, Prime Minister | Central Asian Islamic republic from the 2013 remake of Yes, Prime Minister, formerly part of the British Empire and a Soviet Socialist Republic; this country is a variation of Qumran (a fictional oil-rich sheikdom located in the Persian Gulf) which featured in the original series of Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister. | |
Qumran (Kumrahn) | Yes Minister | Arabic oil sheikhdom. | |
Buranda | Yes Minister | Developing African country, formerly known as British Equatorial Africa. | |
Saint George's Island | Yes, Prime Minister | Island nation located somewhere in the Arabian Sea. It was the centrepoint of the episode "A Victory for Democracy". A parliamentary republic and a Commonwealth member state, the island was on the verge of a communist coup. |
MOVIES
Name | Flag | Work | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Sakhovia | Final Score | Breakaway state located in North Caucasus, Russia. Tried to become independent with a war in 1999. | |
Jazeristan | The Misfits | ||
Krakozhia, Republic of | The Terminal | Slavic Eastern European country from the 2004 film. During the events of the film, civil war breaks out and is resolved in 9 months. | |
Vosnia | State Secret | European dictatorship in a 1950 film starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr. | |
Vulgaria | Don't Drink the Water | tourist destination in Woody Allen's play and film Don't Drink the Water, a country located behind the Iron Curtain. | |
Saint Heron, Republic of | Rage to Kill (1988 film) | Beautiful caribbean island nation. | |
Pontenero | Bombs on Monte Carlo (1931 film) | This musical comedy focuses on a warship from Pontenero. | |
Bandara | Abdullah the Great (1955) | Fictional version of King Farouk's Egypt. | |
Pendrang | The 1946 Universal movie serial Lost City of the Jungle | Small Himalayan nation bordering China ruled by a dictatorial casino heiress. Capital city is Zalabar. | |
Congotanga | Congo Crossing | Congotanga, West Africa, has no extradition laws; the government is controlled by foreign gangsters | |
Panem | The Hunger Games | check books | |
North Africa, Republic of | Counterforce | Arab nationalist of the Mediterranean Sea. Closely analogous to Libya. | |
Maldonia | The Princess and the Frog | Fictional country named mixed with Maldives and Macedonia. | |
San Miguel | Firewalker | Central American country located in the Yucatan peninsula. | |
Scandinavia | Ransom aka The Terrorists | Scandinavian country inspired by Norway. |
EXTERNAL
Name | Flag | Work | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Urk (also Uruk) | Descendants of the Sun | War-torn Mediterranean country monitored by the United Nations. The South Korean government provides peacekeeping forces and private hospitals send volunteer medical teams. |
UNAVAILABLE
Name | Flag | Work | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
San Marcos | South American country in an episode of Alarm für Cobra 11 - Die Autobahnpolizei. | ||
Val Verde | Supercarrier | Spanish-speaking country in ONE EP OF the TV series Supercarrier. | |
San Marco | Bourbon Street Beat | Latin American banana republic IN "Green Hell" AND "Last Exit" | |
Val Verde | Supercarrier | Spanish-speaking country in the TV series Supercarrier. | |
Santhoma | Your Friendly Neighborhood Death Peddler | Country in Jimmy Sangster's novel, located on the west coast of South America. It extends a total of one hundred and eighty miles from north to south and reaches its maximum breadth of fifty miles from east to west. It is bordered to the west by the Pacific Ocean and to the north, east and south by an extensive range of mountains which effectively cuts it off from the rest of the Latin American continent. The capital is called Canstartisville and is located on the coast about halfway between the north and south borders. Its president is Miguel Canstartis | |
Krastava | The Mourner | Small central European country, located between Czechoslovakia and Poland. | |
Sulvania | Prisoner of Swing (1937) | Central European monarchy where swing music is banned. This is a parody of the fictional country Zenda from The Prisoner of Zenda.[53]
UNAVAILABLE | |
Crashbania | The Bad Barons of Crashbania and other books by Norman Hunter |
UNAVAILABLE | |
Acquasorgiva | Acquasorgiva by Mura (1939) | A city built around a spring on top of a mountain near the sea in the Central African colony of the Fascist Italy.[54] UNAVAILABLE | |
Nevoruss | Breath of the Past, Russ we hadn't known about | Powerful state in the north of Russia and America created by Russian writer Grigoriy Demidovtsev. In the Breath of the Past and Russ we hadn't known about, Demidovtsev depicts a fictional European country named Nevoruss. "Nevoruss" is the Russian word for "Neva Russ", literally "Russ at the Neva river". Nevoruss is considered to be a successor state of the medieval Novgorod Republic. It managed to avoid Muscovite conquest in the 15th century and due to commercial activity of its inhabitants continued to thrive. Thus Russia had never united, so its place shares Nevoruss and Muscovy. Their opposition resembles that of Jesusland and the United States of Canada. Besides Russian territories Nevoruss due to its early colonial expansion also controlled the Baltic states, Scandinavia with Iceland and Greenland, some parts of North America (including Alaska and the whole Canada) as well as some important islands (among them Cuba, Canaries and Hawaiian Islands).
UNAVAILABLE | |
United Socialist States of America | Back in the USSA | UNAVAILABLE | |
Zindawba | "Beloved Bonds". by F.E. Campbell | Dishonored | An African republic whose ruler and first president, Khalief Abhad, abuses two girls.
UNAVAILABLE |
Timbuktu, Republic of | The Lousy World | Country mentioned in the episode "Kiepski prezydent". In the episode, Ferdynant Kiepski, the main character of the show, is chosen to be the president of the country, after its citizens saw his election campaign during his failed run for the office of the President of Poland
UNAVAILABLE |
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Africa
Countries
- African Empire - Poul Anderson's "Ghetto" in William F. Nolan's short story collection A Wilderness of Stars
- Afrikaribesia - Enoch Ajunwa's novel Unknown Destination
- Afro-European Federation - Robert A. Heinlein's novel Time for the Stars
- Coptic Union - John C. Wright's novel Count to a Trillion, p. 184
- Azania - John C. Wright's novel Count to a Trillion, p. 184
- Republic of Dongo - Dambisa Moyo's nonfiction book Dead Aid
- Federal Africa - M.J. Locke's novel Up Against It, p. 162
- Ishmaelia - Evelyn Waugh's novel Scoop
- Kamanga - Chris Ryan's novel Tenth Man Down
- Ken-Tan-Moz - Ben Jeapes's novel Phoenicia's World
- Kingdom of Katanga - David Brin's novel Existence, p. 409
- Republic of Kikaya - Larry Viven and Steven Barnes's novel The Moon Maze Game
- Mancala - James Lilliefors's novel Viral, p. 217
- Buttata - James Lilliefors's novel Viral, pp. 4, 217
- Republic of Sundiata - James Lilliefors's novel Viral, pp. 8, 217
- Republic of Masada (Madagascar) - Christopher Priest's novel The Separation
- New Harare - Kim Stanley Robinson's novel 2312, pp. 374-387
- New Zimbabwe - Kim Stanley Robinson's novel 2312, p. 387
- PanAfrica - Robert A. Heinlein's novel The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
- Rhodesia (future sovereign fragment of contemporary Zimbabwe) - Kim Stanley Robinson's novel 2312, p. 387
- Ruratania (sub-Saharan Africa) - Richard Rottenburg's nonfiction book Far-Fetched Facts description from MIT Press
- Shurga - Anthony Burgess's novel Devil of a State, pp. 30, 38
- Trognika - Anthony Burgess's novel Devil of a State, p. 105
- Naraka - Anthony Burgess's novel Devil of a State, pp. 38, 105
- Dunia (East African Caliphate), a.k.a. Daru-i-riszwan or (Abode of Grace) - Anthony Burgess' novel Devil of a State
- Unnamed country with base in equatorial Africa that carries out nuclear attack on the United States in the Cold War scenario "The 36-Hour War," Life November 19, 1945. Vol. 19, No. 21. source
Antarctic
Cities and Towns
- City of the Invalidated Past - James Morrow's novel This is the Way the World Ends, p. 135
Arctic
Countries
- Thule - Tobias S, Buckell's novel Arctic Rising
- Polario - One Way to Get Russia Right Moscow Times. August 26, 2012.
Australia
- Ross City - Gregory Benford's short story "The Scarred Man," Venture May 1970
North America
States and territories
- Alderney - Grand Theft Auto video games series
- Alleghany - John Barnes's novel Daybreak Zero, Daybreak series
- American Centaurian - Gini Koch's novel Alien Tango
- Calisota' - Duck universe in various Walt Disney comic books
- Catawba - Thomas Wolfe's novel Look Homeward, Angel
- Chesepeake - John Barnes's novel Daybreak Zero, Daybreak series: Green Idaho (northern half of Idaho after its partition) - Greg Bear's novel Heads, p. 48
- Euphoria - David Lodge's novel Changing Places
- Fremont - James A. Michener's novel Space
- Heavensylvania - "4th of July Under Attack" episode of Colbert Report, June 30, 2009
- Hohoq (a.k.a. Ar) - comedian John Hodgman's The Areas of My Expertise.
- Lost Quarter - John Barnes's novel Daybreak Zero, Daybreak series
- Malebolgia - Minuet in Hell episodes of Doctor Who
- Manhattan - James Blish's short story "A Work of Art" in Science Fiction Stories July 1956
- Mercer - Motorama 1991 film
L Mexifornia - Bordertown television series
- Mikewa - Anthony Trollope's novel The American Senator
- Missitucky - Finian's Rainbow 1947 Broadway musical
- Moosylvania - The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show television series
- New England - John Barnes's novel Daybreak Zero, Daybreak series
- New Delaware - Daily Sow With John Stewart episode of January 16th, 2013
- Federal District of Sitka - Michael Chabon's novel The Yiddish Policemen's Union
- Superior - John Barnes's novel Daybreak Zero, Daybreak series
- Statesota - Moral Orel Adult Swim television series
- United Rockies Emirates - A Wry Look at the Presidential Election, Year 2024 Steve Bodow. Wired. 16:3 March 3, 2008.
- Wabash - John Barnes's novel Daybreak Zero, Daybreak series
- Waldensia - Kingley Amis's novel The Alteration, p. 201
- Winnemac - Sinclair Lewis's novels
ADVERTISEMENT
Countries
- American Union - Larry Viven and Steven Barnes's novel The Moon Maze Game
- Archdiocese of Florida - Chris Roberson's Further: Beyond the Threshold
- Atlantic Union - Norman Spinrad's novel The Men in the Jungle
- Aristopia - Costello Holford's novel Aristopia: A Romance-History of the New World
- Blueland (island near Hawaii) - RIMPAC 98 (international maritime training exercise)
- California Republic - Colin Harvey's novel Damage Time
- Central - "Inside Probe" episodes of NBC television series My Name is Earl
- Christian Federation of American States - M.J. Locke's novel Up Against It, p. 161
- Cilenia - Karl Schroeder's "To Hie From Far Cilenia, in John Scalzi's short story collection Metatropolis
- Commonwealth of American States - Arthur C. Clarke's novel 'The Hammer of God
- Deseret - Chris Roberson's Further: Beyond the Threshold
- Ecotopia - Ernest Callenbach's novels Ecotopia: The Notebooks and Reports of William Weston and Ecotopia Emerging
- Efficistan - Steve Vanderheiden's nonfiction book Atmospheric Justice: A Political Theory of Climate Change
- Empire of the Americas - Poul Anderson's "The Communicators," a short story in Robert Hoskin's collection Infinity One
- Great Asia - Poul Anderson's "The Communicators," a short story in Robert Hoskin's collection Infinity One
- Norrestand - Poul Anderson's "The Communicators," a short story in Robert Hoskin's collection Infinity One
- Empire of the Americas - Poul Anderson's "The Communicators," a short story in Robert Hoskin's collection Infinity One
- Midafrica - Poul Anderson's "The Communicators," a short story in Robert Hoskin's collection Infinity One
- Domination of Baikal - Poul Anderson's "The Communicators," a short story in Robert Hoskin's collection Infinity One
- Christian States of America - Matt Ruff's novel The Mirage, pp. 235-237
- United Arab States - Matt Ruff's novel The Mirage
- Pentocostal Gilead Heartland - Matt Ruff's novel The Mirage
- Kingdom of Louisiana - Matt Ruff's novel The Mirage, pp. 235-237
- Isreal - Matt Ruff's novel The Mirage
- Evangelical Republic of Texas - Matt Ruff's novel The Mirage, pp. 235-237
- Kingdom of Mississippi - Matt Ruff's novel The Mirage, pp. 235-237
- Rocky Mountain Independent Territories - Matt Ruff's novel The Mirage (Homage to Philip K. Dick's The Man in the High Castle?)
- Federated States of the Western Hemisphere - Douglas R. Mason's novel Matrix
- Free City of Boulder - Dale Pendell's 2010 novel The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse, p. 128
- Grand Duchy of Hallifax - John Barnes's novel The Last President, p. 351
- Haijac Union - Philip José Farmer's novel The Lovers
- Higher Novo Mexico - Gregory Benford's nonfiction book Deep Time
- Free State of Chihuahua - Gregory Benford's nonfiction book Deep Time
- Icaria - The Zeno Narrative
- Frisland - The Zeno Narrative
- Drogeo - The Zeno Narrative
- Engroeneland (probably Greenland) - The Zeno Narrative
- Estotiland - The Zeno Narrative
- Janitoria - Scrubs You Tube
- Mecha (ruled by and for androids) - Madeline Ashby's novel vN, p. 67
- Normeroca - Poul Anderson's short story "SOS" in his collection Dialogue With Darkness
- Northwest Union - Robert A. Heinlein's Beyond This Horizon
- Oceania - George Orwell's novel 1984
- Omerta - Katy Stauber's novel Revolution World
- Opium - Nancy Farmer's novel The House of the Scorpion
- Orangeland (island near Hawaii) - RIMPAC 98 (international maritime training exercise)
- Pacifica - Chris Roberson's Further: Beyond the Threshold
- People's Republic of America - Invasion USA 1952 film
- People's Republic of the Northeast - John C. Wright's novel Count to a Trillion
- Pollutia - Steve Vanderheiden's nonfiction book Atmospheric Justice: A Political Theory of Climate Change
- Real America - John Barnes' novel Candle
- Republic of Gilead - Margaret Atwood's novel The Handmaid's Tale
- Republic of Hawaii/Free State of Hawaii - Robert A. Heinlein's novel Revolt in 2100
- Reunited States - Dale Pendell's 2010 novel The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse, p. 128
- Salmon Nation - Ecotrust NGO conception of the Pacific Northwest
- Shasta-Tehachapi California Confederation - Dale Pendell's 2010 novel The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse, p. 47
- Socialist Union of American States - Maureen F. McHugh's novel China Mountain Zhang
- Technate of North America - Mack Reynolds' novel The Cosmic Eye
- Western Hemisphere Union - Allen Steele's novel Coyote Rising, Coyote universe
- United America Mack Reynolds' novel Commune 2000 A.D.
- United Republic of America - Allen Steele's novel Coyote Rising, Coyote universe
- United States of North America (U.S.N.A.) - Robert A. Heinlein and Spider Robinson's novel Variable Star
- United Vassal States of America - Otto Basil's novel Wenn dad der Fürher wusste (If Only the Fürher Knew)
- Zona Infectada - indie film
Other
- York Basin - James Blish and Norman L. Knight's novel A Torrent of Faces
Islands
- New South Greenland
South America and Caribbean
Countries
- Bolivarian Federation - Lee Konstantinou's novel Pop Apocalypse, p. 59
- Brazilian Union - Robert A. Heinlein's novel The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
- Costaguana - Juan Gabriel Vasquez's novel The Secret History of Costaguana ACTUALLY JUST PANAMA
- Costaguana - Michael Taussig's non-fiction? The Magic of the State
- Greater Brazil - Paul McAuley's novel The Quiet War and Evening's Empire, page 31
- Estados Unidos de Sud - Robert A. Heinlein's novel Time for the Stars
- Latinum - Max Ehrlich's novel The Edict
- Euroasia - Max Ehrlich's novel The Edict
- Europa - Max Ehrlich's novel The Edict
- Federated Orinet Republics - Max Ehrlich's novel The Edict
- Can-Am States - Max Ehrlich's novel The Edict
- African Complex - Max Ehrlich's novel The Edict
- Macondo - Gabriel Garcia Marquez's novel One Hundred Years of Solitude
- Mayapan - Adrienne V. Parks's novel Acts of God
- Multinational Territory of Germany (former Brazilian states of Pernambuco and Rio Grande do Norte) - Ignacio de Loyola Brandao's novel And Still the Earth
- New Bolivar - Robert A. Heinlein's novel Beyond This Horizon
- Republic of Vieques - October 17, 1962 U.S. Military Training Exercise for the invasion of Cuba (Source: Alex von Tunzelmann's 2011 Red Heat: Conspiracy, Murder, and the Cold War in the Caribbean)
- San Theodoros - Hergé's cartoon Tintin and the Picaros
- Southern Hemisphere League - John Barnes's Million Open Doors series novels: A Million Open Doors, brief reference
- Tecala - Taylor Holden's novel Proof of Life
East Asia, Southeast Asia and Australasia
Countries
- Agartha - Buddhist legend
- Arcadia - Cobra Gold 2009 joint Thai-American military exercise
- Australasian Republic - Robert A. Heinlein's novel Tunnel in the Sky
- Autarchy of Great Asia - Poul Anderson's short story "SOS" in his collection Dialogue With Darkness
- Basicland - Basically, It's Over hypothetical island in an economic essay
- Dahanga - Anthony Burgess' novel The Enemy in the Blankets
- Democratic Republic of China - Paul McAuley's novel The Quiet War
- Eastern Federation - Casshern 2004 film
- Europa - Casshern 2004 film
- Zone Seven (probably in Central Asia) - Casshern 2004 film
- Empire of the Great Khan - Robert A. Heinlein's novel Beyond This Horizon
- Erewhon (presumably New Zealand) - Samuel Butler's novels Erewhon and Erewhon Revisited
- Eurasian Coalition - David J. Williams' novel The Machinery of Light
- Kingdon of Agharti (religious, subterranean realm of the King of the World) - Ferdinand Ossendowski's Beasts, Men and Gods non-fiction book citation
- Grand Society of China - Poul Anderson's short story "A Man to My Wounding," in his collection The Horn of Time
- Great Asia Republic - Robert A. Heinlein's novel The Door Into Summer
- Great China - Norman Spinrad's novel The Men in the Jungle
- Great China - Robert A. Heinlein's novel The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
- Greater Manchuria - John C. Wright's novel Count to a Trillion, p. 184
- Pala - Aldous Huxley's utopian novel Island (inspiration for the Brotherhood of Eternal Love)
- Panasia - Poul Anderson's short story "Epilogue," in his collection Explorations
- Pan-Asian Republic - Colin Harvey's novel Damage Time
- Pacific Community - Paul McAuley's novel The Quiet War
- People's Republic of North China - Scott Mackay's novel Omega Sol
- Republic of Shanghai - A Wry Look at the Presidential Election, Year 2024 Steve Bodow. Wired. 16:3. March 3, 2008
- Republic of Wine - Mo Yan's novel Republic of Wine
- Siberian Republic - Gregory Benford's novel Eater, p. 282
- United Asia - John Barnes's Million Open Doors series novels
- Yatakang - John Brunner's novel Stand on Zanzibar
South Asia
Countries
- Beneghal - Poul Anderson's "Progress," a short story in his collection The Horn of Time
- Pankot - Indiana Jones and Temple of Doom 1984 film
- Raspur - What's Up, Tiger Lily? 1966 Woody Allen film
Pacific
Islands
- Enika Atoll (Marshall Islands) - Kevin J. Anderson's Ground Zero, an X Files novel
- Sangar Island - Robert Sheckley's novel The Journey of Joenes
- Skin Island - Jessica Khoury's novel Vitro'
Countries
- Equatorial New Guinea - Aloha 2015 film
- Macronesia - "Asassinanny" episode of Venture Bros.
- Maurai Federation - Poul Anderson's "Progress," a short story in his collection The Horn of Time
Europe
Islands
- Caspiar (located in the Caspian Sea) - homeland of comedian Andy Kaufman's character Foreign Man
- Diavolino (Lake Trasimeno, Italy) - Horror novel Diavolino by Steve Emmett
- Merodia (archipelago in Lagodo)- Conference of Peripheral Maritime Regions (CPMR) 2002 Exercize
Countries
- Astarkh Republic - David R. George III's Star Trek: The Original Series novel Allegiance in Exile
- Bacteria - The Great Dictator 1940 Charlie Chaplin film
- Balta - Evan Mandery's novel First Contact: Or, Its Later Than You Think. pp. 188, 214
- Borduria - Hergé's Tintin and the Picaros
- Borgravia - Norman Spinrad's The Iron Dream (note the novel within the novel structure)
- Burgundy (real region but fictional independent country) - Brad Linaweaver's novella Moon of Ice
- Castalia - Hermann Hesse's novel Magister Ludi: The Glass Bead Game
- Common Europe - Mack Reynolds' novel Commune 2000 A.D.
- Common Europe - John Brunner's novel Stand on Zanzibar
- Duchy of Grand Fenwick - The Mouse that Roared 1959 film
- Eurasia - George Orwell's novel 1984
- Euro Universe - Code Geass anime universe
- EuroFreezone - David Brin's novel Existence, p. 45
- European Alliance - Allen Steele's novel Coyote Rising, Coyote universe
- Eurore Division - Brian W. Aldiss's novel Bow Down to Nul
- Free State of Bohemia - Dale Pendell's 2010 novel The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse, p. 124
- Galway Republic - John Barnes's novel The Last President, p. 351
- Gazira-ul-Ragul (renamed and Islamized Isle of Man) - Anthony Burgess' essay/dystopian novella 1985, p. 243
- Greatbrit Division - Brian W. Aldiss's novel Bow Down to Nul
- Greater Soviet Union - Norman Spinrad's novel The Men in the Jungle
- High Republic of Heldon - Norman Spinrad's The Iron Dream (note the novel within the novel structure)
- Holy Islamic Caliphate of Iraq - Dad From 2150 Can’t Get Enough Iraq War Documentaries parody in The Onion March 13, 2014
- Jewish Free State (Balkans) - Stephen Fry's alternative history within a novel Making History
- Kingdom of the Azores - John Barnes's novel The Last President, p. 351
- Lagodo - Conference of Peripheral Maritime Regions (CPMR) 2002 Exercize
- Luvania - trick question in One.Tel. 2004 public opinion survey
- Macedonion Free State - Poul Anderson's "Marius," a short story in his collection The Horn of Time
- Meccania - Owen Gregory's novel Meccania: the Super-State
- Luniland - Owen Gregory's novel Meccania: the Super-State
- Franconia - Owen Gregory's novel Meccania: the Super-State
- Lugubria - Owen Gregory's novel Meccania: the Super-State
- Northern Union (northern Europe) - Gwynne Dyer's nonfiction Climate Wars, p. 1
- Padania (northern Italian peninsula) - Gwynne Dyer's nonfiction Climate Wars, p. 1
- Pottsylvania - The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle 2000 film
- Relinesia - MILEX 09 EU Exercise
- Republic of Scotland - Ken MacLeod's novel The Night Sessions, p. 73
- Rhodania - MILEX 09 EU Exercise
- Russlavic Federation - Charles E. Gannon's novel Fire With Fire, p. 594
- Schlaraffia - myth described in John Waller's nonfiction The Dancing Plague, p. 31
- Slaka - Malcolm Bradbury's sendup Why Come to Slaka?: The Official Guide to an Imaginary, Mysteriously Mobile Piece of Europe
- States of Europe - Brian Aldiss' novel Earthworks
- Waterberg State - Brian W. Aldiss's novel Earthworks
- New Angola - Brian W. Aldiss' novel Earthworks
- Australia-Zealand - Brian Aldiss' novel Earthworks
- Soviet Complex - Mack Reynolds' novel Commune 2000 A.D.
- Sycambia - Randolph Robban's Si l'Allemagne avait vainu
- Trobokistan - former Soviet satellite state in Totally Spies! television series
- United Federation of Britain - Total Recall 2012 remake of the adequate 1990 film adaptation
- United Free Europe - Poul Anderson's "Marius," a short story in his collection The Horn of Time
- Universal State - Karin Boye's novel Kallocain
- Wolack - Norman Spinrad's The Iron Dream (note the novel within the novel structure)
- Worldstate - Karin Boye's novel Kallocain
- Zembla - Vladimir Nabakov's novel (or collection of cantos) Pale Fire
- Zind - Norman Spinrad's The Iron Dream (note the novel within the novel structure)
- Unnamed country where Esperanto is the national language - Idiot's Delight 1939 film
Middle East and Central Asia
Cities and Towns
- Baleb (capital of Azaran) - Fred Hoyle and John Elliot's novel Andromeda Breakthrough
- Wadi al-Uyoun - Abdelrahman Munif's novel Cities of Salt
- Hirbet Hizah (fictional Palestinian village destroyed in the Naqba) - S. Yizhar's "The Story of Hirbet Hizah."
Countries
- Azaran (Muslim Middle East oil state) - Fred Hoyle and John Elliot's novel Andromeda Breakthrough
- Federation of Imamates - Lee Konstantinou's novel Pop Apocalypse
- TransArabian Caliphates - Lee Konstantinou's novel Pop Apocalypse
- Hamiya - Amjad Nasser's novel Land of No Rain
- Islamic Republic of Arabia - Gwynne Dyer's nonfiction Climate Wars, p. 2
- Israeli Republics - Philip José Farmer's novel The Lovers
- Mooran - Abdelrahman Munif's novel The Trench
- Tallstoria (ruled by Persia) - Thomas More's novel Utopia
- Tebarou - Brian Aldiss' novel Super-State
- Turaqistan - War, Inc. 2008 film
- Ugigistan - War, Inc. 2008 film
- Yisroel (Yiddish speaking) - Michael Chabon's essay "Guidebook to a Land of Ghosts" Harper's October 1997 and also an addendum to his novel The Yiddish Policemen's Union
Uncertain Regional Location
Cities
- Marwencol - Marwencol 2010 film
- Satirev - James Morrow's 1990 novel City of Truth
- Urbania, Normland - Richard Rottenburg's nonfiction book Far-Fetched Facts description from MIT Press
- Veritas - James Morrow's 1990 novel City of Truth
- Descartes Borough
- Kant Borough
- Locke Borough
- Nietzche Borough
- Plato Borough
- Spinoza Borough
Countries
- Ambergris - Jeff Vandermeer's fantasy novel Finch
- Stockton Commonwealth - Jeff Vandermeer's fantasy novel Finch, p.14
- Crim Tartary - W.M. Thackeray's illustrated novel The Rose and the Ring
- Paflagonia - W.M. Thackeray's illustrated novel The Rose and the Ring
- Glubdubdrib - Jonathan Swift's novel Gulliver's Travels
- Herland - Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s feminist utopian novel Herland
- Gapnadesh - Gap Year Land opens near Tenby The Daily Mash, May 4, 2013
- Glennbeckistan - Letter to the Editor from WV U.S. Senator Robert Byrd
- Kalif's empire - Jeff Vandermeer's fantasy novel Finch, p. 14
- Kazohinia - Sándor Szathmári's novel Kazohinia
- Kirkesner - U.S. military medical training at Quantico, VA (source: Kyndra Miller Rotunda's memoir Honor Bound, pp. 14, 17, 21)
- Land Where Econfakers Dwell - John F. Weeks's nonfiction Economics of the 1% p. 5
- Linaria - Asuka Izumi’s manga The Lizard Prince
- Normland - Richard Rottenburg's nonfiction book Far-Fetched Facts description from MIT Press
- Outer Zone, a.k.a. OZ - Tin Man 2007 min-series
- Renewistan - Stewart Brand's nonfiction Whole Earth Discipline: An Ecopragmatist's Manifesto
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
alien from arcturus epdf Star Traders 4X date, platforms courts of the morning epdf mark and the void shooting script read xebel series bozo robot official title snake refernces for zandia archie o'toole text from sandbox Wonderman dates, find 1st issue, Wonder Comics #9-20 ? observation lady closeup deathstroke movie title date scotland - get alt royal standard use ai upscale on tijada broad This Modern World dates zaire flag, congo arms all tenth man down bib info series, name of rebel movement iraq arms, other eagles of saladin for battlefield, what countries use / used, translator reddit for inscription serdar? maneuvering spelling viriconium bib bahari lion check image banks need plaited mane can assemble out of multiple if you find large enough source images peacock feathers agent of chaos bib quote page number welcome to night vale book murderbot series The Lost Embassy for want of a nail wiki, tropes page orange flag in mirror's edge venezuela flag in mercenaries opening cutscene in hd the dreamers book 18 days title bib the young world - what flag means, archive, bib
g 170, 192-195, main 43-54
--- Mighty Space Miners OAV (おいら宇宙の探鉱夫) 1994 sci-fi OVA
Atlantis Bialya Bogatago - Batman #424 (October, 1988) Corto Maltese Del Canto - JLA Classified #26 (October, 2006) Devil Skull Island Dhabar - in Robin 44 a Middle-Eastern country also known as Karroca or the Karrocan Emirate, neighboring Edalji Gamorra Island Hunpar Jamil Island Jarhanpur Kafoonistan Kahndaq Karrocan Emirate - aka Karroca, aka Dhabar, Kaznia Khadym Kooey Kooey Kooey Korao Lamumba Lancho Largo Logamba Markovia Mikishawm Modora
CHECKED Justice League Europe (1989-1993) _ DC Database _ Fandom
Rheelasia - Asian country in Young Justice, episode XXXX, a blatant stand-in for North Korea. (A united Rheelasia had appeared earlier in Black Canary & Oracle: Birds of Prey) _NOTHING North OR WEST/EAST? It was spelled Rhelasia in the Young Justice TV show, which split the country in two halves like Korea. North Rhelasia and South Rhelasia, although the nations have recently united, forming United Rhelasia.
NOT DONE
Numark Nurvania Olancho Oolong Island Oxnalia Paradise Island Parador - Police Comics #5 (December, 1941)
+ Eclipso etc
Quiana Qurac Ramistan Rangistan Raulo Rebolo Rembecco Rhapastan Rheelasia Robaria Samos San Miguel - neutral country in whose port a surface raider of an unnamed nation at war with the US is secretly resupplying in X-5, Secret Agent, Hit Comics #1 (July, 1940) Much later in New Titans #70 (October, 1990) country has terrible rep but is grudgingly doing a peace process and has just released iconic freedom fighter from jail. In deathstroke movie, dictatorhsip under xxxx, whom Deathstroke uncharacteristically leaves alive, and has featureless red flag.
incomplete
Santa Bertriza - neighbor of Del Canto in JLA Classified #26 (October, 2006)_NOTHING - REALLY? Santa Flora - Latin American country https://readcomiconline.li/Comic/Sensation-Mystery-Comics/Issue-3?id=41043#28 Santa Prisca Sardona - republi Seljukana Slovekia - Eastern European monarchy on Earth-8, brutaly conquered by Lord Havok and the Extremists and converted into their stronghold (with the addition of "New" to the name)
https://readcomiconline.li/Comic/Countdown-Presents-Lord-Havok-and-the-Extremists/Issue-5?id=88138#4 https://dc.fandom.com/wiki/Slovekia?so=search
Souciyan Island
South OR WEST/EAST? Rheelasia - Asian country in Young Justice, episode XXXX, a blatant stand-in for South Korea. (A united Rheelasia had appeared earlier in Black Canary & Oracle: Birds of Prey) _NOTHING
Sunken Island
Tai-Yan
Talon
Tiger Empire
Tranbelvia
United States of AmeriKa
United States of Lions
United States of North America
Uslustan
Vendazia
Verdania
Vlatava - homeland of Count Vertigo. has flag in Suicide Squad Vol 1 #41 May, 1990
Volcania
Voldania
Voltania
Wooloo Island
Zambesi
Zandia
Zangaria
Zarikan
Zazarstan
Zhutan
Zorania
---
[Arabic _ English] The motto on the seal of the Emirate of Deryabar in the 1947 movie _Sinbad the Sailor._ According to the script, it reads _In the eighth month, the winds are willing_ - is that correct? "في قمر الثمين النائم ألفين" ؟؟؟ I am just guessing . does that mean anything or is it just gibberish? It's either a different language or just gibberish. The font is usually associated with farsi/urdu. Can be used for Arabic but very rare. thanks for the clearer image. Can't quite make it all out but what I can see the given translation is roughly accurate? It's more like "In moon the eighth the breeze accepts" But it may not be Arabic, rather something close enough that it's roughly understandable. That or a really bad translation into Arabic (They started with what they wanted it to say in English and translated it into Arabic)
https://readcomiconline.li/Comic/The-Inferior-Five/Issue-4?id=74673#6
Archie O'Toole was an American comic-strip written and drawn by Will Eisner, debuting as a two-page feature in Feature Funnies in July 1938, before moving to Smash Comics, another Quality anthology title, a year later.
History of 1930's platinum and golden age comics http://www.terryhoknes.com/comichistory1933.htm
The Steranko History of Comics https://archive.org/stream/historycomics11/History_comics_2_djvu.txt
By February 1941, Eisner had left the feature, which gradually transitioned to a one-page format. His successors (which included George Tuska) kept the pen name "Bud Thomas," but most of the continuity elements were discarded in favor of self-contained gag strips.
Premise
Archie O'Toole was a native of the island dictatorship of Pyromania, located three thousand miles off the Atlantic coast of the U.S. Employed as a itinerant artist, he was thrown in jail after painting a portrait of an old man with a beard (the mercurial dictator of Pyromania, Gil O. Teen, having banned beards.) Gil O. Teen then commanded Archie to paint his own portrait, but the artist tricked the dictator into falling off a balcony, an embarrassment which (under the laws of Pyromania) meant his deposition. In gratitude, O'Toole was declared the new king of Pyromania.
The strip's first year in Feature Funnies consisted of O'Toole fending off attempts by Gil O. Teen to depose him and retake power, followed by a trip to America to secure a loan to address Pyromania's perennial budget shortfall, where the king was greeted as a celebrity and made a lot of money endorsing products. He also acquired a romantic interest in the angelic Suzy Sweet, the stepdaughter of a New York mobster who had tried to waylay him on the way home. The stories consisted of two pages and had a certain amount of continuity, including attempts to introduce recurring characters such as a upper-class British bodyguard or an offensively stereotyped black "Finkelstein's monster," that however rarely saw more than a few appearances. The plots included encounters with mobsters, visits by foreign dignitaries, and encounters with the supernatural, such as the ghosts haunting the Pyromanian royal castle (who left in a huff after O'Toole tried to charge them rent.)
In August 1939, the comic was moved to Quality's new title, Smash Comics, and the storytelling became less ambitious; Suzy Sweet was dropped without explanation after the penultimate Feature Funnies issue, while Gill O. Teen only outlasted her by one more. The royal advisers became one-off characters, and the title was gradually scaled down to a single page, with less narrative content and more of a single-joke structure. Archie O'Toole' was nonetheless popular enough to run for another nine years, in nearly seventy consecutive issues; the art however departed considerably from Eisner's original style, and there were several instances of unsubtly recycled plots.
Character Description
Tall, gangly, and red-headed, O'Toole was kind, eccentric, and fond of bad novelty music, in particular a tune called "Flat Foot Floogie" ("with a floy floy ya de da yo de do").
Publication History
Title | Appearances | First | Last | Issues | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Feature Funnies | 11 | Jul 1938 | May 1939 | #10 - #20 | |
Feature Comics | 2 | Jun 1939 | Jul 1939 | #21 - #22 | |
Smash Comics | 72 | Aug 1939 | Feb 1949 | #1 - #41, #43 - 68, #70, #71, #78, #79, #81 | |
All Humor Comics | 1 (reprint only) | Oct 1949 | Oct 1949 | #16 |
Category:Golden Age superheroes Category:1938 comics debuts Category:1949 comics endings Category:Characters created by Will Eisner Category:Comics characters introduced in 1940 Category:DC Comics characters Category:Quality Comics characters Category:Quality Comics superheroes Category:Quality Comics titles Category:Comics set in the United States |}
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