- Ruritania
Ruritania is a
fictional country incentral Europe which forms the setting for three books byAnthony Hope : "The Prisoner of Zenda " (1894), "The Heart of Princess Osra " (1896), and "Rupert of Hentzau " (1898). The kingdom is also the setting for sequels and variations by other writers, see here for homages. It lent its name to agenre of adventure stories known asRuritanian romance s, and is used in academe to refer to a hypothetical country.In literature and creative arts
In Hope's
oeuvre , Ruritania is depicted as a German-speaking,Roman Catholic country under anabsolute monarchy , with deepsocial division s (but not ethnic ones) reflected in the conflicts of the first novel. Geographically, it is usually considered to be located betweenSaxony andBohemia ; the author indicates that the capital city, Strelsau, lies on the railway line betweenDresden andPrague . Hope's novels give the impression that Ruritania would not be a pleasant place to inhabit, with its feckless, autocratic king, police surveillance of suspected subversives, and society deeply polarised between rich and poor. However, stage and film versions sanitised and romanticised the setting, ignoring Hope's references to the poverty and political unrest in Strelsau's Old City, and depicted instead a picturesque fairy-tale kingdom.Other authors have created
homage s set in Ruritania, includingSimon Hawke 'sscience fiction re-working "The Zenda Vendetta (Time Wars Book 4)" (1985),John Haythorne 's Communist-era "The Streslau Dimension ", andJohn Spurling 's humorous post-Cold War thriller "After Zenda " (1995). Among the later novelists to use this setting, neither Hawke nor Spurling adheres to the Hopecanon ; their works show influences from the film adaptations. Hawke relocates Ruritania to theBalkans , and makes it smaller and more socially cohesive; Spurling, who places the country in theCarpathians thus hinting at its being in fact the formerHabsburg -today part of Romania- province ofTransylvania , introduces ethnic and linguistic divisions; Haythorne puts Ruritania on the other side ofCzechoslovakia to Spurling's setting.Hope's novels resulted in "Ruritania" becoming a
generic term for any imaginary small, European kingdom used as the setting for romance, intrigue andadventure novel . It lent its name to a wholegenre of writing, theRuritanian romance , including theGraustark novels byGeorge Barr McCutcheon . InEvelyn Waugh 's 1930 comedic novel "Vile Bodies ", one character is a deposed and maudlin "ex-King of Ruritania"; he is presumably the same figure who appears in severalP.G. Wodehouse stories, mostly as the doorman of Barribault's Hotel. Ruritania even makes an appearance in a card game, "Contraband", in which one of the cards represents the Ruritanian Crown Jewels.Later authors develop the idea further. Ruritania inspired other fictional countries, such as
Ixania inEric Ambler 's "The Dark Frontier ", which share with the original the depiction of complexpower struggles in which a visiting protagonist from a real country becomes deeply involved.In 1970,
Neiman-Marcus selected Ruritania as the subject of its annual fortnight, in which the arts, culture, and goods of a country are highlighted both in the store and through special events. Previous honorees includedEngland ,France ,Italy , andDenmark , although the 1969 and 1971 events also had a general theme rather than a particular country.Ruritania is mentioned in "Anno Dracula" and "
The New Traveller's Almanac ". In "Back in the USSA ", Princess Flavia of Ruritania marries into analternate history Romanov dynasty . The short story "A Shambles in Belgravia" featuresProfessor Moriarty andIrene Adler working to cause a scandal in the Ruritanian government. [ [http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/sherlock/shamblesinbelgravia1.shtml A Shambles in Belgravia] ]In July 2008
Warren Ellis will use the Ruritania setting as part of his graphic novella "Aetheric Mechanics ".In academia
"Ruritania" is used as the name of a hypothetical country to make points in academic discussions, much as
Alice and Bob are in logic and computing.Jurists specialising ininternational law use it and otherfictional countries when describing a hypothetical case illustrating some legal point. Australian foreign ministerAlexander Downer cited Ruritania as a fictional enemy when illustrating a security treaty betweenAustralia andIndonesia signed on 8 November 2006: "We do not need to have a security agreement with Indonesia so both of us will fight off the Ruritanians. That's not what the relationship is about," he said. "It is all about working together on the threats that we have to deal with, which are different types of threats".Walter Lippmann used the word to describe the stereotype that characterized the vision ofinternational relations during and after the First World War. Ruritania is used as the name of a highly nationalist country in Equatorial Cyberspace [http://www.arts.mcgill.ca/programs/polisci/brynania/infocentre/factbook/cyberia.html] , a fictional continent used for a peacebuilding andconflict resolution simulation atMcGill University .Ruritania has also been used to describe the stereotypical development of
nationalism in 19th centuryEastern Europe , byErnest Gellner in "Nations and Nationalism", in apastiche of thehistorical narrative s of nationalist movements among Poles, Czechs, Serbians, Romanians, etc. In this story, peasant Ruritanians living in the "Empire of Megalomania" developed national consciousness through the elaboration of a Ruritanianhigh culture by a small group of intellectuals responding toindustrialization and labor migration.Biochemistry professor, science and science fiction writer, and humor theorist
Isaac Asimov , when tellingethnic joke s that were based entirely on ethnic slurs, would transplant them to Ruritania, e.g.:Q: Why do Ruritanian dogs have flat faces?:A: From chasing parked cars.Other
Ruritania is a
Jugendstil frakturtypeface , byAustralia n designerPaul J. Lloyd .ee also
*
Liechtenstein
*Austria-Hungary References
External links
* [http://www.dafont.com/ruritania.font Ruritania Font] in dafont.com
* [http://www.silverwhistle.co.uk/ruritania/ The Ruritanian Resistance] contains descriptions of the country
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.