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List of fictional countries is a list of fictional countries from published works of fiction (books, films, television series, etc.). Fictional works describe all the countries in the following list as located somewhere on the surface of the Earth as we know it — as opposed to inside the planet, on another world, or during a different "age" of the planet (see below). Map of the Land of Oz, the fictional country in the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Map of the fictional island of Sodor used in the Thomas the Tank Engine stories Fictitious countries used in the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four A guidebook produced about the fictional country Molvanîa...
A - Abari: a British (and ex-British) territory in South America in novels written by John Hearne and Morris Cargill
- Adjikistan: central Asian nation located near Afghanistan and Pakistan in the video game SOCOM U.S. Navy SEALs: Combined Assault
- Afromacoland: African country in the novel Chief the Honourable Minister by T.M. Aluko
- Agrabah: Arabian mystical land in the animated movie Aladdin and its sequels
- Agraria: Eastern country in the movie You Know What Sailors Are
- Ajina: Mixture of the continent of "Asia" and the country of "China", this fictional country was published in the series of Rockman.EXE (US: Mega Man Battle Network (video game) video game.
- Ajir (or Azhir): a Middle East republic neighboring Karak in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Nitro"
- 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
- Al Amarja: Mediterranean island state in the Over the Edge roleplaying game
- Alaine: small European kingdom from the movie His Majesty, the American
- Albenistan: Central Asian country in the d20 adventures Raid on Ashkashem, the Qalashar Device, and the Khorforhan Gambit written by Fraser Ronald and published by Sword's Edge Publishing
- Aldestan: Central Asian country, adjacent to Kazakhstan, in the Command & Conquer: Generals video game
- Alpine Emirates: Islamic states in the Bavarian Alps in the alternate history book The Years of Rice and Salt, by Kim Stanley Robinson
- Altruria: utopian country from William Dean Howells' A Traveller from Altruria
- Amerope: Mixture of the continents of "America" and "Europe", this fictional country was published in the series of Rockman.EXE (US: Mega Man Battle Network (video game) video game.
- Alvania: Balkan kingdom from the movie The Royal Rider
- Amerzone: Central American country, the setting of Amerzone video game
- Anatruria: Balkanic kingdom in the Bernie Rhodenbarr novel The Burglar who thought he was Bogart
- Anchuria: Central American country in the novel Cabbages and Kings by O. Henry
- Anemia: a country in the movie Hot Stuff. Bears the same name as the medical condition.
- Angria: imaginary country from the poems of the Brontë sisters
- Annexia: fictional country at the border of which the final scenes of Naked Lunch take place.
- 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"
- Aquabania: an idyllic island, the supposed home of The Aquabats
- Aquilea: South American country in the movie Les Trottoirs de Saturne
- Arcacia: mythical kingdom in the movie A Royal Family
- Ardistan: from the novel Ardistan and Dschinnistan by Karl Friedrich May
- Aslan: from anime Area 88. Sometimes also transliterated Asran.
- Aurelia: a fictional country that appeared in Ace Combat X.
- Auspasia: the noisiest and most talkative nation in the world; appears in Georges Duhamel's Lettres d'Auspasie and La dernier voyage de Candide
- Austrania: European kingdom in the movie The Last Volunteer
- Axphain: neighbor of Graustark
- Azaran: Middle Eastern country in The Andromeda Breakthrough TV series
- Aztlan: country formed out of the American states of Utah, Arizona and New Mexico after a nuclear war in the novel Warday
John Edgar Colwell Hearne (1926, Montreal, Canada, 1994, Stony Hill, Jamaica) was a white Jamaican novelist, journalist, and teacher. ...
Morris Cargill CD (10 June 1914 - 8 April 2000, Kingston, Jamaica) was a white Jamaican lawyer, businessman, planter, journalist and novelist. ...
Adjikistan is the fictional country that takes place in SOCOM U.S. Navy SEALs: Combined Assault and SOCOM: U.S. Navy SEALs Fireteam Bravo 2. ...
Timothy Mofolorunso Aluko (born June 14, 1918) is a Nigerian writer. ...
This article is about the Disney film. ...
MegaMan NT Warrior (Full Name: MegaMan Net Transmission Warrior), known as RockMan EXE (ããã¯ãã³ã¨ã°ã¼ Rokkuman EGUZE) in Japan, is an anime and manga series based on the MegaMan Battle Network series of video games. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
It has been suggested that Regents: Low Countries be merged into this article or section. ...
Alternate history (fiction) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
The Years of Rice and Salt (2002, ISBN 0553580078) is an alternate history novel written by science fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson, a thought experiment about a world without Christianity. ...
For the late American actress, see Kim Stanley. ...
Al Amarja is a fictitious Mediterranean island setting of the roleplaying game Over the Edge, by Atlas Games. ...
Over the Edge is a surreal role-playing game of secrets and conspiracies, taking place on the mysterious Island of Al Amarja. ...
A roleplaying game (RPG) is a type of game in which players assume the roles of characters and collaboratively create stories. ...
This article needs cleanup. ...
Alternate history (fiction) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
The Years of Rice and Salt (2002, ISBN 0553580078) is an alternate history novel written by science fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson, a thought experiment about a world without Christianity. ...
For the late American actress, see Kim Stanley. ...
William Dean Howells (March 1, 1837 â May 11, 1920) was an American realist author. ...
MegaMan NT Warrior (Full Name: MegaMan Net Transmission Warrior), known as RockMan EXE (ããã¯ãã³ã¨ã°ã¼ Rokkuman EGUZE) in Japan, is an anime and manga series based on the MegaMan Battle Network series of video games. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Amerzone is a first-person adventure game much like Myst. ...
Bernie Rhodenbarr is the fictional protagonist of the Burglar series of mystery novels by Lawrence Block. ...
William Sydney Porter in his thirties O. Henry is the pen name of American writer William Sydney Porter (September 11, 1862 â June 5, 1910). ...
This article discusses the medical condition. ...
The Brontë sisters, painted by their brother, Branwell c. ...
Naked Lunch is a 1991 film by the Canadian director David Cronenberg. ...
Animaniacs logo, featuring Yakko, Wakko, and Dot, plus Pinky and the Brain. ...
This article is about the television series. ...
Location within Mexico Municipalities of Baja California Country Capital Municipalities 5 Largest City Tijuana Government - Governor José Guadalupe Osuna Millán (PAN) - Federal Deputies PAN: 8 - Federal Senators Alejandro González (PAN) Rafael DÃaz (PAN) Fernando Castro (PRI) Area Ranked 12th - Total 69,921 km² (26,996. ...
The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show (also known as Rocky and His Friends and The Bullwinkle Show) was a television animated series created and produced in the USA by Jay Ward. ...
The Aquabats (often written as The Aquabats!) are an American rock band formed in 1994 in Huntington Beach, California and currently recording for Nitro Records. ...
Karl Friedrich May (Hohenstein-Ernstthal, February 25, 1842 - Radebeul, March 30, 1912) was the best selling German writer of all time, noted chiefly for wild west books set in the American West and similar books set in the Middle East; in addition, he also wrote some lesser-known stories set...
Animé redirects here. ...
Serialized in Big Comic Spirits Original run 1979 â 1986 No. ...
Aurelia Spoiler warning: Aurelia (IPA: [ÊÉeɪliËÉË]) is a fictional country from the game Ace Combat X: Skies of Deception. ...
Georges Duhamel (June 30, 1884 - April 13, 1966), was a French author, born in Paris. ...
Graustark is a fictional country in Eastern Europe used as a setting for several novels by George Barr McCutcheon. ...
Graustark is a fictional country in Eastern Europe used as a setting for several novels by George Barr McCutcheon. ...
The Andromeda Breakthrough was a 1962 sequel to the popular BBC TV series A for Andromeda again written by Fred Hoyle and John Elliot. ...
Aztl n is the Aztec/Mexica place of origin in Northern Mexico — perhaps in the area of the present-day southwestern US states or perhaps an island in part of the modern Mexican state of Nayarit. ...
This article is about the U.S. state. ...
Official language(s) English Spoken language(s) English 74. ...
Capital Santa Fe Largest city Albuquerque Largest metro area Albuquerque metropolitan area Area Ranked 5th - Total 121,665 sq mi (315,194 km²) - Width 342 miles (550 km) - Length 370 miles (595 km) - % water 0. ...
Warday is a novel by Whitley Strieber and James Kunetka, first published in 1984. ...
B - BabaKiueria: a country in Australia in the movie BabaKiueria
- Babalstan: Middle Eastern country in the movie Harum Scarum
- Babar's Kingdom
- Backhairistan: from The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius animated TV series
- Bacteria: thinly-disguised version of Fascist Italy from the movie The Great Dictator. Bears the same name as the microorganism.
- Bahar: gulf state from an episode of Spooks. Capital city: Bahar city.
- Bahavia: country where Meena Paroom's father is the ambassador in the Disney Channel series, "Cory In The House". This is a small country right outside Uzbekistan.
- Bahkan: a nation threatened by the Federated Peoples' Republic in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Fool's Gold"
- Baki: homeland of Omio in Madeleine L'Engle's writing, a small Pacific island nation once dominated by British
- 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
- Balnibarbi: land containing the metropolis called Lagado from the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift
- Baltonia: probably a Baltic country in the movie Esupai
- Bandrika (sometimes spelled Vandreka): Eastern European Alpine country, the setting of the first part of the movie The Lady Vanishes. The language spoken in this country is an amalgamation of several European languages.
- Bangalla: from The Phantom comic strip. The Phantom's base lies in the deep woods of this central African nation.
- Bapetikosweti: The "homeland" state of the South African satirist Pieter-Dirk Uys (under the guise of his drag character, Evita Bezuidenhout) was ambassador to South Africa. It is a word-play on the former "Bantustan" state of Bophuthatswana (unrecognised as a sovereign state by any country other than South Africa). Bophuthatswana was re-incorporated into South Africa shortly after its first democratic election on 27 April 1994, after which Uys discontinued using his parody state (claiming that Bapetikosweti too had been "re-incorporated" into South Africa).
- Baracq: a Middle Eastern kingdom in the TV soap opera Capitol.
- Barataria: an island kingdom awarded by some noblemen to Sancho Panza as a prank in Miguel de Cervantes' Don Quixote. The name comes from Spanish language's barato, meaning cheap. Barataria also features in The Gondoliers or The King of Barataria, a Savoy Opera, with music by Arthur Sullivan and libretto by W. S. Gilbert.
- 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.
- Basenji: a country neighboring Russia in the sitcom I Dream of Jeannie
- Belka: a fictional country that appeared in Ace Combat 5 and Ace Combat Zero.
- Beninia: from John Brunner's Stand on Zanzibar
- Bensalem: utopian island nation located somewhere off the Western coast of the continent of America from Francis Bacon's The New Atlantis
- Beth Ja Brin: Middle-Eastern country appearing in Danger Man
- Betonia: European kingdom in the movie His Royal Highness (1932)
- Bialya: fictional country appearing in many comic books published by DC Comics.
- Birani: African nation featured in the movie The Gods Must Be Crazy. Located near Namibia and Angola. Has a Banana Forest at a place called Dumgase.
- 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.
- Blefuscu: a land where all the people are tiny from the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift. Enemies of Lilliput
- Bocamoa: a gold producing white supremacist African country from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Kitara"
- Bolginia: a small country in the video game Gyakuten Saiban 4
- Boloxnia: an Eastern European Communist county set in 1957 compiled by the listeners of Alex Lester, presenter of the Radio 2 early morning show.
- Bonande: West African country in the movie La Nuit de la vérité
- Bongo Congo: African kingdom in cartoon King Leonardo and his Short Subjects
- 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)
- Bora Gora: An island in the Marivellas island chain from Tales of the Gold Monkey
- Boravia: a republic from TV program Danger Man In the episode "The Lovers", John Drake receives a call from an old enemy who is now in charge of security for the President of Boravia.
- Borduria: totalitarian state from the comics series The Adventures of Tintin, located in the Balkans
- Borginia: a republic from the videogame Dino Crisis
- Borovia: Central-European country from The Big Knights TV programme.
- Borovia (2): a communist Eastern European country in the G.I. Joe comics by Marvel Comics.
- Bothalia: a kingdom in the Balkan Mountains from the movie The Vagabond Prince
- Brainania: from the animated series Pinky and the Brain
- Braslavia: Slavic dictatorial country in Patrouille des Castors comics
- Bratavia: Asian dictatorial country mentioned in an episode of the 1987 German TV comedy Diplomaten küßt man nicht
- Brazuela: industrialized South American nation between Venezuela and Brazil in Totally Spies! TV series
- Bregna: a centralized scientific planned state from the animated series Aeon Flux
- Bretzelburg: central European dictatorship from Spirou et Fantasio comics
- Holy Britanian Empire: A world superpower that has taken over one-third of the entire world in the anime series Code Geass
- British Hidalgo: tiny Central American country in the novel Limekiller by Avram Davidson (See Hidalgo)
- Brobdingnag: country where the people are all giants from the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift
- Brutopia: country appearing in several Donald Duck stories, possibly referring to the Soviet Union
- Bukistan: an Islamic country in the Cary Grant movie Dream Wife
- Bulmeria: an African country mentioned in the webcomic, It's Walky!
- Buranda: African country in the BBC comedy series Yes Minister
BabaKiueria is a 1986 Australian satirical film on relations between Indigenous Australians and Australians of European descent. ...
BabaKiueria is a 1986 Australian satirical film on relations between Indigenous Australians and Australians of European descent. ...
Harum Scarum is a 1965 musical film and comedy starring Elvis Presley. ...
Babars Kingdom, also known in French as Le pays des Ãléphants (Elephant Land), is a fictional country in Africa consisting of intelligent elephants, which are usually bipedal and civilized. ...
The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius is a spin-off of the Oscar-nominated computer-animated movie; Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, first officially aired in September 2002. ...
Fascism (in Italian, fascismo), capitalized, was the authoritarian political movement which ruled Italy from 1922 to 1943 under the leadership of Benito Mussolini. ...
The Great Dictator is a film directed by and starring Charlie Chaplin. ...
Phyla Actinobacteria Aquificae Chlamydiae Bacteroidetes/Chlorobi Chloroflexi Chrysiogenetes Cyanobacteria Deferribacteres Deinococcus-Thermus Dictyoglomi Fibrobacteres/Acidobacteria Firmicutes Fusobacteria Gemmatimonadetes Lentisphaerae Nitrospirae Planctomycetes Proteobacteria Spirochaetes Thermodesulfobacteria Thermomicrobia Thermotogae Verrucomicrobia Bacteria (singular: bacterium) are unicellular microorganisms. ...
For the music band, see The Spooks. ...
Information Aliases Sophie Martinez Age 14 Date of birth 1993 Occupation Student Family Ambassador Paroom Mother Portrayed by Maiara Walsh Meena Paroom is a fictional character on the television show Cory in the House. ...
For Disney Channel in other countries, see Disney Channel around the world. ...
Cory in the House is an American childrens television series on the Disney Channel and a spin-off from the hit Disney Channel Original Series Thats So Raven. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Madeleine LEngle (November 29, 1918 â September 6, 2007)[1] was an American writer best known for her childrens books, particularly the Newbery Medal-winning A Wrinkle in Time and its sequels A Wind in the Door, A Swiftly Tilting Planet and Many Waters. ...
The Six Million Dollar Man is an American television series about a fictional cyborg working for the OSI (which was usually said to refer to the Office of Scientific Intelligence, but sometimes was called the Office of Scientific Investigation). ...
First Edition of Gullivers Travels Gullivers Travels (1726, amended 1735), officially Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. ...
Jonathan Swift Jonathan Swift (November 30, 1667 â October 19, 1745) was an Irish cleric, satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for Whigs then for Tories), and poet, famous for works like Gullivers Travels, A Modest Proposal, A Journal to Stella, The Drapiers Letters, The Battle of the Books, and...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
The Lady Vanishes is a 1938 film directed by Alfred Hitchcock. ...
For other uses, see Phantom. ...
is the 117th day of the year (118th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1994 (MCMXCIV) The year 1994 was designated as the International Year of the Family and the International Year of the Sport and the Olympic Ideal by the United Nations. ...
Capitol was the name of a television soap opera which aired on the daytime schedule of CBS from March 26, 1982 to March 20, 1987 for 1270 episodes. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
Cervantes redirects here. ...
This article is about the fictional character and novel. ...
This article is about the international language known as Spanish. ...
The Gondoliers, or The King of Barataria, is a Savoy Opera, with music by Arthur Sullivan and libretto by W. S. Gilbert. ...
The Savoy Operas are a series of operettas written by Gilbert and Sullivan. ...
Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan (May 13, 1842 â November 22, 1900) was an English composer best known for his operatic collaborations with librettist W. S. Gilbert. ...
Sir William Schwenck Gilbert Sir William Schwenck Gilbert (November 18, 1836 â May 29, 1911) was an English dramatist, librettist and illustrator best known for the fourteen comic operas produced in collaboration with the composer Sir Arthur Sullivan. ...
Frederick Forsyth, CBE (born August 25, 1938) is an English author and occasional political commentator. ...
The Deceiver is a 1991 novel by Frederick Forsyth. ...
For the episode of The Twilight Zone, see I Dream of Genie (The Twilight Zone). ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Nations and Organizations of Ace Combat. ...
John Brunner John Kilian Houston Brunner (September 24, 1934 â August 26, 1995) was a prolific British author of science fiction novels and stories. ...
Cover art. ...
For other persons named Francis Bacon, see Francis Bacon (disambiguation). ...
Columbus Santa Maria, by Eertvelt The New Atlantis is a utopian novel written by Francis Bacon in 1626. ...
This article is about the 1960s TV series which was also known as Secret Agent and shouldnt be confused with the 1990s television series Secret Agent Man. ...
Bialya is a fictional country in DC Comics. ...
DC Comics is an American comic book and related media company. ...
The Gods Must Be Crazy is a film released in 1980, written and directed by Jamie Uys. ...
De facto is a Latin expression that means in fact or in practice. It is commonly used as opposed to de jure (meaning by law) when referring to matters of law or governance or technique (such as standards), that are found in the common experience as created or developed without...
Clifford the Big Red Dog is an enduring American childrens book series first published in 1962. ...
Lilliput and Blefuscu are two island nations that appear in the 1726 novel Gullivers Travels by Jonathan Swift. ...
First Edition of Gullivers Travels Gullivers Travels (1726, amended 1735), officially Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. ...
Jonathan Swift Jonathan Swift (November 30, 1667 â October 19, 1745) was an Irish cleric, satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for Whigs then for Tories), and poet, famous for works like Gullivers Travels, A Modest Proposal, A Journal to Stella, The Drapiers Letters, The Battle of the Books, and...
Lilliput and Blefuscu are two island nations that appear in the 1726 novel Gullivers Travels by Jonathan Swift. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Gyakuten Saiban 4 lit. ...
Alex Lester (born Alexander Norman Charles Phillips Lester, 11 May 1956 in Walsall, United Kingdom) is a British broadcaster. ...
Pre-1989 division between the West (grey) and Eastern Bloc (orange) superimposed on current national boundaries: Russia (dark orange), other countries of the former USSR (medium orange),members of the Warsaw pact (light orange), and other former Communist regimes not aligned with Moscow (lightest orange). ...
This article is about communism as a form of society and as a political movement. ...
Alex Lester (born Walsall, West Midlands, 11th May 1956) is a British broadcaster who presents the weekday overnight/early-morning programme on BBC Radio 2. ...
a Radio Personality is the modern incarnation of the disk jockey, or DJ. In the 1990s, successful radio stations began to focus less on the musical expertise of their hosts and more on the individual hosts personalities. ...
Night of Truth (La nuit de la vérité, 2004) is the African director Fanta Régina Nacros first full length film. ...
King Leonardo and his Short Subjects was an animated cartoon series released in 1960 by Total Television (which would later rename itself Leonardo Productions after the main character of this show). ...
Map of Central America and the Caribbean The Caribbean Sea (pronounced or ) is a tropical sea in the Western Hemisphere, part of the Atlantic Ocean, southeast of the Gulf of Mexico. ...
Tales of the Gold Monkey was a 1982 television show broadcast by ABC. The networks attempt to capitalize on the fame of the movie Raiders of the Lost Ark the previous year featured an ex-Flying Tigers Indiana Jones-like operator of an air cargo delivery service named Jake...
This article is about the 1960s TV series which was also known as Secret Agent and shouldnt be confused with the 1990s television series Secret Agent Man. ...
Borduria is a fictional country in the adventures of Tintin. ...
The concept of Totalitarianism is a typology or ideal-type used by some political scientists to encapsulate the characteristics of a number of twentieth century regimes that mobilized entire populations in support of the state or an ideology. ...
The Adventures of Tintin (French: ) is a series of Belgian comic books created by Belgian artist Hergé, the pen name of Georges Remi (1907â1983). ...
Balkan redirects here. ...
This article or section contains a plot summary that may be overly long, confusing, or ambiguous. ...
The Big Knights was an animated television programme on BBC1. ...
The G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero comic book series was first published by Marvel Comics and later, Devils Due Productions. ...
For the homing pigeon awarded the Dickin Medal in 1946, see G.I. Joe (pigeon). ...
This article is about the comic book company. ...
This article describes both the animated television series, and the characters from that series. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Æon Flux DVD cover Æon Flux is an animated science fiction television series that aired on MTV. It premiered in 1991 on MTVs Liquid Television experimental animation show as a six-part serial of short films, followed in 1992 by five individual short episodes. ...
Il y a un sorcier à Champignac, 1951, by Franquin Spirou et Fantasio (Spirou and Fantasio) is a Franco-Belgian comic strip that began its run in 1938. ...
Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion ) is a Japanese anime television series, created by Sunrise. ...
Avram Davidson (April 23, 1923 â May 8, 1993) was a writer of fantasy fiction, science fiction, and crime fiction, as well as the author of many unclassifiable but unforgetable stories that do not fit into a genre niche. ...
Brobdingnag is a fictional land in Jonathan Swifts satirical novel Gullivers Travels occupied by giants. ...
First Edition of Gullivers Travels Gullivers Travels (1726, amended 1735), officially Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. ...
Jonathan Swift Jonathan Swift (November 30, 1667 â October 19, 1745) was an Irish cleric, satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for Whigs then for Tories), and poet, famous for works like Gullivers Travels, A Modest Proposal, A Journal to Stella, The Drapiers Letters, The Battle of the Books, and...
Brutopia is a fictional country appearing in several Donald Duck stories. ...
Donald Duck is an animated cartoon and comic-book character from Walt Disney Productions. ...
For people named Islam, see Islam (name). ...
For the vocal coach, see Carrie Grant. ...
Dream Wife is a 1953 romantic comedy film made by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. ...
Its Walky! was a daily webcomic by David Willis. ...
Buranda is a fictional West African developing country (or LDC (less developed country) at the time of filming) that features in the second episode of Yes Minister (The Official Visit) and (briefly) Yes, Prime Minister. ...
Yes Minister is a satirical British sitcom written by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn that was first transmitted by BBC television and radio between 1980 and 1984, split over three seven-episode series. ...
C - Cacklogallinia: a kingdom off the coast of South America, from A Voyage to Cacklogallinia by Captain Samuel Brunt
- Cagliostro: a tiny duchy in the anime movie The Castle of Cagliostro
- Calia: from Modesty Blaise episode "The Jericho Caper"
- Candover: medieval country in the novel Rats and Gargoyles by Mary Gentle
- Cap'D'Far: a small island country from an episode of Scarecrow and Mrs. King who's only export was fish bones
- Carbombya: country mentioned in the Transformers series
- Carpania: European kingdom in The Great Race movie
- Carpathia: Balkan kingdom from the play The Sleeping Prince by Terrence Rattigan and the subsequent movie The Prince and the Showgirl
- Cascara: a tiny Caribbean island in the movie Water
- 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
- Cayuna: an imaginary Caribbean island modelled on Jamaica in the novels of John Hearne
- 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 movie The Only Thing
- Chimerica: Central American country from the Hidden Agenda computer game
- Chiroubistan: a Balkan/Islamic country perpetually at war, in the French comic strip "Henriette"
- Concordia: a small country only a few miles across somewhere in Europe, setting for the play Romanoff and Juliet by Peter Ustinov and the movie of the same title.
- Confederated Gulf States: Persian Gulf Monarchy run by Sheik Rasul in an episode of Spooks
- Coronado: unstable South American state in a movie of the same name, presumably named after Francisco Coronado
- Coronia: a kingdom from the movie King, Queen and Joker
- Cortuguay: Latin American country beset by revolutions in the film and Harold Robbins novel the Adventurers
- Costaguana: from Joseph Conrad's Nostromo
- Country of the Blind: from the short story with the same name by H. G. Wells
- 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
- Curuguay: a generic Latin American banana republic seen in The A-Team
Dutchy of Cagliostro is the fictional European country, that appears in the anime movie Castle of Cagliostro directed by Hayao Miyazaki in 1979. ...
Animé redirects here. ...
Lupin III: The Castle of Cagliostro ) is a 1979 anime film co-written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki; it is one of the master thief Lupin III movies. ...
Cover of the first Modesty Blaise novel. ...
Mary Rosalyn Gentle (1956—) is a UK science fiction and fantasy author. ...
Scarecrow and Mrs. ...
Carbombya is a fictional North African nation from the Transformers 1980s cartoon. ...
The Transformers (G1) 1984-1987, U.S. This page is a partner page to Transformers Universes, listing the various television series that the Transformer toyline has spawned since its creation in 1984. ...
Cover of the 2004 DVD release of The Great Race The Great Race is a 1965 semi-comical, semi-dramatic film directed by Blake Edwards, written by Blake Edwards and Arthur A. Ross, with music by Henry Mancini and cinematography by Russell Harlan. ...
Carpathia can refer to various things: RMS Carpathia was a steamship, notable for its role in the rescue of survivors from the sinking of the Titanic on April 15, 1912. ...
The Sleeping Prince is a 1953 play by Terrence Rattigan. ...
Terence Mervyn Rattigan (June 10, 1911-November 30, 1977) was one of Britains most important dramatists. ...
The Prince and the Showgirl is a 1957 Hollywood film starring Marilyn Monroe and co-starring Laurence Olivier who also directed and produced it. ...
Water is a 1985 film scripted by Dick Clement and Ian Le Frenais, directed by Clement, and starring Michael Caine. ...
Edgar Rice Burroughs Edgar Rice Burroughs (September 1, 1875 â March 19, 1950) was an American author, best known for his creation of the jungle hero Tarzan, although he also produced works in many genres. ...
John Edgar Colwell Hearne (1926, Montreal, Canada, 1994, Stony Hill, Jamaica) was a white Jamaican novelist, journalist, and teacher. ...
The Only Thing is a 1925 costume drama, starring Eleanor Boardman. ...
Hidden Agenda is the name of several different things: Hidden Agenda (game) is a computer game from 1988. ...
A computer game is a game composed of a computer-controlled virtual universe that players interact with in order to achieve a defined goal or set of goals. ...
Romanoff and Juliet is a play by Peter Ustinov. ...
Sir Peter Alexander Ustinov, CBE (IPA: ; April 16, 1921 â March 28, 2004), born Peter Alexander Baron von Ustinov, was an Academy Award-winning English actor, writer, dramatist and raconteur of French, Italian, Swiss, Russian, German and Ethiopian ancestry. ...
For the music band, see The Spooks. ...
Francisco Vásquez de Coronado (ca. ...
Harold Robbins (May 21, 1916-October 14, 1997) was an American author. ...
// Joseph Conrad (born Teodor Józef Konrad NaÅÄcz-Korzeniowski, 3 December 1857 â 3 August 1924) was a Polish-born novelist who spent most of his adult life in Britain. ...
Nostromo is a 1904 novel by Polish-born British novelist Joseph Conrad, set in the fictitious South American republic of Costaguana. ...
The Country of Blind is a short story by H. G. Wells. ...
Herbert George Wells (September 21, 1866 â August 13, 1946), better known as H. G. Wells, was an English writer best known for such science fiction novels as The Time Machine, The War of the Worlds, The Invisible Man, The First Men in the Moon and The Island of Doctor Moreau. ...
For other uses, see Crab (disambiguation). ...
For other uses, see Crocodile (disambiguation). ...
Tahiti is the largest island in the Windward group of the French Polynesia, located in the archipelago of Society Islands in the southern Pacific Ocean. ...
For other uses, see Banana republic (disambiguation). ...
For the 2008 movie, see The A-Team (film). ...
D Timothy Peter Mo (born December 30, 1950¹, Hong Kong) is an Anglo-Chinese novelist. ...
Year 1991 (MCMXCI) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the 1991 Gregorian calendar). ...
The Redundancy of Courage is a novel by Timothy Mo published in 1991. ...
Graustark is a fictional country in Eastern Europe used as a setting for several novels by George Barr McCutcheon. ...
Graustark is a fictional country in Eastern Europe used as a setting for several novels by George Barr McCutcheon. ...
Team America: World Police Team America: World Police is a 2004 movie by Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the creators of the Comedy Central television program South Park. ...
Dinotopia: Land Apart From Time by James Gurney Dinotopia is a fictional utopian place created by author and illustrator James Gurney. ...
James Gurney (born June 14, 1958) is an artist and author best known for his illustrated book series Dinotopia, which is presented in the form of a 19th century explorerâs journal from an island utopia cohabited by humans and dinosaurs. ...
The Three Stooges were an American vaudeville and comedy act of the mid 20th century best known for their numerous short subject films. ...
You Nazty Spy (1940) is an 18-minute short subject by the Three Stooges that satirized Nazi Germany. ...
Book cover of The High King Lloyd Chudley Alexander (born January 30, 1924) is the author of a number of fantasy books for children and adolescents, as well as several adult novels. ...
Karl Friedrich May (Hohenstein-Ernstthal, February 25, 1842 - Radebeul, March 30, 1912) was the best selling German writer of all time, noted chiefly for wild west books set in the American West and similar books set in the Middle East; in addition, he also wrote some lesser-known stories set...
E - East African Protectorate from Bungie's Halo
- Eastasia: from the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
- 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
- East European Republic: an anti-American power from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Submarine". Possibly the same as the East European Peoples Republic (EEPR) from "The Party" and the European People's Republic from "Invasion".
- East Yemen: located somewhere in the Middle East, from the sitcom Yes, Prime Minister. Formally known as The People's Democratic Republic of East Yemen, it was a Soviet backed Communist dictatorship which often raided its neighbour, West Yemen.
- 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.
- Ecuarico: homeland of an exiled dictator in an episode of Gilligan's Island
- Eisneria: a republic in the Balkans from the Road Rovers TV series
- Elbonia: Backward country from the comic strip Dilbert
- Eldorado: fictional country from Terra em Transe
- Eleutheria: an island nation in the Southwest Pacific Ocean from the Eleutheria Model Parliament role playing game.
- Elkabar: Persian Gulf kingdom, from the Mission: Impossible episode "The Slave"
- Emmeria: a fictional country that will appear in Ace Combat 6.
- Equatorial Kundu: West African republic from the television series The West Wing
- Eretz: home of a visiting prime minister, Salka Palmir, in an episode of The Six Million Dollar Man ('Eretz' is Hebrew for 'land')
- Erewhon (anagram of nowhere): in the novel Erewhon by Samuel Butler
- Erusia: A fictional country that appeared in Ace Combat 4, Ace Combat Zero, and briefly mentioned in Ace Combat 5.
- Estrovia: European kingdom in the movie A King in New York
- Estovakia: a fictional country that will appear in Ace Combat 6.
- Esturia: Slavic country in Patrouille des Castors comics
- Euphrania: tiny kingdom in the movie The Slipper and the Rose
- Eurasia: from the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
- Evallonia: Central European country in the novels of John Buchan
- Evarchia: Eastern European country from Brigid Brophy's Palace Without Chairs
The Halo universe is a fictional setting for the video games Halo: Combat Evolved, Halo 2, the future games Halo 3 and Halo Wars, and the books related to the Halo series. ...
Bungie Studios is a video game developer founded in 1991 under the name Bungie Software by two undergraduate students at the University of Chicago, Alex Seropian and Jason Jones. ...
It has been suggested that Covenant Vehicles in Halo be merged into this article or section. ...
Nineteen Eighty-Four (sometimes 1984) is a darkly satirical political novel by George Orwell. ...
This article is about the Orwell novel. ...
Eric Arthur Blair (25 June 1903 [1] [2] â 21 January 1950), better known by the pen name George Orwell, was an English author and journalist. ...
This article needs additional references or sources to facilitate its verification. ...
Star Trek: First Contact (Paramount Pictures, 1996; see also 1996 in film), is the eighth feature film based on the popular Star Trek science fiction television series. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
A map showing countries commonly considered to be part of the Middle East The Middle East is a region comprising the lands around the southern and eastern parts of the Mediterranean Sea, a territory that extends from the eastern Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf. ...
Yes, (prime) minister: Sir Humphrey Appleby, James Jim Hacker, Bernard Woolley Yes, Minister and its sequel Yes, Prime Minister are British sitcoms about the struggle between (Dr) James Jim Hacker (played by Paul Eddington), the government minister of the (fictional) Department of Administrative Affairs (and later as Prime Minister) and...
CCCP redirects here. ...
Ecotopia: The Notebooks and Reports of William Weston is the title of a seminal book by Ernest Callenbach, published in 1975. ...
Ernest Callenbach (born April 3, 1929) is an American writer. ...
One popular proposed flag for Cascadia. ...
For the NES (Nintendo Entertainment System) video game, see The Adventures of Gilligans Island. ...
Balkan redirects here. ...
This entire article, especially the controversy section and the discussion of its cancellation does not cite any references or sources. ...
The average Elbonian The Republic of Elbonia is a fictional country from Scott Adams comic strips Dilbert and Plop: The Hairless Elbonian. ...
Dilbert (first published April 16, 1989) is an American comic strip written and drawn by Scott Adams. ...
Eleutheria (ελεÏ
θεÏία) is an ancient and modern Greek term for, and personification of, liberty. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
The Republic of Equatorial Kundu is a fictional African country from the television series The West Wing. ...
The West Wing is a popular and widely acclaimed American television serial drama created by Aaron Sorkin and produced and co-written by John Wells. ...
The Six Million Dollar Man is an American television series about a fictional cyborg working for the OSI (which was usually said to refer to the Office of Scientific Intelligence, but sometimes was called the Office of Scientific Investigation). ...
Hebrew redirects here. ...
Wikisource has original text related to this article: Erewhon Erewhon, or Over the Range is a novel by Samuel Butler, published anonymously in 1872. ...
Samuel Butler Samuel Butler (December 4, 1835 - June 18, 1902) was a British writer best known for his satire Erewhon. ...
Erusia Erusia is a fictional country from the PlayStation 2 game Ace Combat 4. ...
Ace Combat 04: Shattered Skies is a game for the PlayStation 2 developed by Namco. ...
The introduction of this article does not provide enough context for readers unfamiliar with the subject. ...
The Slipper and the Rose (1976) (143 min) is a British musical film retelling the classic fairy tale of Cinderella. ...
For other uses, see Eurasia (disambiguation). ...
This article is about the Orwell novel. ...
Eric Arthur Blair (25 June 1903 [1] [2] â 21 January 1950), better known by the pen name George Orwell, was an English author and journalist. ...
John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir (August 26, 1875 - February 11, 1940), was a Scottish novelist and politician who served as Governor General of Canada. ...
Brigid Antonia Brophy (born June 12, 1929, in London, England; died August 7, 1995, in Louth, Lincolnshire, England) was an English novelist, essayist, critic, biographer, and dramatist. ...
F Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Year 1991 (MCMXCI) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the 1991 Gregorian calendar). ...
Mortadelo y Filemón (Mortadelo and Filemón) is one of the most popular comic strip series in Spain, appearing for the first time in 1958 in the childrens comic-book TÃo Vivo drawn by the hand of Francisco Ibáñez. ...
Jim Fitzpatricks version of Che Jim Fitzpatrick is an Irish artist famous for Irish folk art. ...
Prince Humperdinck is the villain of William Goldmans 1973 comic adventure novel, The Princess Bride. ...
This article is about the novel. ...
William Goldman (born August 12, 1931) is an American novelist, playwright and two-time Academy Award-winning screenwriter. ...
Simon Richard Green, born 1955 in Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire, is a British science fiction and fantasy-author. ...
Freedonia, (Land of the Spree, and the Home of the Knave), is a fictional country in Europe, seen during the 1933 movie Duck Soup, which starred the Marx Brothers. ...
This article is about the comedian siblings. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
A map of the Eastern Bloc 1948-1989. ...
Zork universe Zork games Zork Anthology Zork trilogy Zork I Zork II Zork III Beyond Zork Zork Zero Enchanter trilogy Enchanter Sorcerer Spellbreaker Other games Wishbringer Return to Zork Zork: Nemesis Zork Grand Inquisitor Zork: The Undiscovered Underground Topics in Zork Encyclopedia Frobozzica Characters Kings Creatures Timeline Magic Calendar Zorkmid...
Border Zone is an interactive fiction computer game written by Marc Blank and published by Infocom in 1987. ...
G Motoko Kusanagi from the manga Ghost in the Shell. ...
Flag of Genosha under Magnetos reign. ...
This article is about the comic book company. ...
Genovia is a fictional country used in the Princess Diaries books, written by Meg Cabot, which were later developed into films. ...
This article is about the Meg Cabot novels. ...
The Princess Diaries is a comedy-drama film and the screen adaptation of Meg Cabots 2000 novel of the same name. ...
The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement is a sequel of The Princess Diaries which was released in 2004. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
The Gilead flag in the film The Republic of Gilead is a theocratic fictional country that is the setting of the Margaret Atwood dystopian novel The Handmaids Tale. ...
The Handmaids Tale is a dystopian novel by Canadian author Margaret Atwood, first published by McClelland and Stewart in 1985. ...
Margaret Eleanor Atwood, OC (born November 18, 1939) is a Canadian writer. ...
Metal Gear: Ghost Babel *boxart needed* Developer: Konami Computer Entertainment Japan (West) Publisher: Konami Computer Entertainment Designer: Shinta Nojiri Release date: April 2000 (Japan), May 2000 (US/Europe) Genre: Stealth action Game modes: Single player, Two-player competitive ESRB rating: Everyone ELSPA rating: +11 Platform: Game Boy Color Media: ROM...
Bottoms Up is a 1960 British comedy film. ...
Marion Eleanor Zimmer Bradley (June 3, 1930 â September 25, 1999) was an American author of fantasy novels such as The Mists of Avalon and the Darkover series, often with a feminist outlook. ...
First Edition of Gullivers Travels Gullivers Travels (1726, amended 1735), officially Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. ...
Jonathan Swift Jonathan Swift (November 30, 1667 â October 19, 1745) was an Irish cleric, satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for Whigs then for Tories), and poet, famous for works like Gullivers Travels, A Modest Proposal, A Journal to Stella, The Drapiers Letters, The Battle of the Books, and...
MacGyver is an American adventure television series, produced in Canada, about a laid-back, extremely resourceful secret agent, played by Richard Dean Anderson. ...
The Brontë sisters, painted by their brother, Branwell c. ...
This article needs to be wikified. ...
Samuel Langhorne Clemens (November 30, 1835 â April 21, 1910),[1] better known by the pen name Mark Twain, was an American humanist,[2] humorist, satirist, lecturer and writer. ...
Michael John Moorcock (born December 18, 1939, in London, England) is a prolific English writer primarily of science fiction and fantasy who has also published a number of literary novels. ...
The History of the Runestaff is a series of four fantasy novels by Michael Moorcock, consisting of The Jewel In The Skull, The Mad Gods Amulet, The Sword Of The Dawn, and The Runestaff. ...
The Duchy of Grand Fenwick is a tiny fictional country created by Leonard Wibberley in a series of comedic novels beginning with The Mouse That Roared (1955), which was later made into a film. ...
The Mouse that Roared is a 1955 novel by Irish writer Leonard Wibberley that launched a series of satirical books about a fictional European nation called the Duchy of Grand Fenwick. ...
Wibberely with Eleanor Cameron in 1965 Leonard Patrick OConnor Wibberley (April 9, 1915-November 22, 1983), son of agronomy professor and author Thomas Wibberley, was a prolific Irish-American author who also wrote under several pseudonyms. ...
Graustark is a fictional country in Eastern Europe used as a setting for several novels by George Barr McCutcheon. ...
George Barr McCutcheon (1866–1928) was an American novelist and playwright. ...
The Justice Squad is a superhero team. ...
Some French viewers use this emblem as a rear car tag, as if their car was registered in Groland. ...
For the music band, see The Spooks. ...
This article is about the novel. ...
William Goldman (born August 12, 1931) is an American novelist, playwright and two-time Academy Award-winning screenwriter. ...
This anime/manga-related article is a stub. ...
An animated series or cartoon series is a television series produced by means of animation. ...
H Halla is a fictional kingdom near the kingdom of Shundi as depicted in Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne. ...
Goopy (on the right) and Bagha Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne, written and directed by the late Satyajit Ray, is a popular Indian childrens film. ...
Jan Morris CBE (born James Humphrey Morris on 2 October 1926, in Clevedon, Somerset, England, but by heritage and adoption Welsh) is a British historian and travel writer. ...
Herland is a utopian novel from 1915, written by feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman. ...
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (July 3, 1860 â August 17, 1935) was a prominent American poet, non-fiction writer, short story writer, novelist, lecturer, and social reformer. ...
FMP Mission 04 DVD Cover Full Metal Panic! (Katakana: フルメタルパニック!, often abbreviated to FMP!) is the name of an anime series which originally aired in 2002. ...
A sequential look at United Flight 175 crashing into the south tower of the World Trade Center The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11âpronounced nine eleven or nine one one) consisted of a series of coordinated terrorist[1] suicide attacks upon the United States, predominantly...
Agatha Mary Clarissa, Lady Mallowan, DBE (15 September 1890 â 12 January 1976), commonly known as Agatha Christie, was an English crime fiction writer. ...
The Secret of Chimneys is a detective novel written by Agatha Christie in 1925. ...
The Labours of Hercules is a short story collection written by Agatha Christie. ...
Doc Savage is a fictional character, one of the pulp heroes of the 1930s and 1940s. ...
Simon Richard Green, born 1955 in Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire, is a British science fiction and fantasy-author. ...
Houyhnhnms are a race of intelligent horses described in the last part of Jonathan Swifts satiric Gullivers Travels. ...
In Gullivers Travels by Jonathan Swift, a Yahoo is a vile and savage creature, filthy and with unpleasant habits, resembling human beings far too closely for the liking of Lemuel Gulliver, who finds the calm and rational society of the Houyhnhnms far preferable. ...
First Edition of Gullivers Travels Gullivers Travels (1726, amended 1735), officially Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. ...
Jonathan Swift Jonathan Swift (November 30, 1667 â October 19, 1745) was an Irish cleric, satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for Whigs then for Tories), and poet, famous for works like Gullivers Travels, A Modest Proposal, A Journal to Stella, The Drapiers Letters, The Battle of the Books, and...
Carl Barks (March 27, 1901 â August 25, 2000) was a famous Disney Studio illustrator and comic book creator, who invented Duckburg and many of its inhabitants, such as Scrooge McDuck (1947), Gladstone Gander (1948), the Beagle Boys (1951), Gyro Gearloose (1952) and Magica De Spell (1961). ...
The Hardy Boys is a popular series of detective/adventure books for boys chronicling the fictional adventures of teenage brothers Frank and Joe Hardy. ...
I This article is about the comic strip. ...
It has been suggested that this article be split into articles entitled Les Mains Sales and Les Mains Sales (film), accessible from a disambiguation page. ...
Jean-Paul Charles Aymard Sartre (June 21, 1905 â April 15, 1980), normally known simply as Jean-Paul Sartre (pronounced: ), was a French existentialist philosopher and pioneer, dramatist and screenwriter, novelist and critic. ...
For other uses, see Tangier (disambiguation). ...
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: William S. Burroughs William Seward Burroughs II (February 5, 1914) â August 2, 1997; pronounced ), more commonly known as William S. Burroughs, was an American novelist, essayist, social critic, painter and spoken word performer. ...
Naked Lunch is a novel by William S. Burroughs. ...
The Venture Bros. ...
Afghanistan (Pashtu/Iran in the west, Pakistan in the south and east, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan in the north, and China in the easternmost part of the country. ...
Have I Got News For You is a UK television panel game, on the subject of news, politics and current affairs. ...
Anthem SorÅ«d-e MellÄ«-e ĪrÄn ² Capital (and largest city) Tehran Official languages Persian Demonym Iranian Government Islamic Republic - Supreme Leader - President Unification - Unified by Cyrus the Great 559 BCE - Parthian (Arsacid) dynastic empire (first reunification) 248 BCE-224 CE - Sassanid dynastic empire 224â651 CE - Safavid dynasty...
Anthem Surūd-i Millī Capital (and largest city) Kabul Official languages Pashto, Persian (Darī)1 Government Islamic Republic - President Hamid Karzai - Vice President Ahmad Zia Massoud - Vice President Karim Khalili Independence from the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland - Declared August 8, 1919 - Recognized August 19 1919 Area...
Flag flown by the Taliban. ...
Frederik George Pohl, Jr. ...
The Suite Life of Zack and Cody, is an American childrens television series that airs on the Disney Channel. ...
Ah! Wilderness! redirects here. ...
Scoop is a 1938 novel by English writer Evelyn Waugh about the rush of war reporters to a thinly disguised Abyssinia (now Ethiopia). ...
Evelyn Waugh, as photographed in 1940 by Carl Van Vechten Arthur Evelyn St. ...
For other uses, see Ishtar (disambiguation). ...
Ishtar is a 1987 motion picture comedy, directed by Elaine May and starring Dustin Hoffman and Warren Beatty as Rogers and Clarke, a duo of incredibly untalented lounge singers who stumble into a political conflict in the fictional North African nation of Ishtar. ...
Islandia could refer to: The community of Islandia, Florida The community of Islandia, New York The book Islandia by Austin Tappan Wright This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
Austin Tappan Wright (1883-1931) was an American legal scholar and author, best remembered for his major work of Utopian fiction, Islandia. ...
Guild Wars Nightfall is a fantasy Competitive/Co-operative Online RolePlaying Game (CORPG) and the third stand-alone campaign in the Guild Wars computer game series developed by ArenaNet. ...
007 redirects here. ...
This article needs additional references or sources for verification. ...
The Dark Frontier (1936) is Eric Amblers first novel, about whose genesis he writes: […] Became press agent for film star, but soon after joined big London advertising agency as copywriter and ideas man. During next few years wrote incessantly on variety of subjects ranging from baby food to...
Balkan redirects here. ...
Eric Ambler (28 June 1909 - 22 October 1998) was an influential English writer of spy novels who brought a level of realism to the field that had generally been absent in earlier works. ...
The Dark Frontier (1936) is Eric Amblers first novel, about whose genesis he writes: […] Became press agent for film star, but soon after joined big London advertising agency as copywriter and ideas man. During next few years wrote incessantly on variety of subjects ranging from baby food to...
J - Jambalaya Island: an ex-pirate island in the Caribbean, turned to a tourist attraction center, in Escape from Monkey Island
- Javasu: an island in the Indian Ocean, the alleged country of "Princess Caraboo"
- Jhamjarh: An Indian Maharajate in Donald Jack's Bandy Papers novels.
- Jumbostan and Unsteadystan: from the world of Donald Duck
Escape from Monkey Island (EMI) is a computer adventure game developed and released by LucasArts in 2000. ...
A sketch of Princess Caraboo, by Edward Bird. ...
Donald Lamont Jack (December 6, 1924 - c. ...
Donald Duck is an animated cartoon and comic-book character from Walt Disney Productions. ...
K - 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
- Kahndaq: a fictional country. In the DC Comics Universe, Kahndaq is an Arab country on the continent of Africa, between Egypt and Jordan.
- Kajsa (Casha, Kasha): a sultanate, neighbor to Basenji from the sitcom I Dream of Jeannie
- Kalao: African country affected by a covered-up industrial accident, Panique
- Kalubya: North African country corresponding to the location of Libya in Operation Thunderbolt arcade game
- Kalya: West African country in the novel The Zinzin Road by Fletcher Knebel. Capital city: Ft. Paul.
- Kamanga: Southern African country in the novel Tenth Man Down by Chris Ryan. Capital City: Mulongwe. Kamanga is poverty-stricken, war-torn and has an AIDS epidemic.
- Kambezi: African country occurring in several MacGyver episodes, e.g. "Black Rhino"
- 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
- Kandah State: Sultanate in Ann Halam's Taylor Five; located on Borneo between Malaysia and Indonesia
- Karak: Middle Eastern country, neighboring Ajir in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Nitro"
- Karathia: Slavic monarchy in the Three Young Investigators series
- Karistan: Central European country in the movie Legend of the White Horse
- Karjastan: Central Asian country in The Sentinel
- Karlova: European kingdom in Edgar Rice Burroughs's The Rider
- Karovia: European kingdom from the movie Trouble for Two
- Kasnia: war-torn Eastern European monarchy in the DC Animated Universe
- Kaziland: tiny island nation home to Dr. Kamikazi, the villain of the Robotboy series
- Katanga: African country, neighboring Sierra Leone, in Frederick Forsyth's The Dogs of War; note that Katanga is a real province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Katzenstok: a republic in the Balkans from Road Rovers TV series
- Keltic Sultanate: Islamic sultanate comprising the British Isles. From the alternate history book The Years of Rice and Salt, by Kim Stanley Robinson
- Kenyopia: belligerent African nation in Totally Spies! TV series attempting to conquer its fictitious neighbor Lyrobia (see below)
- Khembalung: Buddhist Himalayan country whose population moves to an island, in the Science in the Capital series by Kim Stanley Robinson
- Khemed: Arabic monarchy from the world of comic book hero Tintin
- Khios, Kingdom of: An island Muslim kingdom in the real Sea of Mamara (flag has a white crescent and star on a red square filling 3/4 of the flag, the remainder is a white rectangle) where sinister agency H.A.R.M. aimed to fake a Soviet invasion in 1968 to provoke a nuclear war between the Soviet Union and NATO which had guaranteed the kingdom's sovereignty. Features in the computer game No One Lives Forever 2: A Spy In H.A.R.M.'s Way. Not to be confused with the real Chios which is in the Aegean Sea.
- Kinakuta (Queenah-Kootah): island state from Neal Stephenson's novels Cryptonomicon and The Baroque Cycle
- Kinjanja: African country in the movie A Good Man in Africa (1994) starring Sean Connery
- Klopstockia: from the W. C. Fields movie Million Dollar Legs
- Krakozhia: A Slavic or Caucasian country from the movie The Terminal. Closely resembles nations that suffered bloody internal conflicts following the collapse of Soviet Union (eg. Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Transnistria)
- Kravonia: Eastern European country from the novel Sophy of Kravonia by Anthony Hope and the subsequent movie
- Kreplakistan: Soviet Republic from the Austin Powers movies, likely based of the real Karakalpak Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, now the Republic of Karakalpakstan. ("Kreplach" - Eastern European Jewish dish consisting of meat-filled dumplings.)
- Kuala Rokat: a far eastern country, from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Seal"
- Kurio: from William Rose Benét's children's book The Flying King of Kurio
- Kuristan: from the movie Mr. Magoo, central Asian nation that is home to the famous jewel The Star of Kuristan
- Kurland: mythical kingdom in the movie A Royal Family (but see Courland)
- Kush: African country from John Updike's novel The Coup
MacGyver is an American adventure television series, produced in Canada, about a laid-back, extremely resourceful secret agent, played by Richard Dean Anderson. ...
Kahndaq is a fictional country in the DC Comics Universe. ...
DC Comics is an American comic book and related media company. ...
For the episode of The Twilight Zone, see I Dream of Genie (The Twilight Zone). ...
Operation Thunderbolt is a one- or two-player shooter arcade game by Taito made in 1988. ...
Centipede by Atari is a typical example of a 1980s era arcade game. ...
Fletcher Knebel (1911-1993) was an American author of several popular works of political fiction. ...
For the actor, see Christopher Ryan. ...
For other uses, see AIDS (disambiguation). ...
MacGyver is an American adventure television series, produced in Canada, about a laid-back, extremely resourceful secret agent, played by Richard Dean Anderson. ...
The Thirteen-Gun Salute (1989) is a novel by Patrick OBrian, the thirteenth in the Aubrey–Maturin series. ...
Patrick OBrian (12 December 1914 â 2 January 2000; born as Richard Patrick Russ) was an English novelist and translator, best known for his AubreyâMaturin series of novels set in the Royal Navy during the Napoleonic Wars and centered on the friendship of Captain Jack Aubrey and the Irish...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Legend of the white horse (AKA BiaÅy smok) is a Polish-American adventure movie for kids, released in 1986 (premiere : July 13, 1987). ...
The Sentinel is a 2006 thriller film starring Michael Douglas, Kiefer Sutherland, Eva Longoria, and Kim Basinger. ...
Edgar Rice Burroughs Edgar Rice Burroughs (September 1, 1875 â March 19, 1950) was an American author, best known for his creation of the jungle hero Tarzan, although he also produced works in many genres. ...
Kasnia is a fictional country which appears in the Superman, Justice League, Justice League Unlimited, and Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman cartoons. ...
An image of many of the DCAU heroes. ...
Robotboy is a French and American animated television series which was produced by Cartoon Network & French production company Alphanim with TV Channels France 3 and Cartoon Network as well as Luxanimation. ...
Frederick Forsyth, CBE (born August 25, 1938) is an English author and occasional political commentator. ...
Country Democratic Republic of the Congo Capital Lubumbashi Largest city Lubumbashi National language Swahili, Tshiluba Land area¹ 496 871 km² Governor Moïse Katumbi Chapwe Population Density 4 125 000 (est. ...
Balkan redirects here. ...
This entire article, especially the controversy section and the discussion of its cancellation does not cite any references or sources. ...
Alternate history (fiction) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
The Years of Rice and Salt (2002, ISBN 0553580078) is an alternate history novel written by science fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson, a thought experiment about a world without Christianity. ...
For the late American actress, see Kim Stanley. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
For the late American actress, see Kim Stanley. ...
Khemed is the fictional country in the Arabian Peninsula invented by Hergé for Tintin books. ...
The Adventures of Tintin (French: ) is a series of Belgian comic books created by Belgian artist Hergé, the pen name of Georges Remi (1907â1983). ...
Chios (Greek: , alternative transliterations Khios and Hios), is the fifth largest of the Greek islands, situated in the Aegean Sea seven kilometres (five miles) off the Turkish coast. ...
Look up Aegean Sea in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Kinakuta is a fictional country featured in the books Cryptonomicon and The Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson. ...
Neal Town Stephenson (born October 31, 1959) is an American writer, known primarily for his science fiction works in the postcyberpunk genre with a penchant for explorations of society, mathematics, currency, and the history of science. ...
Cryptonomicon is a 1999 novel by Neal Stephenson. ...
The Baroque Cycle, a series of books written by Neal Stephenson, appeared in print in 2003 and 2004. ...
Sir Thomas Sean Connery (born 25 August 1930) is a retired Scottish actor and producer who is perhaps best known as the first actor to portray James Bond in cinema, starring in seven Bond films. ...
W. C. Fields (January 29, 1880 â December 25, 1946) was an American juggler, comedian, and actor. ...
Slavic and Slavonic are used interchangably in English, with the former perferred in US English, and the latter in English. ...
Look up Caucasian in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
This section contains a list of trivia items. ...
Capital Sokhumi Official languages Abkhaz, Georgian Government - Chairman, Cabinet of Ministers - Chairman, Supreme Council Temur Mzhavia Autonomous republic of Georgia - Georgian independence Declared Recognised 9 April 1991 25 December 1991 Currency Georgian lari (GEL) Anthem Aiaaira Capital Sukhumi Official languages Abkhaz, Russian1 Government - President Sergei Bagapsh - Prime Minister Alexander Ankvab...
Anthem unknown Capital Tskhinvali Official languages Ossetian1 Government - President Eduard Kokoity - Prime Minister Yury Morozov De facto independence from Georgia - Declared November 28, 1991 - Recognition none Currency Russian ruble (RUB) Russian in widespread use by government and other institutions. ...
For the region during the Second World War, see Transnistria (World War II). ...
Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins (February 9, 1863 _ July 8, 1933), better known as Anthony Hope was a British novelist, best remembered today for his short novel The Prisoner of Zenda (1894, set in the fictional kingdom of Ruritania, a prequel The Heart of Princess Osra (a collection of short...
The tone or style of this article or section may not be appropriate for Wikipedia. ...
The Karakalpak ASSR was an autonomous republic of the Soviet Union. ...
Kreplach are small noodles filled with ground meat or cheese, usually boiled and served in soups. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
William Rose Benét (February 2, 1886 - May 4, 1950) was an American poet, writer and editor. ...
Mr. ...
Coat of arms of Courland Courland (Latvian: ; German: ; Latin: Curonia / Couronia; Lithuanian: ; Estonian: ; Polish: ; Russian: ) is an historical Baltic province now part of Latvia. ...
John Hoyer Updike (born March 18, 1932 in Shillington, Pennsylvania) is an American writer. ...
L Lani Lani: unknown location in Disney's Cory in The House Nevil Shute (London, January 17, 1899 â Melbourne, January 12, 1960) (full name Nevil Shute Norway) was one of the most popular novelists of the mid-20th century. ...
Ruined City, sometimes published as Kindling, is a 1938 novel by Nevil Shute. ...
- Lampidorra: A tiny Principality in Western Europe near France, Italy, and Switzerland from the movie "Penny Princess"(1952). It's so small, it makes Switzerland look the size of Mongolia.
- Lanconia: Eastern European country referenced in Jude Deveraux's romance novels
- Latveria: a kingdom in the Fantastic Four comic-book series ruled by tyrannical Doctor Doom
- Laurania: the republic in Savrola (A Tale of the Revolution in Laurania) by Winston Churchill
- Lavernia: Eastern European country in the movie Another Meltdown (Bi xie lan tian)
- Leasath: a fictional country that appeared in Ace Combat X.
- Leutonia: Eastern European home of the Happy Wanderers (Yosh & Stan Shmenge) from SCTV
- Libria: a totalitarian state in the movie Equilibrium
- Lilliput: a land where all the people are tiny from the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift
- Litzenburg: neutral country in the Border Zone computer game
- Lividia: mythical kingdom in the movie Greater Than a Crown
- Logosia: African country from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Crane"
- Lombuanda: a small African country on the Gulf of Guinea in the Mission: Impossible episode "The Diamond"
- 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, Verminous Knids, and wicked Whangdoodles.
- Lovitzna: a state lying to the north of Maltovia, hereditary enemies of that country, from Biggles goes to War by Captain W.E. Johns.
- Low countries: from Simon Green's Beyond the Blue Moon. Capital city: Haven.
- Lower Slobbovia: ice-covered wasteland from the comic strip Li'l Abner
- Lucre Island: a pirate island in the game, Escape from Monkey Island
- Lugash: Mideast nation from the Pink Panther series of movies
- Luggnagg: an island state about 100 leagues SE from Japan. From the book Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift.
- 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.
- Lutha: a small Balkan kingdom from the novel The Mad King by Edgar Rice Burroughs
- Lyrobia: African nation in Totally Spies! containing desert and rain forest environments, with an Arabic-inspired culture
Jude Deveraux (born September 20, 1947 as Jude Gilliam White) is a Romance novel author who is well-known for her historical romance. ...
This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
For other uses, see Fantastic Four (disambiguation). ...
Doctor Doom (Victor von Doom) is a fictional Marvel Comics supervillain created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. ...
Laurania is an imaginary country created by Sir Winston Churchill and used as a backdrop for his only novel Savrola: A tale of revolution in Laurania. ...
Churchill redirects here. ...
Leasath Spoiler warning: Leasath (IPA: [leɪsæθ]) is a fictional country from the game Ace Combat X: Skies of Deception. ...
The Happy Wanderers (also the Shmenge Brothers) were a fictional polka duo featured on the SCTV comedy program in 1982-1983. ...
Second City Television, or SCTV, was a Canadian television sketch comedy show offshoot from the Toronto troupe of The Second City. ...
Equilibrium is a 2002 action/science fiction film written and directed by Kurt Wimmer. ...
Lilliput and Blefuscu are two island nations that appear in the 1726 novel Gullivers Travels by Jonathan Swift. ...
First Edition of Gullivers Travels Gullivers Travels (1726, amended 1735), officially Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. ...
Jonathan Swift Jonathan Swift (November 30, 1667 â October 19, 1745) was an Irish cleric, satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for Whigs then for Tories), and poet, famous for works like Gullivers Travels, A Modest Proposal, A Journal to Stella, The Drapiers Letters, The Battle of the Books, and...
Border Zone is an interactive fiction computer game written by Marc Blank and published by Infocom in 1987. ...
A computer game is a game composed of a computer-controlled virtual universe that players interact with in order to achieve a defined goal or set of goals. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Roald Dahl (IPA: ) (13 September 1916 â 23 November 1990) was a Welsh novelist, short story author and screenwriter of Norwegian parentage, famous as a writer for both children and adults. ...
Also Nintendo emulator: 1964 (emulator). ...
For other uses, see Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (disambiguation). ...
Oompa-Loompas are dwarves in Roald Dahls fictional books Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator. ...
Biggles Goes to War (1938). ...
Simon Richard Green, born 1955 in Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire, is a British science fiction and fantasy-author. ...
Lil Abner was a comic strip in United States newspapers, featuring a fictional clan of hillbillies in the town of Dogpatch. ...
Escape from Monkey Island (EMI) is a computer adventure game developed and released by LucasArts in 2000. ...
The Pink Panther cartoon character. ...
First Edition of Gullivers Travels Gullivers Travels (1726, amended 1735), officially Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. ...
Jonathan Swift Jonathan Swift (November 30, 1667 â October 19, 1745) was an Irish cleric, satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for Whigs then for Tories), and poet, famous for works like Gullivers Travels, A Modest Proposal, A Journal to Stella, The Drapiers Letters, The Battle of the Books, and...
Lukano is the fictional country in Time Crisis 3 which sends troops (LLA, Lukano Liberation Army or Lukano Liberation Force) to defend AstigÏs from the Zagorias Federation, which had planted nuclear missiles that would be a threat to all countries in the area. ...
Time Crisis 3 is the third installment of the Time Crisis arcade series. ...
Edgar Rice Burroughs Edgar Rice Burroughs (September 1, 1875 â March 19, 1950) was an American author, best known for his creation of the jungle hero Tarzan, although he also produced works in many genres. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
M - Macaria: utopian country from A Description of the Famous Kingdom of Macaria by Samuel Hartlib
- Malaguay: Country that "El" was from on the 1970's sitcom "Soap" on ABC. - Chr$
- Malbonia: fictional country whose flag is used by the protagonists of This Can't Be Happening! by Gordon Korman
- Maguadora: tiny Central American country in the movie Whoops Apocalypse
- Magyaristan: Islamic state in the former Hungary. From the alternate history book The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson
- Malevelosia: an island kingdom filled with supervillains in Justice Squad
- Malicuria: a monarchy run by Emperor Aleister from the episode "April's Fool" of the 1987 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon TV series. The episode is set on the Malicurian embassy in the USA.
- Maltovia: a principality lying slightly to the north-east of the Black Sea, but still in Europe, from Biggles goes to War by Captain W.E. Johns.
- Mandalia: a kingdom in Asia, located "somewhere between India, China and the Soviet Union", from the 1986 German TV series Kir Royal
- Mandavia: a kingdom in the movie Speed King
- Maple White Land: land of Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World
- Mardi archipelago: from Herman Melville's Mardi and a Voyage Thither
- Margoth: European kingdom in Edgar Rice Burroughs's The Rider
- Marivellas: A volcanic island chain in the South Pacific, from Tales of the Gold Monkey
- Marnsburg: a member of the United Nations hostile to the United States in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Imitation"
- Marshovia (Marsovia, Makovnia): small Eastern European kingdom most likely located somewhere near Transylvania in the operetta The Merry Widow
- Masavania, Kosnia: European kingdoms in the movie If I Were Queen
- Matobo: a state in the sub-Saharan region of Africa, from the 2005 film The Interpreter
- Maurania: African country in Paradise video game
- Mêlée Island: a pirate island in the Caribbean Sea, from the Monkey Island games, part of the Tri-Island area (governed by Elaine Marley)
- Mervo: an island principality in the Mediterranean in the novel The Prince and Betty by P. G. Wodehouse
- Mesa de Oro: unstable Latin American island in the Three Young Investigators series. (The name means "golden table" in Spanish.)
- 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.
- Mokoko: African country from Turkish TV Series Kurtlar Vadisi.
- Moldavia: Eastern European country from Dynasty TV series (note: Moldavia really exists as a region)
- Moldavia (2): Eastern European country from the movie Second in Command
- Moldavia (3): Eastern European country from the pilot episode of Batman and Robin, the TV Series featuring Adam West, first aired on 12 January 1966.
- Moldavia (4): Eastern European country from the American sitcom Roseanne
- Moldavia (5): Eastern European country mentioned in the movie Ghostbusters II
- Moloni Republic: Southern African country from the videogame Metal Gear Acid
- Molvanîa: Eastern European country from a parody travel guidebook; from the same authors as Phaic Tăn and San Sombrèro.
- Monica: an anarchist state from the animated series Aeon Flux
- Morevana: a kingdom in which fat is prized in the movie The Slim Princess
- Moribundia: from Patrick Hamilton's Impromptu in Moribundia
- Moronica: parody of Nazi Germany from the Three Stooges short You Nazty Spy
- Mortadelonia: one of the countries resulting of the 1991 collapse of USSR as told in Mortadelo y Filemón: El 35 Aniversario
- Munma Holy Republic: Islamic republic, formed out of the southern quarter of Iran and Pakistan, in Appleseed manga
- Mypos: island nation around the Greek isles, home of Balki from Perfect Strangers
Samuel Hartlieb (ca. ...
Gordon Korman (born October 23, 1963) is a Canadian author, primarily of novels for children and young adults. ...
Whoops Apocalypse was originally a six-part 1982 sitcom by Andrew Marshall and David Renwick, made by London Weekend Television for ITV. Marshall and Renwick later reworked the concept as a 1986 movie with almost completely different characters and plot, although one or two of the original actors returned in...
Alternate history (fiction) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
The Years of Rice and Salt (2002, ISBN 0553580078) is an alternate history novel written by science fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson, a thought experiment about a world without Christianity. ...
For the late American actress, see Kim Stanley. ...
The Justice Squad is a superhero team. ...
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (known as Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles in the United Kingdom, Republic of Ireland, Germany and Sweden) is an American animated television series, produced by Fred Wolf Films and Murakami-Wolf-Swenson, Inc. ...
A diplomatic mission is a group of people from one nation state present in another nation state to represent the sending state in the receiving State. ...
Biggles Goes to War (1938). ...
Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle, DL (22 May 1859â7 July 1930) was a British author most noted for his stories about the detective Sherlock Holmes, which are generally considered a major innovation in the field of crime fiction, and for the adventures of Professor Challenger. ...
The Lost World is a 1912 novel by Arthur Conan Doyle concerning an expedition to a plateau (native name is Tepuyes) in South America (Venezuela) where prehistoric animals (dinosaurs and other extinct creatures) still survive. ...
Herman Melville (August 1, 1819 â September 28, 1891) was an American novelist, short story writer, essayist, and poet. ...
Edgar Rice Burroughs Edgar Rice Burroughs (September 1, 1875 â March 19, 1950) was an American author, best known for his creation of the jungle hero Tarzan, although he also produced works in many genres. ...
Tales of the Gold Monkey was a 1982 television show broadcast by ABC. The networks attempt to capitalize on the fame of the movie Raiders of the Lost Ark the previous year featured an ex-Flying Tigers Indiana Jones-like operator of an air cargo delivery service named Jake...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
This article is about the region in Romania. ...
For the ballet, see The Merry Widow (ballet). ...
The Interpreter is a 2005 drama/thriller film, directed by Sydney Pollack and starring Nicole Kidman, Sean Penn, and Catherine Keener. ...
A world map showing the continent of Africa Africa is the worlds second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. ...
The Interpreter is a 2005 drama/thriller film, directed by Sydney Pollack and starring Nicole Kidman, Sean Penn, and Catherine Keener. ...
Paradise is a 2006 adventure game by White Birds Productions, a company formed by Benoît Sokal who was also responsible for the adventure games Amerzone, Syberia and Syberia 2. ...
Look up pirate and piracy in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Map of Central America and the Caribbean The Caribbean Sea (pronounced or ) is a tropical sea in the Western Hemisphere, part of the Atlantic Ocean, southeast of the Gulf of Mexico. ...
The Secret of Monkey Island, CD version. ...
Elaine Marley in Curse of Monkey Island Elaine Marley is one of the primary characters in the Monkey Island series of adventure games developed by LucasArts. ...
The Prince and Betty is a novel by P. G. Wodehouse. ...
Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse, KBE (15 October 1881 â 14 February 1975) (IPA: ) was a comic writer who has enjoyed enormous popular success for more than seventy years. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (French Le charme discret de la bourgeoisie) is a surreal 1972 film written and directed by Luis Buñuel, a Spanish-born film-maker associated with the Surrealist movement. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Dynasty was an American primetime television soap opera that aired on ABC from January 12, 1981 to May 10, 1989. ...
The Second-in-Command (2i/c) is the deputy commander of any British Army unit, from battalion or regiment downwards. ...
This article is about the 1960s television series. ...
Adam West (born William West Anderson on September 19, 1928) is an American actor who is best known for playing the role of Batman/Bruce Wayne on the 1960s TV series Batman (which also had a film adaptation). ...
is the 12th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1966 (MCMLXVI) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display full calendar) of the 1966 Gregorian calendar. ...
Roseanne Cherrie Barr (born November 3, 1952) is an American actress, writer, talk-show host, and comedian. ...
Ghostbusters II is the 1989 sequel to Ghostbusters (1984). ...
Image:UMD.jpg A UMD of the game. ...
Molvanîas 2-hued trikolor, unique for the fact that it has only two colours, and famous for the Communist Hammer and Sickle, with added Trowel map Molvanîa (A Land Untouched by Modern Dentistry) is a fictional country set in Eastern Europe for the mock travel guide Molvan...
Phaic TÄn is an imaginary country created by Australians Tom Gleisner, Santo Cilauro, and Rob Sitch, and is the basis for a parody travel guidebook Phaic TÄn: Sunstroke on a Shoestring. ...
San Sombrèro (A Land of Carnivals, Cocktails and Coups) is a fictional country set in Central America for the mock travel guide San Sombrèro: a Land of Carnivals, Cocktails and Coups, described as the birthplace of tinted sunglasses and sequins. ...
Æon Flux DVD cover Æon Flux is an animated science fiction television series that aired on MTV. It premiered in 1991 on MTVs Liquid Television experimental animation show as a six-part serial of short films, followed in 1992 by five individual short episodes. ...
Patrick Hamilton (March 17, 1904 - September 23, 1962) was an English playwright and novelist. ...
Nazi Germany, or the Third Reich, commonly refers to Germany in the years 1933–1945, when it was under the firm control of the totalitarian and fascist ideology of the Nazi Party, with the Führer Adolf Hitler as dictator. ...
The Three Stooges were an American vaudeville and comedy act of the mid 20th century best known for their numerous short subject films. ...
You Nazty Spy (1940) is an 18-minute short subject by the Three Stooges that satirized Nazi Germany. ...
Year 1991 (MCMXCI) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the 1991 Gregorian calendar). ...
Mortadelo y Filemón (Mortadelo and Filemón) is one of the most popular comic strip series in Spain, appearing for the first time in 1958 in the childrens comic-book TÃo Vivo drawn by the hand of Francisco Ibáñez. ...
For people named Islam, see Islam (name). ...
For the Aesop Rock album, see Appleseed (album). ...
Perfect Strangers is a sitcom television series which ran for eight seasons from 1986 through 1993 on ABC. The show was moved around in the prime-time lineup and eventually landed on Fridays as part of TGIF. It is about Larry Appleton (Mark Linn-Baker), a high-strung Chicago resident...
N Bedknobs and Broomsticks is a 1971 musical film produced by Walt Disney Productions, which combines live action and animation; it premiered on October 7, 1971. ...
Yulian Semyonov (ЮлиаÌн СемÑÐ½Ð¾Ð²Ð¸Ñ Ð¡ÐµÐ¼Ñнов) (October 8, 1931 - September 5, 1993) was a Russian writer of spy fiction. ...
For the video game, see Spy Fiction (video game). ...
007 redirects here. ...
Casino Royale (2006) is the 21st film in the James Bond series and the first to star Daniel Craig as MI6 agent James Bond. ...
Dynasty was an American primetime television soap opera that aired on ABC from January 12, 1981 to May 10, 1989. ...
Night of Truth (La nuit de la vérité, 2004) is the African director Fanta Régina Nacros first full length film. ...
Cover design Cloud Atlas is a 2004 novel, the third book by British author David Mitchell. ...
The first Captain Underpants book. ...
Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls (1995) is a movie made as a sequel to Ace Ventura, Pet Detective (1994). ...
Alan Sillitoe (born March 4, 1928) is an English writer, one of the Angry Young Men of the 1950s. ...
In modern physics the photon is the elementary particle responsible for electromagnetic phenomena. ...
Ella Minnow Pea is an epistolary novel by Mark Dunn, copyrighted in 2001. ...
Mark Dunn is an American author and playwright. ...
The average Elbonian The Republic of Elbonia is a fictional country from Scott Adams comic strips Dilbert and Plop: The Hairless Elbonian. ...
Anatole France (April 16, 1844 â October 12, 1924) was the pen name of French author Jacques Anatole François Thibault. ...
Penguin Island (LÃle des Pingouins) is a satirical novel by Anatole France first published in 1908. ...
The official flag of Novistrana. ...
Republic: The Revolution is a game produced by a former programmer of Lionhead Studios. ...
Flag of Nuevo Rico Nuevo Rico is a fictional South American country in the adventures of Tintin. ...
The Adventures of Tintin (French: ) is a series of Belgian comic books created by Belgian artist Hergé, the pen name of Georges Remi (1907â1983). ...
Flag of San Theodoros San Theodoros is a fictional South American country in the adventures of Tintin. ...
O Oceania is one of the three super-states in George Orwells novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, and is the location of the novels version of London, where Winston Smith, the main character, lives. ...
This article is about the Orwell novel. ...
Eric Arthur Blair (25 June 1903 [1] [2] â 21 January 1950), better known by the pen name George Orwell, was an English author and journalist. ...
Goldie Jeanne Hawn (born November 21, 1945) is an Academy Award-winning American actress, director and producer. ...
Protocol is a 1984 motion picture starring Goldie Hawn and Chris Sarandon. ...
Dutch ( ) is a West Germanic language spoken by around 24 million people, mainly in the Netherlands, Belgium and Suriname, but also by smaller groups of speakers in parts of France, Germany and several former Dutch colonies. ...
Michael A. Stackpole Michael A. Stackpole (born 1957) is a science fiction and fantasy author best known for his Star Wars and Battletech books. ...
Orsinian Tales is a collection of short stories by American writer Ursula K. Le Guin. ...
Ursula K. Le Guin at an informal bookstore Q&A session, July 2004 Ursula Kroeber Le Guin (born October 21, 1929), is an American author. ...
Orsinian Tales is a collection of short stories by American writer Ursula K. Le Guin. ...
Malafrena is a novel published in 1979 by Ursula K. Le Guin. ...
Central Europe The Alpine Countries and the Visegrád Group (Political map, 2004) Central Europe is the region lying between the variously and vaguely defined areas of Eastern and Western Europe. ...
The Great Dictator is a film directed by and starring Charlie Chaplin. ...
The Great Dictator is a film directed by and starring Charlie Chaplin. ...
Border Zone is an interactive fiction computer game written by Marc Blank and published by Infocom in 1987. ...
A computer game is a game composed of a computer-controlled virtual universe that players interact with in order to achieve a defined goal or set of goals. ...
This entire article, especially the controversy section and the discussion of its cancellation does not cite any references or sources. ...
Oz is a fantasy region containing four countries under the rule of one monarch. ...
Lyman Frank Baum (May 15, 1856 â May 6, 1919) was an American author, actor, and independent filmmaker best known as the creator, along with illustrator W. W. Denslow, of one of the most popular books in American childrens literature, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, better known today as simply...
Wicked may refer to: Look up wicked in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
This article is about the fictional country in the Ace Combat series of games. ...
Outer Heaven is a fictional organization and a recurring concept in the Metal Gear series, introduced in 1987s Metal Gear. ...
For other uses, see Metal Gear (disambiguation). ...
P - Pala: island utopia in Aldous Huxley's Island
- Palombia: home of the Marsupilami from the Spirou et Fantasio and Marsupilami comics
- 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.
- Palestine: Middle eastern country from the movie Exodus.
- Paragonia: Latin American country in the movie The Americano
- Pathos: neighbor of Mypos, part of a different Tri-Island Area in Perfect Strangers
- 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.
- 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 Hoshino aka "Ruri Ruri", a famous character of the series, is originally a princess from there.
- Penguin Island(L'île des Pingouins): in the 1908 novel by Anatole France, an island in the North Sea where Penguins were miraculosly transformed into humans (and which is in fact a satitical view on France).
- Pepeslavia: from "Su Excelencia" movie starring Mario Moreno Cantinflas. Probably referring to Yugoslavia.
- 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
- Phaic Tăn: South East Asian country from a parody travel guidebook; from the same authors as Molvanîa and San Sombrèro.
- Pharamaul: a British island protectorate five hundred miles off the southwest coast of Africa from the novel The Tribe That Lost Its Head by Nicholas Monsarrat.
- Phatt Island: an island in the Caribbean in the game Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge
- 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".
- Pianostan: a country once visited by Inspector Gadget where its people remain happy so long as their King remains miserable
- 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)
- Poictesme: a country situated roughly in the south of France in the books of James Branch Cabell
- Pokoponesia: island nation from the animated version of The Tick
- Poldévie: Eastern European country in a famous petition in the 1930s and in many novels by Jacques Roubaud.
- 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 in Poland and Germany.
- 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 movie The Merry Widow. Pontevedro is a veiled reference to the Balkan country of Montenegro.
- 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)
- 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 The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show
- Povia: a small monarchy in the Balkans in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Heir Apparent"
- Prajevitza: a former socialist republic in Eastern Europe, in the Spanish-French movie Krapatchouk (1993), directed by Enrique Gabriel
This article is about a village in Estonia. ...
Aldous Leonard Huxley (July 26, 1894 â November 22, 1963) was an English writer and one of the most prominent members of the famous Huxley family. ...
Palombia is a fictitious South American country from the Spirou and Marsupilami stories. ...
Marsupilami is a fictional comic book animal created by André Franquin in 1952. ...
Il y a un sorcier à Champignac, 1951, by Franquin Spirou et Fantasio (Spirou and Fantasio) is a Franco-Belgian comic strip that began its run in 1938. ...
Marsupilami is a fictional comic book animal created by André Franquin in 1952. ...
For other uses, see Europe (disambiguation). ...
For the documentary series, see Monarchy (TV series). ...
Serialized in ShÅnen Sunday Original run 2002 â 2007 No. ...
Animé redirects here. ...
For other uses, see Princess (disambiguation). ...
This article is about the second book in the Torah. ...
Perfect Strangers is a sitcom television series which ran for eight seasons from 1986 through 1993 on ABC. The show was moved around in the prime-time lineup and eventually landed on Fridays as part of TGIF. It is about Larry Appleton (Mark Linn-Baker), a high-strung Chicago resident...
Patusan is a fictional country in the movies The Last Electric Knight and Surf Ninjas, as well as the TV series Sidekicks. ...
Filipino name Tagalog: Luzon Sea Portuguese name Portuguese: Mar da China Meridional Vietnamese name Vietnamese: The South China Sea is a marginal sea south of China. ...
Surf Ninjas is a 1993 movie, starring Ernie Reyes Jr. ...
For other uses, see Sidekick (disambiguation). ...
Lord Jim is a novel by Joseph Conrad, originally published in Blackwoods Magazine from October 1899 to November 1900. ...
// Joseph Conrad (born Teodor Józef Konrad NaÅÄcz-Korzeniowski, 3 December 1857 â 3 August 1924) was a Polish-born novelist who spent most of his adult life in Britain. ...
This is part of the Martian Successor Nadesico (see Categories, below) series of articles Martian Successor Nadesico (機動戦艦ナデシコ Kidō Senkan Nadeshiko, 1996) is a science fiction comedy anime TV series, and a subsequent manga series by Kia Asamiya. ...
Ruri Hoshino, as seen in Martian Successor Nadesico: The Prince of Darkness Ruri Hoshino (æéã«ãª Hoshino Ruri) is a fictional character in the anime series Martian Successor Nadesico. ...
Penguin Island (LÃle des Pingouins) is a satirical novel by Anatole France first published in 1908. ...
Penguin Island (LÃle des Pingouins) is a satirical novel by Anatole France first published in 1908. ...
Year 1908 (MCMVIII) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar (or a leap year starting on Tuesday of the 13-day-slower Julian calendar). ...
Anatole France (April 16, 1844 â October 12, 1924) was the pen name of French author Jacques Anatole François Thibault. ...
The North Sea is a sea of the Atlantic Ocean, located between the coasts of Norway and Denmark in the east, the coast of the British Isles in the west, and the German, Dutch, Belgian and French coasts in the south. ...
Modern genera Aptenodytes Eudyptes Eudyptula Megadyptes Pygoscelis Spheniscus For prehistoric genera, see Systematics Some penguins are curious. ...
Fortino Mario Alfonso Moreno Reyes (August 12, 1911 â April 20, 1993) was a comedian of the Mexican theatre and film industry. ...
George Bernard Shaw (26 July 1856â2 November 1950) was a world-renowned Irish author. ...
âE Peterbus Unumâ is an episode from the second season of the FOX animated television series Family Guy. ...
Family Guy is an Emmy Award-winning American animated television series about a dysfunctional family in the fictional town of Quahog, Rhode Island. ...
Phaic TÄn is an imaginary country created by Australians Tom Gleisner, Santo Cilauro, and Rob Sitch, and is the basis for a parody travel guidebook Phaic TÄn: Sunstroke on a Shoestring. ...
Molvanîas 2-hued trikolor, unique for the fact that it has only two colours, and famous for the Communist Hammer and Sickle, with added Trowel map Molvanîa (A Land Untouched by Modern Dentistry) is a fictional country set in Eastern Europe for the mock travel guide Molvan...
San Sombrèro (A Land of Carnivals, Cocktails and Coups) is a fictional country set in Central America for the mock travel guide San Sombrèro: a Land of Carnivals, Cocktails and Coups, described as the birthplace of tinted sunglasses and sequins. ...
Commander Nicholas John Turney Monsarrat RNVR (22 March 1910 â 8 August 1979) was a UK novelist best known today for his sea stories, particularly The Cruel Sea (1951). ...
The Grand Duke, or The Statutory Duel, was the final operetta written by William S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan. ...
W. S. Gilbert Arthur Sullivan Gilbert and Sullivan refers to the Victorian era partnership of librettist W. S. Gilbert (1836â1911) and composer Arthur Sullivan (1842â1900). ...
For the 1999 live-action film, see Inspector Gadget (film). ...
The Curse of Monkey Island (CMI) is an adventure game developed and published by LucasArts, and the third game in the Monkey Island computer game series. ...
James Branch Cabell photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1935 James Branch Cabell (April 14, 1879 - May 5, 1958) was an American author of fantasy fiction and belles lettres. ...
The Tick is the name of a series of comic books and an animated TV series created in 1986 by Ben Edlund, following the exploits of a blue-skinned muscular man named The Tick who fights crime in a place simply called The City. He is an absurdist spoof of...
Jacques Roubaud (born 1932) is a French poet and mathematician. ...
Original sheet music cover // Anchors Aweigh is the song of the United States Navy, composed in 1906 by Charles A. Zimmerman with lyrics by Alfred Hart Miles. ...
Pommern redirects here. ...
Henri Meilhac (February 21, 1831 - 1897), French dramatist, was born in Paris. ...
For the ballet, see The Merry Widow (ballet). ...
Porto Santo Island is a Portuguese island 50 km northeast of Madeira Island in the North Atlantic Ocean. ...
Steven Quincy Urkel (born 1976[1]), better known as Steve Urkel (portrayed by Jaleel White) was the breakout character on the 1990s sitcom Family Matters. ...
Family Matters (TV series) also refers to a popular television series. ...
For other uses, see Madeira (disambiguation). ...
Edward Morgan Forster, OM (January 1, 1879 â June 7, 1970), was an English novelist, short story writer, and essayist. ...
Pottsylvania, in the fictional universe defined by Jay Wards The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show, was a country in Eastern Europe whose interests were generally understood to be hostile to those of the free world. The geography of Pottsylvania is indeterminate. ...
J Troplong Jay Ward (September 20, 1920 â October 12, 1989) was an American creator and producer of animated television cartoons. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Pre-1989 division between the West (grey) and Eastern Bloc (orange) superimposed on current national boundaries: Russia (dark orange), other countries of the former USSR (medium orange),members of the Warsaw pact (light orange), and other former Communist regimes not aligned with Moscow (lightest orange). ...
Q - Qurac: A fictional Persian Gulf country in the DC Comics Universe, often used when DC needs a terrorist state.
- Qamadan: an oil-rich Arab kingdom and American ally from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Brothers"
- Qumar: Middle Eastern state from the television series The West Wing
Qum Qum: A tiny nation in Peru mention in The Suite Life of Zack & Cody Qurac is a fictional country in the DC universe. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Qumar is a fictional Middle Eastern country in the television show The West Wing. ...
The West Wing is a popular and widely acclaimed American television serial drama created by Aaron Sorkin and produced and co-written by John Wells. ...
The Suite Life of Zack & Cody is an American childrens television series that airs on the Disney Channel. ...
Qumran is a fictional country in the 1980s sitcoms Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister. ...
Yes Minister is a satirical British sitcom written by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn that was first transmitted by BBC television and radio between 1980 and 1984, split over three seven-episode series. ...
Qwghlm is a fictional location, featured in the books Cryptonomicon and The Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson. ...
Neal Town Stephenson (born October 31, 1959) is an American writer, known primarily for his science fiction works in the postcyberpunk genre with a penchant for explorations of society, mathematics, currency, and the history of science. ...
Cryptonomicon is a 1999 novel by Neal Stephenson. ...
The Baroque Cycle, a series of books written by Neal Stephenson, appeared in print in 2003 and 2004. ...
R The Australian Broadcasting Corporation or ABC is Australias national non-profit public broadcaster. ...
Embassy was an Australian television series screened on the ABC between 1990 and 1992. ...
Philip Pullman CBE (born October 19, 1946) is a British writer. ...
For other uses, see Banana republic (disambiguation). ...
Junta is a Machiavellian board game designed by Vincent Tsao. ...
Fortino Mario Alfonso Moreno Reyes (August 12, 1911 â April 20, 1993) was a comedian of the Mexican theatre and film industry. ...
For the web browser software of the same name, see Mothra (web browser). ...
Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story is a comedy from 20th Century Fox, written and directed by Rawson Thurber and available on DVD or VHS December 2004. ...
Ruritania is a fictional kingdom in Central Europe which forms the setting for three novels by the writer Anthony Hope: The Prisoner of Zenda (1894), The Heart of Princess Osra (1896), and Rupert of Hentzau (1898). ...
Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins (February 9, 1863 _ July 8, 1933), better known as Anthony Hope was a British novelist, best remembered today for his short novel The Prisoner of Zenda (1894, set in the fictional kingdom of Ruritania, a prequel The Heart of Princess Osra (a collection of short...
The Prisoner of Zenda is an adventure novel by Anthony Hope, first published in 1894. ...
S - Sachenia: a tiny state close to the Alps in the movie Herz ohne Krone
- Sacramento: a Caribbean Island from Érico Veríssimo's novel, O Senhor Embaixador (The Ambassador), heavily based on Cuba.
- Sahelise Republic: African country mentioned in The West Wing
- 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
- 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.
- Salamia: a country in the Middle East in the Tamil movie Vikram
- Salouf: Arabic oil-rich monarchy in the movie Where the Spies Are
- Samavia: Eastern European kingdom in Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Lost Prince
- San Carlos: Latin American nation in the movie Delta Force 2: The Colombian Connection
- San Cordova: a democracy in Latin America from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Elixir"
- San Cristobal: a Latin American democracy in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Code"
- San Cristobel: tropical island country in The Guiding Light TV series, also the name for a separate fictional nation in the TV series Automan
- San Do Mar: Central American nation, a haven for criminals, in several novels by Harry Stephen Keeler; it is the setting for "The Gallows Waits, My Lord."
- San Esperito: South American island nation from the video game Just Cause. Translated in English means "St. espionage".
- San Glucos: from The Simpsons episode "Sweets and Sour Marge"
- San Gordio: a kingdom in the movie The Cowboy Prince
- San Lorenzo: a tiny, rocky island nation located in the Caribbean Sea in Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle
- San Marcos: Latin American republic in Woody Allen's comedy Bananas
- San Marcos (2): Caribbean island from an episode of The A-Team
- San Marcos (3): South American country in an episode of Alarm für Cobra 11 - Die Autobahnpolizei
- San Marcos (4): civil-war torn Central American country in an episode of MacGyver.
- San Miguel: small South/Central American dictatorship in the movie Deal of the Century
- San Monique: Caribbean nation run by a drug lord in the James Bond movie Live and Let Die
- San Pascal: a Latin American country in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Catafalque"
- San Pasquale: South American country in Commander in Chief. Possibly based on Bolivia or Panama.
- San Pedro: from the Sherlock Holmes story "Wisteria Lodge"
- San Pedro (2): South American country in the movie Hour of the Assassin
- San Seriffe: Fictional island nation featured in an elaborate April Fools Day hoax on 1 April 1977 in the British newspaper The Guardian.
- San Sombrèro: Central American country from a parody travel guidebook; from the same authors as Molvanîa and Phaic Tăn.
- San Theodoros: South American nation featured in several of The Adventures of Tintin, home of General Alcazar
- Santa Costa: Caribbean island dictatorship from the pilot episode of Mission: Impossible. Appears to lie about half-way between Cuba and the Venezuelan coast on a map seen – briefly – at the start of the episode.
- Santa Cristal: Central American country in the movie Santa Cristal
- Santales: a small Latin American democracy, from the Mission: Impossible episode "Trek"
- Sapogonia: imaginary country, located somewhere to the south of Mexico, where all mestizos come from, in the novel Sapogonia by Ana Castillo
- Saradia: Middle Eastern country in the movie Godzilla vs. Biollante
- Sarkhan: Southeast Asian country from the novel The Ugly American by William Lederer and Eugene Burdick and the subsequent movie
- Saroczia: Eastern European country which the United States invades, which serves as the terrorist basis in the video game Winback.
- Saudi-Israelia: Appears as 51st state of the United States in The Simpsons epsisode Future-Drama.
- Scabb Island: an anarchic pirate island in the Caribbean in the game Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge
- Schiermeeuwenoog: a Dutch island from the Sjors & Sjimmie-series, became independent and reverted in comic and movie.
- The Triple Monarchy of Scythia-Pannonia-Transbalkania: from Dr. Engelbert Eszterhazy stories by Avram Davidson
- Selgina: a small country located high in the Himalayas in the movie Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster
- Sercia: a republic in Time Crisis video game
- Serena Republic: a small country mentioned in the Metal Gear Acid 2 video game
- Shadaloo: Southeast Asian state in the 1994 film Street Fighter, based on the Capcom computer game (in which the same word was used to describe various other things, including a criminal organisation). In the television series Street Fighter II V, a similar name, Shadowlaw, referred to a master organization controlled by Bison which several lesser syndicates operated under.
- Shakobi: African monarchy from That's So Raven TV series, episode "The Royal Treatment"
- Shangri-La: a mystical, harmonious valley, enclosed in the western end of the Himalaya in James Hilton's novel Lost Horizon
- Shundi: a kingdom from the movie Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne which was filmed by Satyajit Ray from a novel by Upendrakishore Raychoudhury
- Soviet Unterzoegersdorf: the "last existing appanage republic of the USSR", a fake country created by monochrom for theatre performances and computer games
- Sierra Gordo: a South American country often used as a satire of banana republics in the G.I. Joe comic book series published by Marvel Comics.
- SimNation: a country featured in video games by Maxis, including the SimCity series and The Sims. The capital is SimCity, revealed in the politics career track in The Sims 2.
- Skandistan: Islamic state comprising what was formerly Scandinavia. From the alternate history book The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson
- Skeptos: neighbor of Mypos, part of a different Tri-Island Area in Perfect Strangers
- Skull Island: from King Kong movies
- Skull Island: a small pirate island in the Caribbean in the game The Curse of Monkey Island
- Slabovia a.k.a. United Slabovian Empire: a land-locked country with a frustrated navy. It is referred to in The May Day Impromptu and several other works by Canadian playwright Patrick Goddard (an award winning English playwright working out of Montreal, Quebec).
- The People's Republic of Slaka: a Balkan communist country in Malcolm Bradbury's Rates of Exchange and its sequel Why Come to Slaka?
- Slavatania: an imaginary country from the TV series Hope & Faith made up by Faith in the episode "Natal Attraction" when she tells her gynaecologist that her father is the prince of the country
- 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.
- Slovetzia: a tiny country in Eastern Europe in the movie The Beautician and the Beast
- Island of Sodor: between England and the Isle of Man, the setting for the Reverend Awdry's Thomas the Tank Engine railway network managed by "The Fat Controller"
- Sonzola: African republic mentioned in the novels of Christopher Brookmyre
- Sotho: a kingdom in Africa mentioned in a 1997 episode of the German TV series Küstenwache (note: the name and the royalist form of government seem to refer to the real existing Kingdom of Lesotho - however, in the episode, the King of Sotho comes to Germany to order ships for his coastguard, which would not make any sense for the real Lesotho, since the country is landlocked).
- Spydravania: a small island nation or enclave as it has been shown geographically located of the coast of Somalia and located on the border between Sudan, Central African Republic and Chad. It is home to Spydra, the villainess of the Gadgetboy series. The country's full name is the Queendom of Spydravania.
- Strackenz: European country in the novel Royal Flash by George MacDonald Fraser
- Sunda: in Eric Ambler's State of Siege [2], 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.)
- Suroq: Middle Eastern country from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "Terror"
- Svardia: a tiny European republic from the Mission: Impossible episode "The Train"
- Syldavia: Balkan monarchy featured in four stories of The Adventures of Tintin, neighbouring Borduria
- Sylvania: belligerent neighbor to Freedonia in the movie Duck Soup
- Symkaria: a small Eastern European country from Marvel Comics, the homeland of renowned mercenary Silver Sable
Ãrico VerÃssimo (1905-1975), was a Brazilian writer born in Rio Grande do Sul. ...
O Senhor Embaixador is a book by Érico Veríssimo, about the history of the hipotetical Republic of Sacramiento Categories: Literature stubs ...
This article is about a TV show. ...
Armed Assault (ArmA) is a computer game by Bohemia Interactive (BI). ...
St. ...
The Arabian Sea (Arabic: Ø¨ØØ± Ø§ÙØ¹Ø±Ø¨; transliterated: Bahr al-Arab) is a region of the Indian Ocean bounded on the east by India, on the north by Pakistan and Iran, on the west by Arabian Peninsula, on the south, approximately, by a line between Cape Guardafui, the north-east point of Somalia...
Yes, (prime) minister: Sir Humphrey Appleby, James Jim Hacker, Bernard Woolley Yes, Minister and its sequel Yes, Prime Minister are British sitcoms about the struggle between (Dr) James Jim Hacker (played by Paul Eddington), the government minister of the (fictional) Department of Administrative Affairs (and later as Prime Minister) and...
A fictional state in Eastern Europe in the novel The Lost Prince by Frances Hodgson Burnett. ...
Frances Hodgson Burnett Frances Burnetts blue plaque in central London Frances Hodgson Burnett, (November 24, 1849 - October 29, 1924) was an English playwright and author. ...
The Lost Prince (novel) is a novel by British-American authoress Frances Hodgson Burnett, first published in 1915. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
This Guiding Light logo, which debuted in 1982, was used, save for background changes, until 1990. ...
Automan was a U.S., science fiction, superhero, television series produced by Glen A. Larson. ...
One of the most prolific and yet relatively unknown American authors, Harry Stephen Keeler represented to many the quintessential writer: one who wrote for the love of writing, regardless of fan base, profit or any other external factors. ...
Just Cause was released on September 22, 2006 for Microsoft Windows, Xbox, Xbox 360, and PlayStation 2 platforms in Europe. ...
Simpsons redirects here. ...
The Republic of San Lorenzo is a fictional country from the Kurt Vonnegut satire Cats Cradle (1963), where much of the books second half takes place. ...
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. ...
For the string game, see Cats cradle. ...
Fictional Latin American republic loosely based on Cuba, featured in ‘Bananas’, the 1971 Woody Allen comedy. ...
Woody Allen (born Allen Stewart Königsberg on December 1, 1935) is a three-time Academy Award-winning American film director, writer, actor, jazz musician, comedian, and playwright. ...
Bananas is a film written, directed, and starring Woody Allen and Louise Lasser in 1971. ...
West Indies redirects here. ...
For the 2008 movie, see The A-Team (film). ...
Alarm für Cobra 11 - Die Autobahnpolizei is a German television series about the team of the Autobahnpolizei in first in Berlin than later in Nordrhein-Westfalen. ...
For other uses, see Central America (disambiguation). ...
MacGyver is an American adventure television series, produced in Canada, about a laid-back, extremely resourceful secret agent, played by Richard Dean Anderson. ...
Deal of the Century promotional poster. ...
007 redirects here. ...
Live and Let Die is the 8th film in the British James Bond series and the first to star Roger Moore as MI6 agent James Bond. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
It has been suggested that List of characters in Commander in Chief be merged into this article or section. ...
A portrait of Sherlock Holmes by Sidney Paget from the Strand Magazine, 1891 Sherlock Holmes is a fictional detective of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, who first appeared in publication in 1887. ...
San Serriffe is a fictional island nation created for April Fools Day. ...
For other uses, see Guardian. ...
San Sombrèro (A Land of Carnivals, Cocktails and Coups) is a fictional country set in Central America for the mock travel guide San Sombrèro: a Land of Carnivals, Cocktails and Coups, described as the birthplace of tinted sunglasses and sequins. ...
Molvanîas 2-hued trikolor, unique for the fact that it has only two colours, and famous for the Communist Hammer and Sickle, with added Trowel map Molvanîa (A Land Untouched by Modern Dentistry) is a fictional country set in Eastern Europe for the mock travel guide Molvan...
Phaic TÄn is an imaginary country created by Australians Tom Gleisner, Santo Cilauro, and Rob Sitch, and is the basis for a parody travel guidebook Phaic TÄn: Sunstroke on a Shoestring. ...
Flag of San Theodoros San Theodoros is a fictional South American country in the adventures of Tintin. ...
The Adventures of Tintin (French: ) is a series of Belgian comic books created by Belgian artist Hergé, the pen name of Georges Remi (1907â1983). ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Language(s) Predominantly Spanish, (with a minority of other languages), while Mestiços speaks Portuguese Religion(s) Christianity (Predominantly Roman Catholic, with a minority of Protestant and other Religions) Related ethnic groups European (mostly Spanish, Portuguese, French and Italian), Amerindian people, Austronesian people, Hispanics and Latinos Mestizo (Portuguese: Mestiço...
Ana Castillo signing a copy of Massacre of the Dreamers, May 25, 2006 Ana Castillo (born 1953) is a Chicana novelist, poet, short story writer, and essayist. ...
Godzilla vs. ...
The Ugly American is the title of a 1958 political novel by Eugene Burdick and William Lederer. ...
William Julius Lederer (b. ...
Eugene Burdick (12 December 1918 - 26 July 1965), was co-author of The Ugly American (1958), Fail-Safe (1962) and The 480 (1965). ...
Eastern Europe is, by convention, a region defined geographically as that part of Europe covering the eastern part of the continent. ...
Winback is a video game developed by Koei for the Nintendo 64 in 1999 and PlayStation 2 in 2001. ...
A U.S. 51 star flag has been designed in case of a 51st state actually joining the United States. ...
Simpsons redirects here. ...
Future-Drama is the fifteenth episode of the sixteenth season of The Simpsons. ...
Anarchism is a generic term describing various political philosophies and social movements that advocate the elimination of hierarchy and imposed authority. ...
Avram Davidson (April 23, 1923 â May 8, 1993) was a writer of fantasy fiction, science fiction, and crime fiction, as well as the author of many unclassifiable but unforgetable stories that do not fit into a genre niche. ...
Perspective view of the Himalaya and Mount Everest as seen from space looking south-south-east from over the Tibetan Plateau. ...
Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster, released in Japan as San Daikaijū: Chikyū Saidai no Kessen lit. ...
Time Crisis is a video game initially available in arcades and later released for the PlayStation and cell phones. ...
Metal Gear Acid 2 (rendered Metal Gear Ac!d², abbreviated MGA2) is a video game developed by Kojima Productions and published by Konami for the PlayStation Portable. ...
Shadoloo (often spelled as Shadowloo, Shadaloo and Shadowlaw, Japanese: シャドルー) is a fictitious international crime syndicate which is featured prominently in Capcoms Street Fighter series. ...
Year 1994 (MCMXCIV) The year 1994 was designated as the International Year of the Family and the International Year of the Sport and the Olympic Ideal by the United Nations. ...
Screenshot of Street Fighter (arcade version). ...
For the original NASA meaning, see capsule communicator. ...
Street Fighter II V , pronounced two vee) is an anime series based on the fighting game Street Fighter II. Directed by Gisaburo Sugii, the series first aired in Japan in 1995, from April 10 to November 27, on YTV. As of July 2007 re-runs of the series started to...
Shadoloo (also spelled Shadowloo, Shadaloo, and in some cases Shadowlaw) is a fictitious international crime syndicate which is featured prominently in Capcoms Street Fighter series. ...
This article is about the association term. ...
Shakobi is a fictional country on the continent of Africa invented for an episode of the Disney Channel original series Thats So Raven titled The Royal Treatment. ...
Thats So Raven is an American Emmy Award-nominated[1] sitcom television series broadcast on the Disney Channel. ...
Shangri-La is a fictional place described in the novel, Lost Horizon, written by British writer James Hilton in 1933. ...
Perspective view of the Himalaya and Mount Everest as seen from space looking south-south-east from over the Tibetan Plateau. ...
James Hilton (September 9, 1900 - December 20, 1954) was a popular English novelist of the first half of the 20th century. ...
The cover of the 1961 paperback edition Lost Horizon is a fantasy adventure novel by James Hilton. ...
Shundi is a fictional kingdom depicted in Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne. ...
Goopy (on the right) and Bagha Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne, written and directed by the late Satyajit Ray, is a popular Indian childrens film. ...
Satyajit Ray (Bengali: ) (May 2, 1921âApril 23, 1992) was a Bengali Indian filmmaker and polymath. ...
Soviet Unterzoegersdorf (German: Sowjet-Unterzögersdorf) is a fictitious country created by the art/technology/theory group monochrom. ...
monochrom members: (back) Johannes Grenzfurthner, Evelyn Fürlinger, Roland Gratzer; (front) Günther Friesinger, Franz Ablinger. ...
The G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero comic book series was first published by Marvel Comics and later, Devils Due Productions. ...
South America South America is a continent crossed by the equator, with most of its area in the Southern Hemisphere. ...
For other uses, see Banana republic (disambiguation). ...
For the homing pigeon awarded the Dickin Medal in 1946, see G.I. Joe (pigeon). ...
This article is about the comic book company. ...
Maxis Software is an American company that was founded as a video game developer and is now a brand name of Electronic Arts (EA). ...
This article is about the first installment in the series of computer and video games. ...
This article is about a computer game that was released in year 2000. ...
This article is about the first installment in the series of computer and video games. ...
For other uses, see Politics (disambiguation). ...
This article is about the computer game. ...
For other uses, see Scandinavia (disambiguation). ...
Alternate history (fiction) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
The Years of Rice and Salt (2002, ISBN 0553580078) is an alternate history novel written by science fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson, a thought experiment about a world without Christianity. ...
For the late American actress, see Kim Stanley. ...
Perfect Strangers is a sitcom television series which ran for eight seasons from 1986 through 1993 on ABC. The show was moved around in the prime-time lineup and eventually landed on Fridays as part of TGIF. It is about Larry Appleton (Mark Linn-Baker), a high-strung Chicago resident...
This page refers to the fictional Skull Island of King Kong. ...
For other uses, see King Kong (disambiguation). ...
Skull Island, as seen in The Curse of Monkey Island. ...
The Curse of Monkey Island (CMI) is an adventure game developed and published by LucasArts, and the third game in the Monkey Island computer game series. ...
Sir Malcolm Stanley Bradbury (September 7, 1932 â November 27, 2000) was a British author and academic. ...
Hope & Faith is an American sitcom that aired for three seasons on ABC from 2003 to 2006. ...
This article is about the 1960s TV series which was also known as Secret Agent and shouldnt be confused with the 1990s television series Secret Agent Man. ...
The Beautician and the Beast is a 1997 family comedy film directed by Ken Kwapis and starring Fran Drescher and Timothy Dalton as the title characters. ...
A map of the Island of Sodor showing the Railway system (click to enlarge). ...
For other uses, see England (disambiguation). ...
The Reverend W. V. Awdry OBE (15 June 1911 – 21 March 1997) was a clergyman, railway enthusiast and childrens author, best known as the creator of Thomas the Tank Engine. ...
Thomas & Friends (formerly Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends) is a British childrens television series, first broadcast on Anglia Television in 1984. ...
Christopher Brookmyre (b. ...
A landlocked country is one that has no coastline. ...
A typical cartoon villain. ...
Royal Flash is a 1975 movie based on George MacDonald Frasers second Flashman novel, Royal Flash. ...
George MacDonald Fraser, OBE (born 2 April 1926 in Carlisle) is a British author of both historical novels and non-fiction books. ...
Eric Ambler (28 June 1909 - 22 October 1998) was an influential English writer of spy novels who brought a level of realism to the field that had generally been absent in earlier works. ...
State of Siege (French title: Ãtat de Siège) is a 1972 French film directed by Costa Gavras and starred by Yves Montand and Renato Salvatori. ...
The Sunda Strait The Sunda Strait is the strait between the Indonesian islands of Java and Sumatra. ...
The Sunda Islands are a group of islands in west part of the Indonesian Archipelago. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
National motto: (English: rub yourself there, get stung ) Official language Syldavian Capital Klow Largest city Klow Population 642,000 (1939) Government Constitutional monarchy Head of State and Head of Government King Muskar XII (1939) Consolidation 1127 Currency Khôr National anthem Rejoice, Syldavia! National animal Pelican Syldavia is a fictional...
The Adventures of Tintin (French: ) is a series of Belgian comic books created by Belgian artist Hergé, the pen name of Georges Remi (1907â1983). ...
Borduria is a fictional country in the adventures of Tintin. ...
Sylvania literally means forest land in Latin. ...
Freedonia, (Land of the Spree, and the Home of the Knave), is a fictional country in Europe, seen during the 1933 movie Duck Soup, which starred the Marx Brothers. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
This article is about the comic book company. ...
For other uses, see Mercenary (disambiguation). ...
Silver Sable Issue #3 (1992) In Marvel Comics, Silver Sable (real name Silver Sablinova) is a female mercenary, hunter of war criminals, the leader of the Wild Pack and CEO of Silver Sable International. ...
T - 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.
- Tanah Masa: from Karel Čapek's War with the Newts
- 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
- Taronia: from the movie Thirty Day Princess
- Tawaki: from the movie Man of the Moment
- Tecala: South American country from the movie Proof of Life
- Tecan: Central American country in the novel A Flag for Sunrise by Robert Stone
- Termina: the country in which the game Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask takes place.
- Terresta: European country in the movie His Royal Highness
- Thulahn: Himalayan country in The Business by Iain Banks
- Tijata: Central American dictatorship from the movie The In-Laws
- 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.
- Toga Toga Islands: South Pacific island nation featured on The A-Team
- Tomania: Nazi Germany-like country from the movie The Great Dictator, ruled by Adenoid Hynkel
- Tontecarlo: a gambler's paradise in Superlópez comic-books until Superlópez's tourism visit. Clearly based on Montecarlo; "Tonte" refers to Spanish word tonto (=fool).
- Transvalia: not actually a state in its own right, but rather a parody of the so-called "Boerestaat" named Orania (which was to be a whites-only "homeland" that right-wing Afrikaners wished to establish after South Africa's transition to democracy on 27 April 1994). Leon Schuster made a comedy film called "Sweet and Short", which was a parody of life in the New South Africa. Interestingly enough, 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.
- Trent, Grand-Duchy of: European Grand-Duchy from the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Choice"
- Trobokistan: former Soviet satellite nation in Totally Spies! TV series
- Tropico: island nation in the Caribbean in the Tropico computer game
- Trucial Abysmia: Middle Eastern country in the G.I. Joe comics.
- Tsalal: an island in the novel The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym by Edgar Allan Poe and its sequel An Antarctic Mystery by Jules Verne
Astrid Anna Emilia Lindgren ( , née Ericsson, November 14, 1907 â January 28, 2002) was a Swedish childrens book author and screenwriter, whose many titles were translated into 85 languages and published in more than 100 countries. ...
Pippi Longstocking (Swedish Pippi LÃ¥ngstrump) is a fictional character in a series of childrens books created by author Astrid Lindgren. ...
Karel Äapek (pronounced ; IPA: ) (January 9, 1890 - December 25, 1938) was one of the most important Czech writers of the 20th century. ...
War with the Newts (Válka s mloky in the original Czech), also translated as War with the Salamanders, is a science fiction story by Czech author Karel Äapek. ...
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Arthur C. Clarke Sir Arthur Charles Clarke, CBE (born 16 December 1917) is a British science-fiction author and inventor, most famous for his novel 2001: A Space Odyssey, and for collaborating with director Stanley Kubrick on the film of the same...
The Fountains of Paradise is a 1979 novel by Arthur C. Clarke. ...
Proof of Life is an American film released in 2000, directed by Taylor Hackford. ...
Proof of Life is an American film released in 2000, directed by Taylor Hackford. ...
Photo of Robert Stone by Robert Birnbaum Robert Stone (born August 21, 1937) is a critically well regarded American novelist, whose work is typically characterized by psychological complexity, political concerns, and dark humor. ...
For the movie Himalaya, see Himalaya (film). ...
For other uses, see The Business. ...
Iain Menzies Banks (officially Iain Banks, born on 16 February 1954 in Dunfermline, Fife) is a Scottish writer. ...
The In-Laws is a 1979 comedy film starring Alan Arkin and Peter Falk. ...
Mortadelo y Filemón (Mortadelo and Filemón) is one of the most popular comic strip series in Spain, appearing for the first time in 1958 in the childrens comic-book TÃo Vivo drawn by the hand of Francisco Ibáñez. ...
For the 2008 movie, see The A-Team (film). ...
Nazism in history Nazi ideology Nazism and race Outside Germany Related subjects Lists Politics Portal Nazism or National Socialism (German: Nationalsozialismus), refers primarily to the ideology and practices of the Nazi Party (National Socialist German Workers Party, German: Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP) under Adolf Hitler. ...
The Great Dictator is a film directed by and starring Charlie Chaplin. ...
Superlópez is a Spanish comic book character created by Jan. ...
Monte Carlo is a very wealthy section of the city-state of Monaco known for its casino, gambling, beaches, glamour, and sightings of famous people. ...
For other uses, see Orania. ...
is the 117th day of the year (118th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1994 (MCMXCIV) The year 1994 was designated as the International Year of the Family and the International Year of the Sport and the Olympic Ideal by the United Nations. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Tropico is a real-time strategy computer game developed by PopTop Software and published by Gathering of Developers in April 2001[1]. The game sees the player taking the role of El Presidente, the ruler of an island in the Caribbean during the Cold War era from the 1950s onward. ...
A computer game is a game composed of a computer-controlled virtual universe that players interact with in order to achieve a defined goal or set of goals. ...
The G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero comic book series was first published by Marvel Comics and later, Devils Due Productions. ...
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket is Edgar Allan Poes only complete novel, published in 1838. ...
Edgar Allan Poe (January 19, 1809 â October 7, 1849) was an American poet, short story writer, playwright, editor, literary critic, essayist and one of the leaders of the American Romantic Movement. ...
This article is about the French author. ...
U Noir ), is a 26-episode anime television series produced in 2001 by the Bee Train animation studio and was licensed for American distribution by ADV Films. ...
This article is about the U.S. State. ...
The Venture Bros. ...
Doctor Doom, one of the most archetypal supervillains and his arch-enemies The Fantastic Four (in background). ...
Baron Werner Ãnderbheit IV is a fictional character and antagonist appearing on the Adult Swim show The Venture Bros. ...
This is a list of the main and recurring fictional characters and organizations from The Venture Bros. ...
A fictional country made from Iraq and Iran. ...
Executive Orders is a political and military thriller novel by Tom Clancy. ...
The Schrödingers Cat trilogy is a trilogy of novels by Robert Anton Wilson, chronicling events and characters in several parallel universes. ...
Robert Anton Wilson Robert Anton Wilson or RAW (January 18, 1932 â January 11, 2007) was a prolific American novelist, essayist, philosopher, psychologist, futurologist, anarchist, and conspiracy theory researcher. ...
Ustio Ustio is a fictional country in the Ace Combat world that was first introduced in the PlayStation 2 video game Ace Combat Zero by Namco. ...
Borges redirects here. ...
Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius is a short story by the 20th century Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges. ...
For other uses, see Utopia (disambiguation). ...
For the Elizabethan play, see Sir Thomas More (play). ...
De Optimo Reipublicae Statu deque Nova Insula Utopia (translated On the Best State of a Republic and on the New Island of Utopia) or more simply Utopia is a 1516 book by Sir Thomas More. ...
Wilbur Addison Smith (born January 9, 1933 in Broken Hill, Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia)) is an author of fiction. ...
V - Val Verde: Spanish-speaking country resembling Panama, in the movies Commando and Die Hard 2
- Valaria: a kingdom in the movie The Colonel of the Red Hussars
- Valeria: Spanish speaking democracy from Mission: Impossible episode "Wheels"
- Valeska: a tropical country from the Three Stooges short Saved by the Belle
- Vambria: an Arctic communist dictatorship on the 1990s Disney animated TV series Tale Spin
- Vandreka: see Bandrika
- Vanutu: a tiny South Pacific nation comprised of four atolls from the novel State of Fear by Michael Crichton; not to be confused with the real Republic of Vanuatu
- Versovia: dictatorship from Australian children's miniseries Eugenie Sandler P.I. from ABC Kids
- 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.
- Veyska: Baltic state suffering dictatorial rule in the Mission: Impossible TV episode "The Astrologer"
- Volsinia: the country with unknown location in Dr Trifulgas: A Fantastic Tale by Jules Verne
- Vulgaria: the far-off, make-believe land in the film version of the children's story Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
Val Verde is a fictional country used by Hollywood filmmakers when they require a South/Central American country without getting into legal or diplomatic hot water. ...
Commando (first released on October 4, 1985) is a Hollywood action movie starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. ...
Die Hard 2, sometimes marketed under the title Die Hard 2: Die Harder, is a 1990 film, the second in the Die Hard series. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
The Three Stooges were an American vaudeville and comedy act of the mid 20th century best known for their numerous short subject films. ...
Disney may refer to: The Walt Disney Company and its divisions, including Walt Disney Pictures. ...
Disneys TaleSpin is a half-hour Disney animated series that first aired as part of The Disney Afternoon. ...
State of Fear is a 2004 novel by Michael Crichton published by HarperCollins on December 7, 2004. ...
Michael Crichton, pronounced [1], (born October 23, 1942) is an American author, film producer, film director, and television producer. ...
ABC Kids is the brand for childrens programming on ABC and ABC2, While the ABC Kids Channel was a Digital TV channel in Australia run by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. ...
Patagonia, as most commonly defined (in orange). ...
Madeleine LEngle (November 29, 1918 â September 6, 2007)[1] was an American writer best known for her childrens books, particularly the Newbery Medal-winning A Wrinkle in Time and its sequels A Wind in the Door, A Swiftly Tilting Planet and Many Waters. ...
Alternate timeline, or AT, is a phrase used when discussing alternate history, a literary offshoot of the science-fiction genre. ...
Mission: Impossible is the name of an American television series which aired on the CBS network from September 1966 to September 1973. ...
This article is about the French author. ...
Vulgaria, played by Neuschwanstein Castle Vulgaria is a fictional European barony visited by the Potts family and Truly Scrumptious in their amazing flying car, in the classic childrens film/stage musical, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. ...
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is a 1968 feature film with a script by Roald Dahl and Ken Hughes, and songs by the Sherman Brothers, based on Ian Flemings book Chitty Chitty Bang Bang: The Magical Car. ...
W - Wakanda: small African nation featured in the Marvel Comics series The Avengers. The nation is ruled by King T'Challa, also known as the super hero Black Panther.
- Wallarya: a small country in the Balkans in the movie His Royal Highness
- 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
- West Yemen: a fictitious and presumably democratic country in the Middle East which bordered East Yemen. From an episode in the sitcom, Yes, Prime Minister.
- Western States of America: a country in the western United States of America presumably after the second American civil war in the near future. It had broken off of the USA to escape "dirty" politics and reliance on Chinese imports. The country was ran by a dictator.
Wakanda is a fictional nation in the Marvel Universe. ...
This article is about the comic book company. ...
The Avengers are a fictional superhero team appearing in comic books published by Marvel Comics. ...
The Black Panther (TChalla) is a fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe who is the first modern Black superhero. ...
For the music band, see The Spooks. ...
A map showing countries commonly considered to be part of the Middle East The Middle East is a region comprising the lands around the southern and eastern parts of the Mediterranean Sea, a territory that extends from the eastern Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf. ...
Yes, (prime) minister: Sir Humphrey Appleby, James Jim Hacker, Bernard Woolley Yes, Minister and its sequel Yes, Prime Minister are British sitcoms about the struggle between (Dr) James Jim Hacker (played by Paul Eddington), the government minister of the (fictional) Department of Administrative Affairs (and later as Prime Minister) and...
Y - Yakastonia: 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.
- Yatakang: archipelagic Australasian "guided socialist democracy" from John Brunner's novel Stand on Zanzibar. Apparently roughly in the region of, and analogous to, Indonesia.
- Yellow Empire: a fascistic Asian power in Blake and Mortimer.
- Yudonia: a country mentioned in the episode "We're Married" from Drake & Josh sitcom
- Yugaria: small Balkan nation from the Mission: Impossible: Operation Surma video game
- Yukon Confederacy: a country in the novel Fitzpatrick's War by Theodore Judson
- Yuktobania: a fictional country that appeared in Ace Combat 5, briefly mentioned in Ace Combat Zero, and will appear in Ace Combat 6
- Yurp: a poor country depicted in I Am Weasel animated TV series (pun on "Europe")
- Yurugli: Eastern European country in the movie Our Lips Are Sealed. Name is a play on of 'you're ugly.' Home of the notorious Hachew (sneezing noise) crime family
Doug is an Emmy Award-winning American Animated Sitcom that originally aired on Nickelodeon, and starred 6th grader Douglas Yancey Funnie. ...
John Brunner John Kilian Houston Brunner (September 24, 1934 â August 26, 1995) was a prolific British author of science fiction novels and stories. ...
Cover art. ...
The Yellow Empire is the primary antagonist in the Secret of the Swordfish trilogy (the first books in the Blake and Mortimer comic book series; it is a totalitarian, fascist-like superpower with worldwide ambitions. ...
Blake and Mortimer, The Yellow M Blake and Mortimer is a comic book/graphic novel series that was created by the Belgian writer and artist Edgar P. Jacobs (1904-1987). ...
Drake & Josh is a teen show American sitcom, shown on the Nickelodeon network, which stars Drake Bell and Josh Peck. ...
Fitzpatricks War is a work of post-apocalyptic fiction by Theodore Judson. ...
Theodore Judson is an American writer. ...
Yuktobania Yuktobania is a fictional country that was created in the PlayStation 2 video game Ace Combat 5. ...
I Am Weasel was an American animated television series, created by David Feiss and broadcast on the Cartoon Network. ...
For other uses, see Pun (disambiguation). ...
For other uses, see Europe (disambiguation). ...
Z - Zagorias Federation: Mediterranean country, featured in Time Crisis 3 video game, which invades Astigos, a small island, a territory of the neighbouring nation of Lukano
- Zakkestan: Ex-part of the USSR in the Dutch [Agent 327] comic series.
- Zamunda: African monarchy from the Eddie Murphy movie Coming to America
- Zangaro: West African country in the movie The Dogs of War
- Zanzibar Land: A country bordering the Middle East and, for a time, the only country to possess nuclear weapons in the Metal Gear series of video games
- Zekistan: a Middle Eastern country between Afghanistan, Pakistan, China and Tajikistan in the Full Spectrum Warrior computer game and Full Spectrum Warrior: Ten Hammers; its history and setting closely resemble Afghanistan's and Iraq's.
- Zembala: African country in the movie The Wild Geese
- Zembla: Northern European country in Vladimir Nabokov's novel Pale Fire
- Zinariya: an African country famous for its copper mines, ruled by a dictator, General Bindiga, in A. N. Wilson's My Name Is Legion
- Zoravia: the country from where the title character in Princess Natasha comes from.
Time Crisis 3 is the third installment of the Time Crisis arcade series. ...
For other uses, see Eddie Murphy (disambiguation). ...
For the reality television series starring Victoria Beckham, see Victoria Beckham: Coming to America. ...
The Dogs of War or Dogs of War may refer to: In film: Dogs of War (film), a 1923 short comedy film with Our Gang and a cameo appearance by Harold Lloyd The Dogs of War (film), a 1981 film based on the novel by Frederick Forsyth [[Star Trek- The...
Zanzibar Land is a fictional, heavily fortified territory in Metal Gear 2: Solid Snake, as well as the setting of the game. ...
For the original video game titled Metal Gear, see Metal Gear. ...
Zekistan is a fictional Central Asian or Middle Eastern nation in the video games Full Spectrum Warrior and Full Spectrum Warrior: Ten Hammers. ...
Full Spectrum Warrior is a video game classified as a real-time tactics action/war game. ...
A computer game is a game composed of a computer-controlled virtual universe that players interact with in order to achieve a defined goal or set of goals. ...
The Wild Geese is a 1978 film about a group of mercenaries in Africa. ...
Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov (Russian: ÐладиÌÐ¼Ð¸Ñ ÐладиÌмиÑÐ¾Ð²Ð¸Ñ ÐабоÌков, pronounced ) (April 22 [O.S. April 10] 1899, Saint Petersburg â July 2, 1977, Montreux) was a Russian-American, Academy Award nominated author. ...
Penguin Classics edition of Pale Fire Pale Fire (1962) is a novel by Vladimir Nabokov, his fourteenth in total and fifth in English. ...
Andrew Norman Wilson (born 1950) is an English writer, known for his biographies, novels and works of popular and cultural history. ...
My Name Is Legion is a novel by A. N. Wilson first published in 2004. ...
Princess Natasha is a flash animation series developed by Larry Schwarz for AOL kids. ...
Unnamed Henri Verneuil (1924-2002), born Ashod Malakian to Armenian parents in Rodosto (Turkey), is a prominent French playwright and filmmaker. ...
I as in Icarus (French: I... comme Icare) is a 1979 French thriller film directed by Henri Verneuil. ...
Season Two of 24 (aka Day 2) was first broadcast from October 28, 2002 to May 20, 2003. ...
References
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