The Land of Oz . Oz is roughly rectangular in shape and divided along the diagonals into four countries:
Munchkin Country (but commonly referred to as 'Munchkinland' in adaptations) in the East,
Winkie Country in the West,
Gillikin Country in the North, and
Quadling Country in the South. In the center of Oz, where the diagonals cross, is the fabled
Emerald City, capital of the land of Oz and seat to the monarch of Oz,
Princess Ozma. The regions have a color scheme: blue for Munchkins, yellow for Winkies, red for Quadlings, green for the Emerald City, and (in works after the first) purple for the Gillikins, which region was also not named in the first book. This emphasis on color is in contrast with Kansas; Baum, describing it, used "gray" nine times in four paragraphs. In
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, this is merely the
favorite color of each quadrant, used for clothing and other man-made objects, and having some influence on their choice of crops, but the basic colors of the world are natural colors. Baum, indeed, never used the color scheme consistently; in many books, he alluded to the colors to orient the characters and readers to their location and then did not refer to it again. His most common technique was to depict the man-made articles and flowers as the color of the country, leaving leaves, grass, and fruit their natural colors. Most of these regions are settled with prosperous and contented people. However, this naturally is lacking in scope for plot. Numerous pockets throughout the Land of Oz are cut off from the main culture, for geographic or cultural reasons. Many have never heard of Ozma, making it impossible for them to acknowledge her as their rightful queen. These regions are concentrated around the edges of the country and constitute the main settings for books that are set entirely within Oz.
The Lost Princess of Oz, for instance, is set entirely in rough country in Winkie Country, between two settled areas. In
Glinda of Oz, Ozma speaks of her duty to discover all these stray corners of Oz. In
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, a
yellow brick road leads from the lands of the Munchkins to the Emerald City. Other such roads featured in other works: one from Gillikin Country in
The Marvelous Land of Oz and a second one from Munchkin Land in
The Patchwork Girl of Oz.
Gillikin Country Gillikin Country is the northern part of the Land of Oz. It is the home of the Gillikins. It is distinguished by the color
purple worn by most of the local inhabitants as well as the color of their surroundings.
Martin Gardner suggests the name Gillikin may be named after the purple blossoms of the
gillyflower. Jerry Griswold summarized Gillikin Country as "a place of mountains and lakes". In his observation of parallels between the land of Oz and the United States of America, he saw this northern part as similar to
Michigan, which was familiar to L. Frank Baum from vacations. In
Gregory Maguire's
revisionist Oz novels
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West and
Son of a Witch, the Gillikin Country is simply called 'Gillikin'. It is portrayed as more prosperous and industrially developed than other regions of Oz, and it is the home of Shiz University. Much of both of
Edward Einhorn's novels,
Paradox in Oz and
The Living House of Oz, are set in Gillikin Country. They feature the kingdom of Tonsoria, homes to Princesses Ayala and Talia, and in Absurd City, home of the Parrot-Ox.
Quadling Country Quadling Country is the southern part of the Land of Oz. It is the home of the Quadlings and ruled by
Glinda.
Michael Patrick Hearn suggests the name Quadling means "a small inhabitant of the fourth country". In Gregory Maguire's novel, Quadling country is described as a marshland that is left almost uninhabited after the conquest of the wizard.
Munchkin Country Munchkin Country is the eastern part of the Land of Oz. It is the home of the
Munchkins. In the story, the novel's protagonist
Dorothy Gale, attends a celebration upon her arrival to Oz at the mansion of
Boq, who is the friendliest and wealthiest Munchkin man. Michael Patrick Hearn suggests the name Munchkin may have been inspired by the fabulous
Baron Munchausen. He also points out that the 1961 Russian edition derives the name from the verb "to munch".
Evan Schwartz suggests a reference to the
Münchner Kindl.
Deadly Desert Oz is completely surrounded on all four sides by a desert which insulates the citizens of the Land of Oz from discovery and invasion. Although the desert is mundane in the first two books, in the third book,
Ozma of Oz (1907), it is described as having life-destroying sands and noxious fumes, features that remains constant for the rest of the series. In the fifth book,
The Road to Oz (1909), a sign is posted on the edge of the desert to warn travelers: ALL PERSONS ARE WARNED NOT TO VENTURE UPON THIS DESERTFor the Deadly Sands Will Turn Any Living Flesh to Dust in an Instant.Beyond This Barrier is theLAND OF OZBut no one can Reach that Beautiful Country because of these Destroying Sands. The desert is used as a literary device to explain why Oz is essentially cut off from the rest of the world and the surrounding countries of
Nonestica. No one in the Oz series is ever seen to die in the desert, but it has nonetheless been breached numerous times by children from the
primary world, by the
Wizard of Oz himself, and by more sinister characters such as the
Nome King, who attempted to conquer Oz. After such an attempt in
The Emerald City of Oz (1910),
Glinda creates a barrier of invisibility around the Land of Oz to further protect it. This was an effort on Baum's part to end the series, but the insistence of readers meant the continuation of the series and, therefore, the discovery of many ways for people to pass through this barrier as well as over the sands. The
Wizard of Oz originally arrived in Oz by a circus balloon (which he implies functioned by a gas lighter than air, rather than hot air), and years later leaves Oz in a hot-air balloon of his own design. • In
The Marvelous Land of Oz, Tip and his companions fly over it using
The Gump who was granted flight with its palm leaf parts. The witch
Mombi tries to cross the desert in the form of a
griffin while
Glinda chases her over the sands. • In
Ozma of Oz,
Princess Ozma crosses the desert with her whole court by use of an infinitely unrolling carpet. • In
The Road to Oz, Dorothy Gale,
Shaggy Man,
Polychrome and
Button-Bright cross the desert into Oz by use of a
sand ship. • In
The Emerald City of Oz, the
Nome King and his allies the Whimsies, the Growleywogs, and the Phanfasms dug a tunnel underneath the desert. • In
The Scarecrow of Oz, Trot, Cap'n Bill, and Button-Bright flew over the desert carried by birds and led by Flipper the Ork. • In
The Magic of Oz, Kiki Aru transformed himself into a bird and flew over the Deadly Desert from the Land of Oz, exploring the various countries of Nonestica. • In
Kabumpo in Oz, a giant Ruggedo hopped right over the Deadly Desert and ran back to his mountain in the Land of Ev after Princess Ozma's palace got stuck in his hair spikes. In the same book, Kabumpo, Peg Amy, Pompadore, and Wag crossed over the Deadly Desert on a runaway country. • In
The Purple Prince of Oz, Polychrome allowed Prince Randy, Kabumpo, and Jinnicky the Red Jinn to ride her rainbow across the Deadly Desert. • In
Handy Mandy in Oz, a geyser beneath Mt. Mern in an unidentified area erupted underneath Handy Mandy sending her and the large boulder she was on over the Deadly Desert where she landed in Munchkin Country. • In
The Silver Princess in Oz, Kabumpo and King Randy were blown across the Deadly Desert by a powerful storm. • In the 1985 film
Return to Oz, Dorothy Gale crosses the edge of the Desert by stepping upon stones. Later, the pack of Wheelers working for
Mombi fail to get across the Deadly Desert in pursuit of Dorothy and the Gump, who cross the desert to reach the Nome King's mountain. Four of the Wheelers fall into the desert and are subsequently turned into sand and killed. The remaining Wheelers later return with Princess Mombi and cross the desert through the tunnel that was dug underneath the desert to reach the Nome King's mountain. • In
Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz, the Deadly Desert contains a monster made of sand.
West and East The first known map of Oz was a glass slide used in Baum's
Fairylogue and Radio-Play traveling show, showing the blue land of the Munchkins in the east and the yellow land of the Winkies in the west. These directions are confirmed by the text of all of Baum's Oz books, especially the first, in which the
Wicked Witch of the East rules over the Munchkins, and the
Wicked Witch of the West rules over the Winkies. Like traditional western maps, the
Fairylogue and Radio-Play map showed the west on the left and the east on the right. However, the first map of Oz to appear in an Oz book had those directions reversed and the
compass rose adjusted accordingly. Most notably, this confused Ruth Plumly Thompson, who frequently reversed directions in her own Oz books as a result. Another speculation stems from the original conception of Oz, which at first appeared to be situated in an American desert. If Baum thought of the country of the Munchkins as the nearest region to him, it would have been in the east while he lived in Chicago but, when he moved to California, it would have been in the west. Modern maps of Oz are almost universally drawn with Winkie country on the right (west) and Munchkin Country on the left (east), with an inverted compass rose. Many Oz fans believe this is the correct orientation, perhaps as a result of Glinda's spell, which has the effect of confusing most standard compasses; perhaps resembling its similarity to the world Alice found
through the looking glass in which everything was a mirror image, or perhaps just reflecting the alien nature of Oz. In
Robert A. Heinlein's 1980 book
The Number of the Beast, he posits that Oz is on a
retrograde planet, meaning that it spins in the opposite direction of Earth so that the sun seems to rise on one's left as one faces north.
March Laumer's
The Magic Mirror of Oz attributes the changes to a character named Till Orangespiegel attempting to turn the Land of Oz orange.
Location '' in 1914. Oz, like all of Baum's fantasy countries, was presented as existing as part of the real world, albeit protected from civilization by natural barriers. Indeed, in the first books, nothing indicated that it was not hidden in the deserts of the United States. The first of these is
Ev, introduced in
Ozma of Oz. In
Tik-Tok of Oz (1914), Baum included maps in the endpapers which definitively situated Oz on a continent with its neighboring countries. Oz is the largest country on the continent unofficially known by names proposed by Robert R. Pattrick: Nonestica, for the whole of the countries surrounding Oz; and "Ozeria," for the whole continent. The land also includes the countries of Ev, Ix, and Mo, which has also been known as Phunniland, among others. Nonestica is, according to the map, adjacent to the
Nonestic Ocean. and John Burton Hatcher. Later maps, such as that drawn by
John Drury Clark and John Burton Hatcher, or the map by James E. Haff and
Dick Martin, show Oz on a small continent surrounded by an ocean full of islands, and they attempt to reconcile contradictions in the books, such as the east–west orientation of locations. A fair amount of evidence in the books points to this continent as being envisioned as somewhere in the southern
Pacific Ocean. At the opening of
Ozma of Oz, Dorothy Gale is sailing to
Australia with her
Uncle Henry when she is washed overboard (in a chicken coop, with
Billina the yellow hen), and lands on the shore of Ev—a rare instance in which an outsider reaches the Oz landmass through non-magical (or
apparently non-magical) means. Palm trees grow outside the Royal Palace in the Emerald City, and horses are not native to Oz, both points of consistency with a South-Pacific location; illustrations and descriptions of round-shaped and domed Ozite houses suggest a non-Western architecture. Conversely, Oz has technological, architectural, and urban elements typical of Europe and North America around the turn of the twentieth century; but this may involve cultural input from unusual external sources (see History below). An argument against the South Pacific is that the seasons in Oz are shown as the same seasons in the United States at the same time. In addition, in
The Wishing Horse of Oz,
Pigasus follows the
North Star when he flies to Thunder Mountain, which could only be done in the Northern Hemisphere. Ruth Plumly Thompson asserts in her first Oz book,
The Royal Book of Oz, that the language of Oz is English, which also suggests European or American influence.
Inspiration Literary scholar Michael Riley posited that Baum's creation of the Emerald City may have been inspired by the White City of the
World Columbian Exposition, which he visited frequently. Riley drew parallels between the White City's construction, which took less than a year, with the quick construction of the Emerald City in the first book. Schematically, Oz is much like the United States, with the Emerald City taking the place of
Chicago: to the East, mixed forest and farmland; to the West, treeless plains and fields of
wheat; to the South, warmth and lush growth, and red earth. Under this interpretation, the diagonal design of the land of Oz in the engravings for the Oz books is meant to symbolize William Jennings Bryan's
Cross of Gold. ==Inhabitants==