Borduria

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Borduriai Köztársaság
Republic of Borduria

Flag of Borduria

National Insignia
Official language Bordurian
Capital Szohôd
Area 550,135 km² (c. 1939)[citation needed]
Population 700,000 (1939)
Government Totalitarian dictatorship
Head of State and Head of Government Marshal Plekszy-Gladz
Creation 1132
Currency Forint
National animal Eagle
[edit]

Borduria is a fictional country in The Adventures of Tintin. It is located in the Balkans, probably in what is currently the eastern half of Slovenia or Eastern Croatia and is bordered by Syldavia, Hungary and Yugoslavia. It is first a parody of a fascist state with close connections with Nazi Germany according to their military equipment and later of a stereotypical Eastern bloc country.

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[edit] History and location

Not much is known about Borduria, since it has been a rather closed country. Borduria seems to have a preference for military governments or governments with a facade of democracy but with military powers pulling all the strings behind the scenes. Borduria’s capital is Szohôd (the diacritic is properly in the shape of the emblematic moustache). In 1195, Borduria conquered their neighbour Syldavia, and ruled it to 1275, when baron Almazout drove the Bordurians away after 6 months, and became king Ottokar I of Syldavia. In 1939, they unsuccessfully staged a coup d'état against Syldavia, trying to remove the king and invade the country, hich it is historically linked to, with support from Syldavian Borduria supporters. This was analogous to, and possibly an indictment of, the Nazi Germany take-over of Austria. This analogy is further reinforced by Hergé's depiction of Bordurian fighter planes, which closely resemble the Messerschmitt Bf 109, or were actual German Bf-109s sold to the Bordurian Air Force.

[edit] Religion

Like Syldavia, Borduria has or has had Islam as one of its religions: a minaret is visible behind the modernist buildings surrounding the statue of Kurvi-Tasch. The culture is similar to the Yugoslavian and the Serbian one, with later on typical communist building style.

[edit] The Bordurian language

Main article: bordurian

The country's language, Bordurian, is poorly known; however, it uses the Latin alphabet and is possibly meant to be related to Hungarian. Strangely enough, there is a city called Szeged in Hungary which could easily be altered to Szohôd in a related language (much as the Russian "Mogilev" has become "Mahilyow" in Belarusian).

[edit] Local/Internal affairs

[edit] Unnamed aggressive military government

Messerschmitt Bf-109D fighter aircraft of the Bordurian Air Force, 1939.
Enlarge
Messerschmitt Bf-109D fighter aircraft of the Bordurian Air Force, 1939.

In 1939, its political system was reminiscent of fascist or national socialist government. It unsuccessfully attempted to take over its neighbor Syldavia, which it is historically linked to. This was analogous to, and possibly an indictment of, the Nazi Germany take-over of Austria. This analogy is further reinforced by Hergé's depiction of Bordurian fighter planes, which closely resemble the Messerschmitt Bf 109... or were actual German Bf-109s sold to the Bordurian Air Force. In actuality there were several minor fascist dictatorships during World War II, such as the Croatian Ustashe regime, Hungary under Miklós Horthy and Romania under Ion Antonescu... all of which fell to the Communists at the end of the war.

[edit] Military

Borduria seems to be relatively well equipped in terms of its military. It is heavily German or Italian influenced, with German-produced Messerschmitt Bf 109 as their main aircraft.

However, in one Tintin comic (The Calculus Affair), they made attempts to stop the stolen tank that Tintin and his companions were using. However, all their attempts fail because of the terrible quality of their weaponry and military construction.

[edit] Taschist Borduria

Image:Tin-bor.png
Flag of Borduria

By 1956, Borduria was reminiscent of a stereotypical Eastern Bloc country complete with its own secret police (ZEP), military dictator, Kurvi-Tasch, whose name is a combination of his moustache and his ideology, and the "taschist" ideology which in all indications seems to be identical to Stalinism with a more militaristic edge. The statue of Kurvi-Tasch in a Nazi-like salute in front of a government building is an overt comparison between him and Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin. The ubiquity of his moustache, "the whiskers of Kurvi-Tasch", seems to be similar to the swastika or hammer and sickle in its (over) use (it is often seen used as a swear word and a diacritical mark, and the bumpers of the local cars are shaped to resemble it).

The Taschist flag of Borduria can be seen in the background - the moustache emblem is also reflected in the car design
The Taschist flag of Borduria can be seen in the background - the moustache emblem is also reflected in the car design

Other traces of the Kurvi-Taschist moustache can be found on the name of the Hotel were Tintin was staying in Szohod, where it is called Hotel Zsnorr which, given Herge's Belgian bilingualism, means moustache in Dutch ('snor').

[edit] Foreign Affairs

In 1976, in the story Tintin and the Picaros, the Bordurian government supported General Tapioca, the current ruler of San Theodoros, a fictional banana republic in South America, and even sent him military advisors. Officially, General Tapioca and San Theodoros are subscribers to the "taschist" ideology, proof of this can be seen on page 22 of Tintin and the Picaros: when Colonel Sponz is talking with Colonel Alvarez in the former's San Theodorian office the latter hits a bust of Kurvi-Tasch with a cork. Another common point between both countries is their tradition of military leadership of the state and government and in that respect the many colonels that they hire. Military and government equipment in San Theodoros often incorporates the Taschist moustache logo in detail decoration, indicating Bordurian origin.

[edit] Sources

Tintin albums featuring Borduria:

[edit] See also