Quadling Country

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The Quadling Country is the southern division of L. Frank Baum's Land of Oz. It is distinguished by the color red, worn by most of the local inhabitants as well as the color of their surroundings. Like the Munchkin Country, the outer regions of the Quadling Country are rich, pleasant and beautiful, inhabited by kind and friendly people, while the areas closer to the Emerald City (i.e. most of the regions between the mountains of the Hammer-Heads and the Forest of the Fighting Trees) are forbidding and dangerous (see "from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz).

Like all the countries of Oz, the Quadling Country contains various unusual sights and places. Among them are:

from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz:

  • the palace of Glinda the sorceress, also known in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and other Oz books as the witch of the South
  • the mountains in which dwell the belligerent and armless Hammer-Heads
  • forest whose animals hail the Cowardly Lion as their king
  • the Dainty China Country
  • the forest of the Fighting Trees, whose Northern row of trees have the power to use their branches to fling away anyone who attempts to enter the forest

from The Emerald City of Oz:

  • Miss Cuttenclip, who cuts paper dolls from live paper
  • Fuddlecumjig, where the inhabitants are made from puzzle pieces and have to be reassembled often
  • Utensia, a kingdom inhabited by animated eating and cooking implements
  • Bunbury, a land where all the inhabitants are animated food
  • Bunnybury, where intelligent rabbits walk on their hind legs and wear clothes
  • Rigmarole Town and Flutterbudget Center, where people either explain things in a roundabout way or worry over nothing

from The Patchwork Girl of Oz:

  • Mister Yoop, a captive "untamed giant"
  • the Hoppers, one-legged cave dwellers who travel by hopping
  • the Horners, pun-loving radium miners with horns who share the caves with the Hoppers and breed prodigiously

from The Scarecrow of Oz:

  • Jinxland, a monarchy separated from the rest of the Quadling Country by a gorge

from The Lost King of Oz:


In Gregory Maguire's revisionist Oz novels Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West and Son of a Witch, Quadling Country is portrayed as a largely undeveloped, swampy region. The ruddy-faced Quadlings are portrayed as artistic and sexually free.

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