Ix (Oz)

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Ix
The Oz series location
Oz-and-surrounding-countrie.jpg
Location of Ix (top center)
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Flag of Ix
First appearance Queen Zixi of Ix
Created by L. Frank Baum
Genre Juvenile fantasy
Information
TypeFairy country
RulerQueen Zixi
Ethnic group(s)Ixeys, Boxers
Notable locationsBoxwood
Notable charactersKing Chillywalla of Boxwood
Other name(s)Kingdom of Ix

Ix is a fictional region in The Oz series of novels created by L. Frank Baum. It neighbors the Land of Oz and Noland, and is ruled by the centuries-old witch-queen Zixi. [1]

Contents

History

Ix is one of the settings featured in the 1905 novel Queen Zixi of Ix and its 1914 film adaptation, The Magic Cloak of Oz . It is later visited in The Silver Princess in Oz where it is home to King Chillywalla of Boxwood and his subjects, the Boxers, who box up everything, including their own bodies down to individual features.

Points of interest

Known inhabitants

Related Research Articles

L. Frank Baum Childrens writer

Lyman Frank Baum was an American author best known for his children's books, particularly The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and its sequels. He wrote 14 novels in the Oz series, plus 41 other novels, 83 short stories, over 200 poems, and at least 42 scripts. He made numerous attempts to bring his works to the stage and screen; the 1939 adaptation of the first Oz book became a landmark of 20th-century cinema.

IX may refer to:

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<i>Queen Zixi of Ix</i>

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Nonestica

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<i>The Magic Cloak of Oz</i>

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<i>John Dough and the Cherub</i>

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Noland (Oz)

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<i>L. Frank Baums Juvenile Speaker</i> book by L. Frank Baum

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<i>Animal Fairy Tales</i>

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The plays of L. Frank Baum are an important aspect of Baum's writing career about which some of the least is known. While even most brief biographies, long before the Internet, have noted Baum's work as a playwright, these works have been rarely performed beyond his lifetime, and almost none have been published aside from two scenarios and a first act of three unfinished works in The Musical Fantasies of L. Frank Baum, compiled with an introduction by Alla T. Ford. Aside from his youthful success with The Maid of Arran, his blockbuster eight-year run with The Wizard of Oz, his failure with The Woggle-Bug, and The Tik-Tok Man of Oz as source material for his novel, Tik-Tok of Oz, very little is known about his dramatic output, and mostly from the publications of Michael Patrick Hearn, Susan Ferrara, and Katharine M. Rogers. Hearn identifies 41 different titles in the bibliography of the 2000 edition of The Annotated Wizard of Oz, plus one play without a title, although some of these titles clearly refer to drafts of the same play, such as the early titles of The Tik-Tok Man of Oz.

This is a complete bibliography for American children's writer L. Frank Baum.

References

  1. Manguel, Alberto; Guadalupi, Gianni (1987). The Dictionary of Imaginary Places. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. p. 186. ISBN   0-15-626054-9.