- National personification
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A national personification is an anthropomorphization of a nation or its people; it can appear in both editorial cartoons and propaganda.
Some early personifications in the Western world tended to be national manifestations of the majestic wisdom and war goddess Minerva/Athena, and often took the Latin name of the ancient Roman province. Examples of this type include Britannia, Germania, Hibernia, Helvetia and Polonia. Representations of the citizenry of a nation—rather than of the nation itself—are Deutscher Michel and John Bull.[1]
A national personification is not the same as a national animal, although in some cartoons the national animal rather than the human personification is used to represent a country.
Contents
Personifications by country or territory
Country Personification Albania
Mother Albania Argentina
Effigy of the Republic/Liberty/Progress/Fatherland, Gaucho Armenia
Mother Armenia (Mayr Hayastan; lit. "Mother Hayastan") Australia
Boxing kangaroo Austria
Austria Brazil
Efígie da República, the Candango (only in Brasília), the Bandeirante (only in São Paulo state) Cambodia
Preah Thaong and Neang Neak Canada
Mountie, Johnny Canuck, Le Vieux de '37 (French Canada), Adam Dollard des Ormeaux (used during the two World Wars as a military example), Miss Canada, Mother Canada (at the Vimy Memorial) Czech Republic
Švejk (literary character), Český Vašek (obsolete, 19th Century), Hloupý Honza, Praotec Čech (Forefather Czech), Čechie, Double-tailed Czech lion. Chile
El Roto, El Huaso, La Carmela, Doña Juanita (an average Chilean woman from the countryside) China
Chinese dragon Denmark
Holger Danske Dominican Republic
Anacaona[citation needed] Egypt
Mother of the World (Om el-Donia) England
John Bull Europe
Europa or Europa regina Finland
Finnish Maiden (Suomi-neito) France
Marianne , Gallic rooster Germany
Germany: Germania, Arminius (Hermann der Cherusker), Deutscher Michel Bavaria: Bavaria, Berlin: Berolina, Franconia: Franconia, Hamburg: Hammonia, Prussia: Borussia, Palatinate: Palatia, Saxony: Saxonia
Greece
Athena, "Greece" of Delacroix Honduras
Juan Pueblo Hungary
Hungária/ Hunnia Iceland
The Lady of the Mountains (Fjallkonan) Ireland
Ériu, Kathleen Ni Houlihan, Hibernia, Granuaile India
Bharat Mata ("Mother India") Indonesia
Ibu Pertiwi Israel
Srulik, King David Italy
Italia Turrita Japan
Amaterasu Omikami, Samurai Macedonia
Mother Macedonia,[2] Macedonian lion (national symbol) Malta
Melita Mexico
Adelita Netherlands
Hans Brinker (outside the Netherlands), De Leeuw van Oranje, de Nederlandse Maagd` ("Netherlands Maiden"), (Zeeland: Zeeuws Meisje) New Zealand
Kiwi, Zealandia, Southern man (for the South Island) Norway
Ola Nordmann, Kari Nordmann, hist. Nór Pakistan
Pak Watan is a national personification and a term of endearment for Pakistan. Palestinian territories
Handala Peru
The chalán, La Madre Patria Philippines
Juan dela Cruz, Maria Clara Poland
Polonia Portugal
Zé Povinho, Eu nacional (National Self), Lusitania, República, Rooster of Barcelos Romania
România Revoluționară, Constantin Daniel Rosenthal Russia
Mother Russia/Mother Motherland, Russian Bear Scotland
Jock Tamson Serbia
Wolf (national personification based on Serbian tradition), Prince Marko (mythical hero, stereotype of the average Serb mentality), Kosovo Maiden, Typical Serb (bearded, stubborn man wearing a fur hat) Slovenia
Kranjski Janez ("John from Carniola", an average man from Slovenia's central region), Peter Klepec Spain
Hispania, Juan Español, Osborne Bull/Toro Osborne Sweden
Mother Svea Switzerland
Helvetia Turkey
Anatolia United Kingdom
Britannia, John Bull, Lion United States
Uncle Sam (government personification), Lady Liberty, Columbia, Brother Jonathan (obsolete), Johnny Rebel (The South, obsolete), Billy Yank (The North, obsolete) Ukraine
Cossack Mamay USSR
Mother Motherland Venezuela
Liberty's White Horse Wales
Dame Wales, Deffroad Cymru, the Awakening of Wales Gallery
Marianne is kept isolated from John Bull, Russian Bear and all the other European powers as Bismarck busily courts them.John Bull, a national personification of the United Kingdom holds the head of Napoleon I of France in an 1803 caricature by James Gillray.Eugène Delacroix, Greece Expiring on the Ruins of Missolonghi (1827)Theodoros Vryzakis' depiction of Hellas as a woman surrounded by rebels of the Greek War of IndependenceItalia and Germania by Friedrich Overbeck, symbolising the friendship between Germany and ItalyNorway, Denmark and Sweden joining hands in a 19th Century posterLech, Czech, Rus and the White EagleWorld War I recruiting poster featuring John Bull.Brazilian Constitutionalist Revolution recruiting poster, showing a Bandeirante with the dictator of Brazil, Getúlio Vargas, in his hand.Allegory drawing depicting the friendship between the Argentine Republic and the newly-formed Brazilian Republic.Zé Povinho, caricature of a Portuguese working class man of the 19th centuryJames Gillray's cartoon on the 1803 Peace of Amiens, features a fat and non-marital Britannia kissing "Citizen François", a personifiaction of Revolutionary France never used by the French themselvesRomania Breaking off Her Chains on the Field of Liberty, also by C. D. RosenthalA later depiction of Romania as a woman in a World War I French caricatureUncle Sam in a U.S. Army recruitment poster used in both World War I and World War IIThe figures in this late 18th century painting by Shiba Kōkan represent Japan, China, and the West.Columbia, personification of the United States ( World War I patriotic poster)Columbia, America personified as a young woman holding up a Phrygian cap on a clipper ship card of the Young America MovementMother Canada statue in the World War I Vimy MemorialMother Motherland, personification of the Soviet Union, at a World War II war memorial in Volgograd (the former Stalingrad)Lady of the mountain in Iceland.Peru (left), Argentina (centre) and Chile (right), personified at the Mausoleum of General San Martín, Buenos Aires.Free Bulgaria; lithography by Georgi Danchov17th century map by Frederik de Wit showing mythological Europa as the continent's personificationEuropa regina in Sebastian Münster's "Cosmographia"."Mrs. Britannia" and her daughter "Miss Canada" discussing "Cousin Jonathan"(the US) in a 1886 political cartoonSee also
- Hetalia: Axis Powers
- Afghanis-tan
- National emblem for other metaphors for nations
- Italia Turrita
- Emblem of Italy
- Mural crown
- The Stella d’Italia
References
Lionel Gossman. “Making of a Romantic Icon: The Religious Context of Friedrich Overbeck’s ‘Italia und Germania.’” American Philosophical Society, 2007. ISBN 0871699753. [1]
External links
National personifications - Argentina
- Effigies of Argentina
- Armenia
- Mother Armenia
- Brazil
- Efígie da República
- Cambodia
- Preah Thong and Neang Neak
- Canada
- Johnny Canuck
- Finland
- Finnish Maiden (Suomi-neito)
- France
- Marianne
- Georgia
- Kartlis Deda
- Germany
- Deutscher Michel
- Germania
- Greece
- Athena
- "Greece" of Delacroix
- Iceland
- Lady of the Mountain
- India
- Bharat Mata
- Indonesia
- Ibu Pertiwi
- Ireland
- Ériu
- Hibernia
- Kathleen Ni Houlihan
- Israel
- Srulik
- Italy
- Italia Turrita
- Japan
- Amaterasu
- Malaysia
- Ibu Pertiwi
- Netherlands
- Netherlands Maiden
- New Zealand
- Zealandia
- Norway
- Ola Nordmann
- Pakistan
- Pak Watan
- Philippines
- Juan dela Cruz
- Maria Clara
- Poland
- Polonia
- Portugal
- Efígie da República
- Zé Povinho
- Russia
- Mother Russia
- Spain
- Hispania
- Sweden
- Mother Svea
- Switzerland
- Helvetia
- Ukraine
- Cossack Mamay
- United Kingdom
- Britannia
- John Bull
- Dame Wales
National symbols Articles Lists Categories:- National personifications
- Art genres
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