Ruritanian
Romance
A Ruritanian Romance is a story set in a imaginary Middle
European or East European country, such as the Ruritania that
gave the genre its name, in a time contemporary to the author.
The popularity of the Graustark novels led to this genre
also being called Graustarkian Romances.
Such stories are typically swashbuckling tales of high romance,
featuring adventure, romance, and intrigue, centered on the
upper classes. The themes of honor, loyalty, and love predominate,
and the books frequently feature the restoration of kings
to the throne.
Although recognizable Ruritanian Romances (such as Robert
Louis Stevenson's Prince Otto) were written prior to Anthony
Hope's The Prisoner of Zenda, it set the type with its adventure
restoring the rightful king to the throne and produced a period
of popular fiction: George Barr McCutcheon's Graustark novels,
Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Lost Prince, Andre Norton's
The Prince Commands.
The genre was widely spoofed and parodied, as well. George
Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man parodied many elements. Dorothy
Sayers's Have His Carcase featured as the murder victim a
man deceived by his murderers because of his foolish belief
in his royal ancestry, feed by endless reading of Ruritanian
Romances.
The popularity of the genre declined after the first part
of the twentieth century. Beside the usual effect of fashion,
the royalist elements of Ruritanian element became less plausible
as many European kings receded from even memory to become
parts of history, and restorations grew less likely.
Many elements of the genre have been transplanted into fantasy
worlds, particularly those of fantasy of manners and alternate
history. These stories are sometimes still referred to as
Graustarkian or Ruritanian .
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