Poland

Poland (ポーランド,Porando) is a character in the series Axis Powers Hetalia/Hetalia: Axis Powers. In 2008, Himaruya gave out human names to some of the characters and he recieved the name, Feliks Łukasiewicz (フェリクス・ウカシェヴィチ, Ferikusu Ukashevichi).

Appearance


He has light, shoulder-length blond hair and green eyes. He wears a green uniform with matching cap, and tan boots. Sometimes he is drawn with a green capelet worn over his jacket, though in one preliminary design of Poland, he wore a full-length cape instead.

An earlier (but ultimately unused) alternate color scheme for Poland exists, where his uniform and eyes are colored blue instead of green.

Personality And Interests
He was once a super nation that controlled Middle and Eastern Europe with his partner Lithuania in the Middle Ages, until Russia split them apart and he was annexed. Despite this, he kept rising back (described "like a phoenix"), noting that Poland is a very strong country.

It is troublesome for others to get to know him, as he acts shy and has anxiety towards strangers. However, if he's used to someone, he will never let go and will act troublesome. He is a cheerful, somewhat selfish man and rather forceful with his opinions. Because he's short-sighted and impulsive, other nations can easily take advantage of him.

He crossdresses as a hobby, and has a Nagoya schoolgirl dialect, often translated as a "valley girl" accent. However, his crossdressing was toned down in later strips, and one instance (in the sequel to Christmas Rampage 2007) was removed from the site.

Lithuania
Main Article: Lithuania

Poland' partner, who he refers to as Liet. The two are close, though Lithuania feels like he's often dragged about by him. Poland was initially shown to be rather self-centered and seeming to take Lithuania's problems lightly, though in later strips, it appears their friendship isn't as one-sided as it previously was.

A "missing" page of Chapter 5 revealed that Poland possibly did actually care for Lithuania underneath it all, as he stated that he wouldn't care if Lithuania hated him because he would still like him anyway. But the validity of that statement remains ambiguous, due to the dream sequence-nature of the scenario (and it may have been Lithuania's own interpretation of Poland's nature).

In the last strip of While You Were Gone, his thoughts are "There's a side of Lithuania I don't know" after seeing Lithuania's battered and bruised back.

Russia
Main Article: Russia

The two have argued with each other at least since the early 1600s, when Poland succeeded in capturing Moscow. Russia's revenge for this was taking part, together with Prussia and Austria, in the partitions of Poland. In 1939, Russia decided to partition Poland again, this time in conjunction with Germany. Their relationship was further soured by the years of post-war Soviet domination.

It should be noted that Poland is not afraid of Russia; Poland actively defends Lithuania from him, despite the inherent threat.

Prussia
Main Article: Prussia

When Prussia was banished from Hungary, he found a new home at Poland's house. Their relations became worse and the two started to argue with each other. At the Battle of Tannenberg, Poland, together with Lithuania, succeeded in beating Prussia, but due to the economic problems caused by the preparations for this war, wasn't able to fully exploit the victory. Much later, Prussia, now an independent kingdom, played a major role in the partitions of Poland.

Today, they still seem to dislike and annoy each other, a reference to the fact that some territory that was historically Prussian (Silesia) is now part of Poland.

North Italy
Main Article: Italy

Italy and Poland are shown to be good friends in a few of the "Extra Stories" and Comic Diary strips, and have known each other since they were small children. It was Poland who gave Italy the idea to make an ejectable seat in Germany's Kubelwagon, as he had previously designed an airplane with one (which backfired on him).

Originally, it was said that the two first met each other in their teens while Feliks had been partitioned and Italy was still not yet independent. However, a Comic Diary strip depicted the two playing together as small children.

In the Anime
Poland appeared briefly in Episode 01, when he intervened in the confrontation between Russia and Lithuania, and threatened to make the former's capital Warsaw. He formally appears in Episode 47, where England and France talk to him about Germany.

Poland's eyes are slightly altered to have more shine to them in his anime design, while in the manga they are flatly-colored. His hair is also a more yellow shade of blond.

Name
The exact inspiration behind his human name is unknown, but it is believed that Hidekaz Himaruya may have had either Jan Łukasiewicz (a philosopher) or Ignacy Łukasiewicz (a scientist) in mind. The surname is pronounced 'Wook-a-shye-veech' in Polish. The name Feliks is spelled Feliks because the letter "x" does not exist in the Polish language. It is not a common name in Poland today but was a popular name among the Polish elite in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

Trivia

 * According to notes by Hidekaz Himaruya, Poland was originally designed as being female but was changed to a male character sometime in production, though the feminine sense of attire was kept to give him the crossdresser angle.
 * Though he is part of the extended recurring cast in the original webcomic, Poland appears only once in the published Hetalia: Axis Powers: Volume 1, in the contemporary strip Meeting Of The World.
 * Poland's birthday, July 22nd, is often a point of controversy with fans due to the fact that it references the foundation date of a "free Poland" under Communist rule. November 11th is seen as more acceptable, due to it being the date that Poland was reestablished as a country after WWI. It remains to be seen whether or not Himaruya will retcon the birthdate (as he did with other characters). In the Polish translation of the manga published by Studio JG, the latter birthdate was used to avoid such controversy.
 * In a somewhat noticeable continuity error, Poland and Lithuania are shown in their teens during the Battle Of Grunwald in What Happened After Tannenburg, though another strip written at the same time (that took place in the Chibitalia timeframe) showed them to still be small children long after that would have taken place.