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{{notability|date=May 2024}}

{{Only primary sources|date=May 2024}}
{{Rcat shell|
{{Short description|Fictional flying island}}
{{R from fictional location}}
{{other uses}}
{{Use British English|date=September 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2013}}
{{Infobox fictional location
| name = Laputa
| image = Laputa map.gif
| imagesize = 300px
| caption = Map of Laputa and Balnibarbi (original map, Pt III, ''Gulliver's Travels'')
| source = ]
| creator = ]
| genre = Satire
| type = ]
| locations =
| people = King
}} }}
])]]

'''Laputa''' {{IPAc-en|l|ə|ˈ|p|uː|t|ə|}} is a ] described in the 1726 book '']'' by ]. It is about {{convert|4+1/2|mi|km|0|abbr=off}} in diameter, with an ]ine base, which its inhabitants can manoeuvre in any direction using ]. The island is the home of the king of ] and his court, and is used by the king to enforce his rule over the lands below.

==Location==
Laputa was located above the realm of ], which was ruled by its king from the flying island. Gulliver states the island flew by the “magnetic virtue” of certain minerals in the grounds of Balnibarbi which did not extend to more than {{convert|4|mi|km|round=0.5|abbr=off}} above, and {{convert|6|league|km|spell=in|abbr=off}} beyond the extent of the kingdom,{{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 157}} showing the limit of its range. The position of the island, and the realm below, is some five days' journey south-south-east of Gulliver's last known position, 46° N, 183° E{{Efn | That is, 177° W.}}{{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 143}} (i.e. east of ], south of the ]){{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 319}} down a chain of small rocky islands.{{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 143}}

==Description==
The island of Laputa is described as being exactly circular and about {{convert |4+1/2 | mi | km|0|abbr=off}} in diameter, giving an area of roughly {{convert|10000|acre|ha|abbr=off}}.{{Efn |The text actually says "...its Diameter 7837 Yards or about four Miles and a Half, and consequently contains Ten Thousand Acres" (''Gulliver;'s Travels'' Pt III, Ch III): However, neither of these diameters gives an area of exactly 10,000 acres. It is unclear why Swift chose such exact values for diameter and area, while having them misalign in this way.}} The island was {{convert|300|yard|m|abbr=off}} thick, and comprised a bottom plate of ] {{convert|200|yd|m|abbr=off}} thick, above which lay "the several minerals in their usual order", topped with "a coat of rich mould {{convert|10|or|12|ft|m|1|abbr=on|disp=sqbr}} deep". {{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 154}}

In shape the upper surface sloped down from circumference to centre, causing all rain to form rivulets into the centre where four large basins {{convert|1/2|mi|m|sigfig=1|abbr=off}} in circuit lie {{convert|200|yd|m|abbr=off}} from the absolute centre. {{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 154}} In the centre of the island itself was a chasm 50 yards in diameter continuing down into a dome extending {{convert|100|yd|m|abbr=off}} into the adamantine surface. This dome served as an ] ], and also contained the ] which enabled the island to fly and move above the realm.{{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 155}}

==Inhabitants==
]
Laputa's population consists mainly of an educated elite, who are fond of mathematics, ], music and technology, but fail to make practical use of their knowledge. Servants make up the rest of the population.

The Laputans have mastered magnetic levitation. They also are very fond of astronomy, and discovered two moons of Mars. (This is 151 years earlier than the ] by ] in 1877.) However, they are unable to construct well-designed clothing or buildings, as they despise practical geometry as "vulgar and mechanick". The houses are ill-built, lacking any right angles,{{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 151}} and the clothes of Laputans, which are decorated with astrological symbols and musical figures, do not fit, as they take measurements with instruments such as ] and a ] rather than with ]s.{{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 150}} They spend their time listening to the music of the spheres. They believe in astrology and worry constantly that the sun will go out.

Many of them have heads angled to one side, and they often suffer from ]: one eye turns inward and the other looks up "to the zenith", conditions that Swift uses to mock the microscope and the telescope. Laputans are described as becoming so lost in thought that they cannot focus their attention on a conversation or avoid running into a tree or falling into a ditch unless periodically struck by a bladder full of pebbles or dry peas carried by one or two "flappers" or, in their native language, "climenoles", hired for the purpose. {{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 148}}

Laputa is a male-dominated society. Wives often request to leave the island to visit the land below; however, these requests are almost never granted because the women who leave Laputa never want to return. The Laputan women are highly sexed (having "an abundance of vivacity") and adulterous, and, whenever possible, take on lovers out of visitors from the lands below. The Laputan husbands, who are so abstracted in mathematical and musical calculations, might assume their wives are adulterous, but so long as they have no flapper around, they won't notice the adultery even should it occur right before their eyes.{{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 153}}

==Nearby lands==
The land beneath the floating island, within the region the Laputa can travel, is known as Balnibarbi. Balnibarbi is controlled by the king of Laputa; its ground capital is the city of ].

Laputa's king is able to control the mainland mostly by threatening to cover rebel regions with the island's shadow, thus blocking sunlight and rain, or by throwing rocks at rebellious surface cities.{{Sfn | Swift | 2008 | p = 159}} In extreme cases, the island is lowered onto the cities below to crush them, although this is not successful every time, notably in the case of ].

The Balnibarbian language, spoken on both Laputa and Balnibarbi, is described by Gulliver as sounding similar to ].

==Symbolism==

Lindalino's relationship with Laputa was intended as an ] of Ireland's relationship with England, and the ] government's foreign and internal politics (as ] was a Tory). The Laputans' absurd inventions mock the ]. As "la puta" means "the whore" in ], some Spanish editions of ''Gulliver's Travels'' use "Lapuntu", "Laput", "Lapuda" and "Lupata" as ]s. It is likely, given Swift's education and satirical style, that he was aware of the Spanish meaning. (Gulliver claimed Spanish among the many languages in which he was fluent.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Gulliver's Travels into Several Remote Regions of the World|last=Swift|first=Jonathan|publisher=D.C. Heath & Co., Publishers|year=1900|location=Boston; New York; Chicago |at=Part I, Chapter II}}</ref>)

==Legacy==

On ]'s largest ], ], there is a feature named ], ''Laputa Regio'', which is named after Swift's Laputa because of his ] of the two then undiscovered Martian moons, which his Laputan astronomers had discovered.<ref> ] Astrogeology Research Program, Phobos</ref>

The 1986 Japanese ] fantasy film, '']'', directed by ], derives its name and basic premise from Swift's novel.

The British indie rock band ] included a song named "Laputa" on their album '']'' released in 2000.

== Explanatory notes ==
{{Notelist}}

== Citations ==
{{Reflist |64em}}

== General sources==
* {{cite book | last1 = Page | first1 = Michael | last2 = Ingpen | first2 = Robert | author-link2 = Robert Ingpen | title = ] | publisher = Penguin Studio | location = New York | year = 1998 | isbn = 0-14-010008-3 | pages = 94, 150–1}}
* {{cite book | first = Jonathan | last = Swift | title = ] | series = Oxford World Classics | orig-year = 1986 | edition = reprint | year = 2008 | others = introduction by Claude Rawson, explanatory notes by Ian Higgins}} First published 1726.

==External links==
{{NIE Poster}}
* at ]

{{Gulliver's Travels}}

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