Xanadu

fictional place
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Xanadu, place in the opium-induced vision that English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge recorded in the poetic fragment “Kubla Khan” (1798). Coleridge’s fantasyland was based on Shangdu (“Upper Capital”), near present-day Duolun in Inner Mongolia, to which the real Kublai Khan moved the seat of Mongol government in the early 1260s.

Coleridge’s name Xanadu persisted in common usage. In Orson Welles’s film Citizen Kane (1941), it is the name given to the palatial estate of Charles Foster Kane, the film’s protagonist. Since then the name has been used in many contexts—including songs, a musical, a ballet, and a film—to suggest the idyllic, the luxurious, and the exotic.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kathleen Kuiper.