Disney's Divinity wrote:And why does the country have to be named? Bah. I hate fake names that are in the "real world."
Oh, God, I hate that too! Genovia, Latveria, Byelocroatia, ugh 

! In PatF's case, if they went through all that trouble to give the movie some historical context, what's the point in "inventing" a new country for the prince? Just give him a real country or don't name it at all!
It's like they did all they could to make his ethnicity vague, just to please the PC police. Now he's not white, but he's not black or Middle Eastern either. He speaks with French accent, but he's not from France, little less from Europe. His name is from India, but he's not Indian. No, he's from Maldonia 

.
On PatF's IMDb board, user named kaiser romanoi made a thread about this thing. Here's what they wrote (and I agree with it completely):
While reading the plot of the film, I started thinking of an actual love story, involving a fun loving European prince and a commoner in the Americas in the late 1920's. I am talking about Alfonso, Prince of Asturias and beautiful Cuban heiress, Edelmira Sampedro. However, in the real world, he had to renounce to the throne in order to marry her. Their story was tragic as they got divorced and a few years later, he died.
What does this story has to do with the film? Well, the truth is that I would like to share an idea of mine. Even in this forum there are some people who would like the idea of having a "Latina" princess. Why not having a Spanish prince for Tiana? (I must admit that I did not like the name Tiana; Princess Madeleine sounds sweet and royal. Tiana is historically unaccurate, too much modern and likely of an American pop star). Among Europeans, a Spanish prince would make an obvious choice. Spanish are not prejudiced about mixing with other races. And I can easily imagine a Spanish prince (who fits the traditional Disney idea of royalty) going to New Orleans to have fun (which I can barely understand for a Middle Eastern/African prince. In the case of a Spanish prince his connections would be obvious: Bourbon Street is named after his family.
Having a Spanish prince would had been the best homage to the three roots of New Orleans: French (Charlotte), Spanish (Prince) and African (Madeleine/Tiana). Disney think big: it is not just New Orleans, it would have been a gracious and polite homage to the multiculturalism of American society and the two largest minorities in the USA. 
Now, why didn't Disney think of this?
sotiris2006 wrote:Is it just me or Naveen's country Maldonia is dangerously close to the real country Moldova? I don't really like that, i think that they should have made up a name of a country that does not resembles a real one. But that's just me i guess...
It sounds like a combination of Moldova and Macedonia. It was originally Maldakesh, which would have made it even more ambiguous (Malta/Marrakesh).