Aheya is not a single island, but an archipelago, stretching east and south from off the coast of eastern Pumirna to the northeast portion of the continent of Yandjee. It is also fairly recent in its settlement, perhaps a mere two and a half thousand years. There is no single authority on the islands, but they are all broadly associated with the culture and practices of the Eya people.
The Eya are notable for having a "law of the land" (wherein no human blood is permitted to be shed on their islands) and the "law of the sea" (where, well, most things go if you can get away with them).
Eileiwa is the largest and southernmost of the islands, and if history is to be believed the original homeland of the Eya people. Slightly smaller than Sweden, it nevertheless boasts an immense and intense diversity of animal and plant life.
The Ziéco live in the northeastern regions of the island, primarily clustered around the cities of Chipu and Beïe, fierce rivals for ages uncounted.
The Lo are found in the southern regions of the island, along the ridge on the Dae Peninsula, as a number of related garden agriculturalist tribes.
Awadi is small but lush, covered in dry forest roamed by a local species of tapir that gave the island its name. It seems to have been the first island reached by the Eya as they expanded across the archipelago, and the locals speak a very archaic dialect.
Kali is the second-most westward of the main islands of Eileiwa, about the size of Kuwait, united under a single queen. It is currently under occupation by Durnhão, and has adopted the faith of Llegramu.
Divided between six states, Yeisen is the second-largest island claimed by the Eya, as well as the furthest to the west. It has approximately the same land area as the Netherlands.