top of page

Geography and location

Sabia and Verona's sovereign territory consists of two patches of land split by roughly 4800 miles in the South American continent. The Northern Territories, consisting of the historical regions of Sabia, Lycem and Verona, are entirely surrounded by Venezuela, while the Southern Territories are located within miles of the Río de la Plata, in Argentina.

It is in the Southern Territories where most of Sabia and Verona's citizens live and where most of the action takes place. The capital, Alios, is one of the two regions in the Southern Territories, alongside the more populous Gonn.

 

Sabia and Verona's claims south of the Equator were made in 2015, years after the foundation of the Kingdom, but since the foundation of these settlements they have become the beating heart of the country.

Location_map_of_Sabia_and_Verona.png
...a nation of contrasts

Looking past the rich history and diverse culture Sabia and Verona has given its territories, there are remarkedly few things in common between the Northern and Southern clusters.

The North, also widely known as the Valtir - from which Sabioveronese people get their oft-used demonym, Valtirians - is smaller and less populated than the South. At an elevation of ~1450 m (4757 ft), the omnipotent mountains of the Northern Andes look down at the Valtir, where the sight of snowy peaks is a usual occurrence.

The South on the other hand lies only miles from the Atlantic coast of the Southern Cone, and the ochre-tinted waters of the Río de la Plata (shared by Argentina and Uruguay) can be seen from the tallest point in Alios. The Southern Territories are home to Sabia and Verona's most green and biodiverse region: the natural reserve of Doga Runann.

Location of the Sabioveronese territories in South America

bottom of page