Akiteiwa

Prehistory
According to evidence from Akitei archaeologists and historians, the peninsula that encompasses the borders of modern Akiteiwa have been inhabited for around 30,000 years, the earliest migrants coming from the south, near modern day Kodeshia. Until the development of agriculture, these people lived in nomadic band societies, hunting and gathering as they moved. On the coasts, fishing formed a large part of the caloric intake and larger semi-sedentary settlements arose as a result of the reliable food security. Population saw a stark increase in approximately 9000 BCE, with the domestication of rice in the PROPER NOUN River Valley in modern day Guurdalai. With the primary method of food production moving away from hunting and gathering, society became more specialised, leading to the formation of complex social structures and the earliest states.

Geography
Akiteiwa is a peninsula in the far east of Kesh. It's relatively flat, with forests and developed rice farmland dominating much of the landscape.