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Heiban (: 海𧵆; Hẻi Bặn), officially the Monarchical State of Heiban is a country in southewestern Kesh bordered to the north by Verissi and Gxea, to the south by Ramay across the Canbrict Strait, to the east by the South Kesh Bay, and to the west by the Iapetus Ocean. Heiban covers a total area of 929,097s square kilometres (358,726 sq mi) and has an estimated population as 99.6 million as of 2021. The capital and largest metropolis is the city of Qifeng, natively known as Kỳ Giàu. Heiban is a.

The Heiban peninsula has been inhabited as early as the Paleolithic age by. The first known modern Heibanese civilization during the second millennium BC centred on the northern end of the Lào Mau River, near modern-day Qifeng. This initial civilization, and the communities that formed it, where known collectively as Người Ta, or Nguoi, and managed to remain almost entirely isolated for much of their early history. Contact with other emerging civilizations in the vicinity of the South Kesh Bay began around the 10th century BCE, with the arrival of Austronesian people from present-day Ramay and South Kesh. In the 3rd century BCE, the Nguoi communities, scattered across the country's plains, began to grow into larger matriarchal chiefdoms and small monarchies, the largest of which was the Matriarchy of Heiban ruled by the Trịnh dynasty. By the beginning of the, this nation had expanded and annexed virtually all smaller chiefdoms in the peninsula. The Trịnh dynasty fell in the year 677 CE, and was overthrown by the Vương dynasty, considered to be the last true Nguoi dynasty in Heiban, as it was under their rule that the country came in contact with Imperial Kodeshia in the 11th century.

Once the Matriarchy of Heiban came in contact with the Kodeshi Empire, a trading agreement was put in place between both nations. The Vương agreed for Kodeshi merchants to be stationed in the nation's largest port city of Sa Hóa. The agreement remained peaceful for nearly two centuries, however, as years went by, the Vương dynasty struggled to maintain its influence on the native population who had begun growing fond of the Chou dynasty of Kodesia. The Vương dynasty was challenged by the Lý dynasty and by the year 1234 CE, it had taken over the nation. However, the Lý rule was short-lived, as the Chou fell in Imperial Kodeshia in favor of the Zhou dynasty only three years after the Lý dynasty had risen in Heiban. The Zhou Empire coerced the southern Kesh nation into consensus of becoming an imperial vassal state, to which the Lý showed little to no opposition. Zhou government officials, known as vassals, were sent to Heiban to replace the native leaders and act instead as heads of state in the name of the Emperor of Kodeshia.