The Kingdom of Lynden, in terms of size, was neither too large nor too small. Spanning a little over 100,000 square kilometres, it was just the right size. As a newly founded kingdom, and not one built through the conquest of another, it had no villages, towns, or roadways spread across its land. Instead, it consisted of only three cities: the capital, a southern trade city where most commerce took place, and a northern trade city where trade was also conducted, but of a very different nature.
The trade in the southern city was between the Kingdom of Lynden and the Europeans. In contrast, the trade in the northern city was between the kingdom and various chieftains and tribes, with slaves as the merchandise.
