Latin Kingdoms of Hesperidesia
The Latin Kingdoms of Hesperidesia refers to the Kingdoms of Basilea, Ravetta, and Albandaea, which were formed by pilgrims and settlers to Hesperidesia who arrived after the founding of Paradise City in 68 AD.
Following the foundation of Paradise City, two subsequent significant waves of Roman Christians arrived in Hesperidesia, with small groups branching off to erect their own settlements along the southern Hesperidesian coast. The settlers who established Basilea were roughly two hundred members of the second wave, while Ravetta and Albandaea were founded during the third wave. When the Empire of Exponent formed in 87 AD, the Latin Kingdoms remained independent states, briefly coming under nominal control of the Empire until the Schism of Paradisa in the third century and then maintaining their independence - and steadily growing as smaller numbers of Roman Christians arrived and settlers mixed with local tribal people - until their eventually conquest during the Coastal Crusade.