Ayesinco

Ayesinco is a port town on the Arritas Peninsula, on the western coast of Alteniquia. It is currently part of the Yimmu-Audal Empire, and is the only Audalad city on the Western coast. Ayesinco is a relatively decent-sized town of a distinct design with a few farms, market center, temple district, and bathhouse.

History and Geography
The city of Ayesinco is built on the native village of Arryn, home to lost Geshemi sailors who found themselves stranded on the coast. (The native village name is actually an exonym, derived from the villager's native tongue upon Amosite arrival.) The settlers of Ayesinco then arrived in the region as a mass migration from Amos, due to the leader's untimely death and a lessening in fertile land. Ayesinco was then founded as a small port city on top of Arryn. It currently has 1 resident, architecture2, who has returned from his absence after his abandonment of Amos. There were 2 mass migrations, the first being a group of Amosites from Arakenthiin who introduced the Geshemi to Qasim, and the second migration from Amos itself to Ayesinco in which the Amosites migrated over the Urnu Desert to the city. Ayesinco is still a large city, one of the largest in the Duchy of Theiotokos, and owns its own county, being the County of Ayesinco. It has many buildings, 6 permanent residents, and many

Local Politics
Originally, Ayesinco, after it's founding, was persuaded to join the nearby Sironia or the VAWR, but architecture2 declined as although he was starting anew, he would keep his allegiance to Yimmu-Audal. Politics of Ayesinco after it's founded are few and far apart, with the major political events being its involvement in the reorganization of the Western Territories and the debate on the capital of Theionikos.

Architecture
Ayesincan architecture is adapted heavily from architecture2's previous styles, with a large amount of inspiration also coming from his desire to make a "second Urnu-Arrak" on the western coast of Alteniquia. Ayesincan architecture also follows a Sumerian-like style, with a ziggurat like inspiration