Sittapini

Sittapini (Phesasit: ; Xiṭapini [s̠iʈaːpini]), officially the Sittapinian Kingdom (Rachun Xiṭapini [raːtɕʰʊn s̠iʈaːpini]), is a country in the Nesionytan Islands, bordering the microstate of Somphaisa via the Phaisa island, and is located west of Ulakisonia, south of, east of the French overseas department of New Gallia, and north of the Kanuzunda Islands. It also has further maritime borders with Dajankagru, the Adrian Islands, and Toalugi. Its capital and largest city is Naragoti, named after its former ruling dynasty.

Sittapini has an area of 19,482 km², and a population of 4,992,084 as of 2021. It is geographically a hilly area, and is in the Binakari Sea, and is separated from Ulakisonia by the Qasunna Strait.

Unlike other islands in the archipelago, the Nytans did not settle in Sittapini. People from southeast Asia arrived in Sittapini in approximately 428 AD, who start to refer to themselves as the Sittapinians in the late 450s. Sittapini is the oldest independent state in the Nesionytan Islands, which was never colonized by any foreign power. In the 800s, Sittapini was divided into four kingdoms, which was known as the four kingdoms period. The Naragoti and Saayam dynasties both wanted control over the entire Sittapinian island, and thus constantly battled each other for three hundred years, until the Naragoti dynasty conquered the entirety of the island in 1022. The Bhomahuti dynasty replaced Naragoti as the current ruling family of Sittapini in 1568, and mostly referred itself as Bhomahuti until 1923, when it was officially renamed to its current name. It is also the last standing Nutaderram kingdom, and is currently the only country in the entire archipelago with Nutaderram as its official religion.

Constitutionally, Sittapini refers to itself as a   and a  state. It is the most democratic country in the Nesionytan Islands, and has a. Sittapini is divided into ten districts, all of which were created under the 1964 constitution.

Urban settlements
Sittapini is the least urbanized nation in the archipelago, with only 31% of the country's population settling in urban areas. In April 2020, as a part of the 2025 Vision Sittapini, the country plans to establish more cities and heavily urbanize its population, although some of the rural Sittapinian population decline this decision.