Now, the kingdom covered almost all of Malabar and Cochin and the rulers of Quilon were made tributaries.
At the height of its power the kingdom covered an area of some 1,500 square miles (3,885 square km).
The kingdom covered the less fertile regions of the Tell Atlas.
Many Croatian scholars argued that the kingdom covered the whole region south of the Drava river to the Drina and Neretva rivers north of Dubrovnik.
At the time, the kingdom of Sweden covered both Sweden and Finland as we know them today.
His kingdom covered many countries, from Greece to Egypt, from Persia to parts of India.
The kingdom of Holland covered the area of present day Netherlands, with the exception of Limburg, and parts of Zeeland, which were French territory.
The area which this kingdom covered included most of Southern Northumbria, roughly equivalent to the borders of Yorkshire extending further West.
Prior to the 4th century BC, the kingdom covered a region approximately corresponding to the Western and Central parts of province of Macedonia in modern Greece.
The kingdom covered parts of western Tibet and northern Ladakh.