Oahspe describes the other 6 kings’ kingdoms (this synopsis leaves out the incomprehensibly long names of the kingdoms and regions):
- the 2nd highest king lived in the plains of Central America, fed by 12 tributary cities extending along a river all the way to the mountains
- the 3rd highest king lived in a location fed by 27 tributary cities and he was the son of the king that built the “great east canal” in the land “where dwelt the large men and women“.
- the 4th king in power had 17 tributary cities that extended from sea to sea in the Middle Kingdom (Panama) and lived in a temple with “a thousand columns of polished mahogany, and with a dome of copper and sliver” that was inhabited by a true oracle of the Creator for 2,000 years.
- the 5th king in power was located in Tennessee with 30 tributary cities. This was the location of “the school and college of great learning, the Ahazahohoputan, where were taught tens of thousands of students” with the most famous student being Penambatta who “traveled far, devoting his life to imparting knowledge” and he amassed 6,000 attendants and 640 officers.
- the 6th king in power had 33 tributary cities in the plains of South-eastern Ohio
- the 7th king in power lived in plains that were fed by 47 tributary cities. These plains were described as extending east to the mountains, and then included the valleys of the river, all the way to the sea (Lake Erie).
Oahspe mentions several other significant regions of America:
- about a 50-day journey west of the kings’ capitals was an uninhabited region, “a place of sand and salt, and hot, boiling waters”, 20 days wide from east to west and 50 days long from north to south.
- In the “High North” was the “kingdom of Olegalla, the land of giants, the place of yellow rocks and high spouting waters”. The king ended up giving his city , with its 24 tributary cities, “to his queen, Minneganewashaka, with the yellow hair, long, hanging down” and she built 270 temples near the spouting waters where her people sang to the Creator every day at sunrise.
- South of Olegalla was the kingdom of Onewagga, a valley that was considered the “consecrated place of the Voice” because there had been 20 generations of kings. East of this kingdom’s lake was the grounds for games and tournaments that occurred every fall. The winners of the strength and track and field competitions were awarded “handsome damsels, with straight limbs and shapely necks, proud, who loved to be awarded handsome, mighty husbands”.
- Even more south was a kingdom that was “rich in legends of the people who lived here before the flood”. It had 6 great canals coursing through it and was “the place of the king of bears”, the grizzly.