Though Azeroth was held for some time by the Horde during the Second War, it has mostly been freed by the Alliance.[8] It contains both the region of Stormwind and Stormwind CityToD 5 (capital of the region[9]), as well as the several surrounding territories.
As compiled in The Last Guardian, Lands of Conflict, World of Warcraft: The Roleplaying Game, Warcraft: Orcs & Humans, and Warcraft II: Tides of Darkness. In Warcraft II, these areas were called domains while other sources called them regions.
The continents of Azeroth, Khaz Modan, and Lordaeron — as part of the larger Eastern Kingdoms continent — would technically be referred to as subcontinents in real world geographical/geological terminology. But the term isn't used in any published Warcraft source.
The Stormreaver clan section in the Warcraft II: Battle.net Edition manual says: "Domain: Stormwind, Azeroth and Balor, Azeroth".[11] This may get a bit confusing, but it tells that the Stormreaver have control over the domain of Stormwind from the continent of Azeroth and Balor of the continent of Azeroth.
↑Warcraft: The Roleplaying Game, p.26 Quote: They launched a new campaign that ended up ravagin the continents of Lordaeron, Khaz Modan and Stormwind.
↑Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos manual, p.3 Quote:The Alliance forces under Sir Lothar managed to push Doomhammer’s clans out of Lordaeron and back into the orc-controlled lands of Azeroth.
↑Lands of Conflict, backcover Quote:"...the eastern continents of Azeroth, Khaz Modan and Lordaeron..."