“…Transient capitals were established along the way in protected rock fortresses (Dam̆badeniya, Yāpahuwa, Dädigama, and Kurunägala) and upland Gampoḷa, before consolidating in the fifteenth century at Kōttē near the coast, where the Portuguese would find them in 1505; and during the sixteenth century, at Senkaḍagala Nuvara (Kandy) in the highland interior. Historians describe those centuries as unsettled and unstable: political power and administration were fragmented (C. R. de Silva 1995a; K. M. de Silva 2016[2005]: 113–14), local rulers (“petty chiefs”) gained autonomy (Kulasuriya 1976), and immigration from the mainland increased (Roberts 1980: 37).…”