Before the fae and Runaji merge of power, the country’s capital was situated in the heart of its southernmost port city: Ranpunan. Most of the population could be found in the general area of Ranpunan. Ranpunan was, and always has been, a popular stop along the trade routes between the East and West. The revenue gathered from trade and tariffs accounted for the majority of Runaji’s wealth at the time.
However, such prosperity could hardly be overlooked by other powers with strong naval capabilites, particularly due to Runaji’s own diminutive size. Thirty years after the fall of the great Gates and eighty three years before the fae-Runaji merger the capital was seized after a four day struggle for possession of the city during which half the harbor was set ablaze. The emperor, along with greater part of the nobility, fled to a more centralized location in the heart of the country.
For several years the governing body of Runaji dwelt on the high reaches in a centralized, decently populated town called Iire as the battle to retake the port raged in the south. Eventually, with the help of Ranpunan’s civilians, the Runaji drove out the occupying forces. However, by that time, the majority of the nobility and, more importantly, the emperor had no desire to return to an easily assaulted location and as such remained in Iire which over time grew into the bustling city it is today.
Runaji’s capital was never officially changed from Ranpunan to Iire. However, by Runaji law, the capital exists wherever the emperor presides. Thus a dual capital started to take shape- with Ranpunan remaining the official capital and the real deciding power held in Iire. Ranpunan, though lacking in tangible administrative power, never faded from mention over the decades due to its enormous wealth and relevance in trade routes, which generated the city its own form of power and sway in national affairs. By the time of the fae-Runaji merger, some eighty three years later, the steadily expanding Iire and the established port of Ranpunan were equally considered to be ruling capitals.