Events in March

2 March
1999: After 56 years in office, King Alexis of Kingston and Boyce dies, aged 98.

4 March
1942: CARTERrail is founded by Marc Anthony Carter.

6 March
1662: Edward du Loup, the future first King of Lower Columbia, is born in Nyhaven.

14 March
1910: The aggression of the Leeonian Freedom Movement begins to settle down after two months of guerrilla warfare.

17 March
2012: Air Canada reintroduces Canadian Airlines as an airline for Kingston and Boyce.

21 March
1956: Croisian Air Flight 437 crashes in the Arabian Sea after suffering an explosive decompression, killing all 39 on board.

22 March
1997: Two people are killed and 17 injured in Waterway Plaza in Centreburg Metro when Michael Rowland fires at commuters in the station.

23 March
1884: Lower Columbia declares war on the Federal Republic of Gudland. 1881: King Brandon II of Lower Columbia disappears while on a diplomatic visit to Buenos Aires, Argentina, causing the first constitutional crisis since 1799. 1723: The British-Canadian Fur trading ship Alouette is the first European vessel to see the Island of Mainland, now Kingston and Boyce.

24 March
1835: John II becomes King of Lower Columbia on the death of his father, King Brandon I.

25 March
1946: The Histalian Action Rapide Paramilitaire, the paramilitary of Histalpol, is formed. 1800: Captain Cook discovers New Duveland, landing at what is now Auroa.

26 March
1885: The Royal Lower Columbian Army begins laying siege to the city of Seattle.

28 March
1849: The City of Portland, Kingston and Boyce is founded as a mining town.

29 March
1780: Klamath becomes the fifth state of Lower Columbia.

31 March
1943: Six provinces leave the Republic of Mainland, forming the States of the Union of Boyce, led by Alexis Kaletta.