State of Guwati

Guwati, officially the State of Guwati, was a micronation located in South Asia, surrounded by India. Formerly a territory neighbouring the seat of the monarchy of the State of Vishwamitra, the territory was handed over to the Karno-Ruthenian Empire as a show of friendship and amity on 15 March 2022 until 07 October 2022, when the Imperial Government returned the territory after the xenophobic attacks by Vishwamitrans that soured the relations between Karnia-Ruthenia and Vishwamitra.

History
Early Frebruary 2022, the State of Vishwamitra, the most important micronation in India recovered the possession of Rajagriha, as was Guwati known at the time. The region, bordered by Rajagriha, the capital of Vishwamitra, already was in possession of Misberia and, being returned to the close micronation, talks between authorities of Vishwamitra and Karnia-Ruthenia begun. On 15 March 2022, the Karno-Ruthenian government was notified that the region was handed to the Empire as a show of goodwill and friendship. The following day, Dhrubajyoti Roy, Rajpramukh of Purvanchal and Rashtradhyaksh of Vishwamitra, also a prince and Minister of Foreign Affairs in Karnia-Ruthenia, was appointed by decree as King in Guwati, the title of the hereditary head of government of the region. Over the course of 2022, three citizens of Vishwamitra, led by Stefan Marius Snagoveanu, a Romanian micronationalist, made several racist and xenophobic remarks agains Brazil and Brazilians in general, also to especially offend Oscar I. With the reticence of Vishwamitran government to punish the responsible, the bilateral relations soured and Guwati was returned to Vishwamitra.

Geography
The Brahmaputra river flows to the north of the metropolis. The city is bordered on the south by the foothills of the Shillong plateau and to the east by the Amchang Wildlife Sanctuary. The Bharalu River, a tributary of the Brahmaputra, flows right through the heart of the city. To the south-west of the city lies Dipor Bil, a permanent freshwater lake with no prominent inflows apart from monsoon run-off from the hills that lie to the south of the lake. The lake drains into the Brahmaputra to the north, and acts as a natural stormwater reservoir for the city. There are also multiple hills within the city limits.

Climate
Guwati has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification Cwa), falling just short of a tropical savanna climate (Köppen climate classification Aw).